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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

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Could I be another? A stranger to myself? [...] A fighter who has too often had to overcome himself?

1886

General well-being favors the stability of all governments, but particularly of democratic government, which rests on the dispositions of the greatest number [...].

1835-1840

It is [...] impossible for the word love, for example, to awaken exactly the same idea in the mind of a child or an old man, of a passionate or timid woman...

1817

'The dignity of humanity is placed in your [artists'] hands, keep it intact! With you it falls! With you it will rise again!'

1896

Adriaen Brouwer

A Peasant Woman Picking Fleas off a Dog

A Peasant Woman Picking Fleas off a Dog

ca. 1626–27

Do you know the surest way to make your child miserable? It is to accustom him to getting everything.

1762

Philosophy fell either into abstract spiritualism or into abstract materialism, which is only an 'abstract spiritualism of matter'.

1841

There are in the nature of things two models, one divine and blessed, the other godless and wretched. Unjust men are unaware of this [...].

c. 253-270 AD

This so-called virtue [humility] is only fit to degrade man, to debase him in his own eyes, to stifle in him all energy and all desire to be useful to society.

1766

Andreas Achenbach

Sunset after a Storm on the Coast of Sicily

Sunset after a Storm on the Coast of Sicily

1853

And the happy thing is, this is my last journey.

1741-1784

In the one, they swear to prefer no one to Caesar; in this one, we swear to prefer ourselves to everyone.

c. 108 AD

The clearest and simplest principles are the most fruitful, and difficult [...] things are not always as useful as our vain curiosity leads us to believe.

1674-1675

Let the seditious, murderers, brigands be punished rigorously, [...] but let those whose doctrine is peaceful, and whose morals are chaste and innocent, be spared.

1686

John Faed

Self-Portrait

Self-Portrait

ca. 1850

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

No one can truly practice piety, nor obey God, except by submitting to all the decrees of the sovereign.

1670

A thing does not have a value because it costs, as is supposed; but it costs, because it has a value.

1776

Men must be either pampered or crushed, because they can get revenge for small injuries, but not for grievous ones.

1855

Villanovan

Bronze horse bit

Bronze horse bit

8th–7th century BCE

To put one's glory in doing nothing is a cowardly ambition.

63-64 AD

Strange thing that, in all the arts, it is only after a long time that one finally arrives at the natural and the simple!

1732

Perhaps [...] it is out of benevolence that God grants me [...] the ability to end my life not only at the most suitable time, but also in the least painful way.

4th century BC

Whoever does not hate in himself this self-love, and this instinct which leads him to put himself above everything, is truly blind.

1670

Etruscan artist

Patera

Patera

mid 6th century BCE

The destruction of the past is perhaps the greatest of all crimes.

1943

Strength is what dominates in him. His verse is robust.

1926

The fate that actually befalls us rarely resembles the one we promised ourselves; at every step we take, we find our expectations disappointed.

1760

Divine love is not something of God: it is God himself.

1932

Abraham Hondius

Christ among the Doctors

Christ among the Doctors

1668

I have deferred speaking of the lever until the end, because it is the most difficult machine [...] of all to explain.

1637

To have a great deal of common sense, one must be made in such a way that reason dominates feeling, and experience dominates reasoning.

1746

It is impossible to do great things when one's thoughts are entirely on petty things.

100-120 AD

A mind that occupies itself night and day with meditations attains that knowledge so recommended by the oracle of Delphi: self-knowledge.

45 BC

Roman Artist

Top of a marble funerary relief with portrait busts of a young man and an elderly woman

Top of a marble funerary relief with portrait busts of a young man and an elderly woman

ca. 138–141 CE

[Poets] would suffer more from the loss of their work than from that of their children.

1580

For a reduplicative proposition to be true, the [...] propositions that expose it [...] must be true, and if one of them were false, it would be false itself.

c. 1270

[Witty remarks and bold actions] have often been like wings to suddenly reach the summit of greatness.

1636

The number and importance of the prohibitions that isolate a sacred thing [...] correspond to the degree of sacredness with which it is invested.

1912

Edgar Degas

A Woman Ironing

A Woman Ironing

1873

Regarding interrogation, it is especially opportune to use it when the adversary has said the contrary, so that [...] an absurdity results.

329-323 BC

A power acquired and maintained by force is a power that force has the right to repel.

1772

The man who knows only his own side of the case knows little of that.

1859

To be fit for good company, one must have wit as well as politeness.

1751

Roman Artist, Pompeian

Wall painting on red ground: candelabrum, from the imperial villa at Boscotrecase

Wall painting on red ground: candelabrum, from the imperial villa at Boscotrecase

last decade of the 1st century BCE

Little by little, the people grow accustomed to irreverence towards the magistrate, [...] learn to disobey willingly, and let themselves be led by the bait of liberty, or rather license, which is the sweetest and most tantalizing poison in the world.

c. 1552-1553

The distinction of subject and object [...] is the common form of all [representations], the only one under which any representation can be conceived.

1819

There are, in my view, efforts in all substances; but these efforts are properly only within the substance itself.

1695

an extraordinary man, who, charged with the most thorny affairs of a great Kingdom, cultivated the sciences and arts with more care [...] than even those who make this glorious occupation their principal business.

1627

Lucia Anguissola

Portrait of a Man

Portrait of a Man

ca. 1560