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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

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Insults and disgrace are much more deeply felt than praise and applause [...].

1674-1675

[...] all bodies have a reluctance to separate from one another.

1653-1662

I have never lived, since I have not governed.

1968

This principle of nature to act by the most determined ways [...] is, in effect, only architectonic, yet it never fails to observe it.

1697

Camille Pissarro

Steamboats in the Port of Rouen

Steamboats in the Port of Rouen

1896

Malicious critics, I despise you all, for I know my own flaws better than you do.

ca. 1730

Does not the adage say: chiseling and polishing are not as good as letting nature act. [...] I let people do as they would, spontaneously, as nature operates.

4th century BC

[...] we can never, with all our reason, go beyond the field of experience.

1783

[Situation] does not admit of contrariety.

c. 1270

Lucas Cranach the Elder

The Martyrdom of Saint Barbara

The Martyrdom of Saint Barbara

ca. 1510

Be careful he does not deceive you; these parasites are not accustomed to acting in good faith.

1518

The stars do not produce [...] poverty and wealth, health and sickness, beauty and ugliness, vices and virtues.

c. 253-270 AD

It is claimed that [the epic] is addressed to people of sound judgment, [...] while tragedy is addressed to spectators of inferior taste.

c. 335 BC

[...] the love of plunder, the spirit of vengeance overriding respect for [...] authority and the observance of military discipline.

1580

Jan van Goyen

View of Haarlem and the Haarlemmer Meer

View of Haarlem and the Haarlemmer Meer

1646

The continual contradictions in the world caused by pride [...] have forced the introduction of the rules of propriety or politeness, in order to facilitate the commerce of the mind and of conversation.

1751

It is hoped that this work [...] will merit above all the approval of the Clergy, who will find all their rights established therein on an unshakeable basis.

1768

Without music, life would be a mistake.

1888

From the moment I began to understand human language, I have never ceased to seek and to learn all the good I could.

4th century BC

Zanobi Strozzi

The Nativity

The Nativity

ca. 1433–34

[...] citizens, despairing of improving their lot by themselves, rush tumultuously towards the head of state and ask for his help.

1835-1840

Our character is still us [...].

1889

What is the most necessary discipline? It is to unlearn the bad things.

1909

What is presumption in the weak, is elevation in the strong.

1746

Jean Bellegambe

Charles de Saint-Radegonde, called Charles Coguin, Abbot of Anchin

Charles de Saint-Radegonde, called Charles Coguin, Abbot of Anchin

ca. 1511–20

One must save the sharpness and brilliance of the mind for subjects that deserve it, just as the lion reserves its efforts for dangers worthy of it.

1636

A composition [...] will be flawed if it is not intelligible to a person of plain common sense.

1766

A great man fears infamy alone, and that suffering only frightens [...] men with the hearts of women.

1st Century A.D.

The essences of things are of all eternity and will remain immutable for all eternity.

c. 1660

British Painter

Eye Miniature

Eye Miniature

1800

[God] has given you these faculties free, independent, and liberated from all external constraint; he has put them entirely at your disposal.

c. 108 AD

Instead of that speculative philosophy [...], one can find a practical one, by which [...] we might [...] make ourselves, as it were, the masters and possessors of nature.

1637

The spirit of conversation is reduced [...] to the talent of speaking ill of others agreeably.

1758

All the rest is not life, but merely time.

c. 49 AD

Roman Artist

Bronze statuette of a goddess

Bronze statuette of a goddess

1st–2nd century CE

the Assembly, adopting the convenient principle: 'Measures, not men,' allowed itself to be duped [...] without having eyes to see the concentration and organization of counter-revolutionary forces.

1851-1852

This act of judging consists in seeing that the idea I have of one thing belongs to the idea I have of another.

1817

When a man is dead, one should not call a doctor.

1750

One will only find pleasantries in women when one only looks for women in them.

1926

French (Fontainebleau) Painter

The Nymph of Fontainebleau

The Nymph of Fontainebleau

1550

The social state is at once so natural, so necessary, and so habitual to man [...] that he never conceives himself otherwise than as a member of a body.

1861

Perception is the first Faculty of the Soul that is occupied with our Ideas. It is also the first and simplest idea that we receive by means of Reflection.

1689

For the scientist, the causal relationship is not in question; it is presupposed by the very method of science.

1895

While we see the [ancients] make such good use of sad leisure [...] putting their consolation in the precepts of philosophy: how are we not ashamed of our vain conversations [...]?

45 BC

Cypriot artist

Limestone lower left leg

Limestone lower left leg

4th or 3rd century BCE ?

Books and learning give to men, more than anything else, the sense and understanding to know themselves and to hate tyranny.

c. 1552-1553

'Condensation is the proper work of the creative intelligence'.

1896

The works of wisdom surpass those of valor in the importance, extent, and duration of their effects.

1620

One should not, in order to populate some provinces more and enrich them, turn others into deserts, or leave behind only a miserable people.

1776

Abraham Hondius

Christ among the Doctors

Christ among the Doctors

1668