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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

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[...] the best general became useless if his troops were not submissive and obedient; thinking that the virtue of obedience, as much as that of command, requires [...] a generous nature [...].

100-120 AD

What did it serve him to have conquered an entire world, since he lost the privilege of great men, which is to know how to command oneself.

1636

We get angry more readily with friends than with strangers, because we feel we are more entitled to receive good from them than not.

329-323 BC

Ulysses is true wisdom, which, without being captivated by material charms [...], turns all its desires towards the heavens.

c. 253-270 AD

Roman Artist, Cypriot

Limestone funerary cippus

Limestone funerary cippus

ca. 2nd–3rd century CE

The human understanding loses itself in trying to sound and control all things to the very end.

1580

It is not a question for [the rulers] to contract but to obey, and in taking on the functions the State imposes on them, they are only fulfilling their duty as Citizens.

1762

However, the heart is empty, it is full of boredom [...] while the mind, deprived of the objects that alone can occupy and nourish it, is absorbed in the darkest melancholy.

1742

In democratic countries, a man, however opulent, is almost always discontented with his fortune, because he finds himself less rich than his father was and fears that his sons will be less so than himself.

1835-1840

Unknown Artist

Cymbal

Cymbal

7000 BCE - 330 CE

The philosophy of 'clear and distinct' ideas [...] freed modern thought from the yoke of authority to admit no other mark of truth than evidence.

1915

Value judgments are always intuitive and admit of no proof; discursive reason only intervenes to define them and put them in order [...].

1932-1942

It is not need, it is not desire—no, it is the love of power that is the demon of men. Give them everything [...] they will remain unhappy and capricious, for the demon waits and waits, it wants to be satisfied.

1881

[The spirit of the Sage is] superior to heaven, to earth, to all beings, dwells in a body to which it is not attached, [...] and knows everything through global knowledge in its motionless unity.

4th century BC

Gustave Courbet

The Calm Sea

The Calm Sea

1869

Here is a very clear example of the errors into which one falls [...] when speaking of an art whose principles one does not know.

1746

Entire layers of the bourgeois class are thrown into the working class. Competition among workers therefore increases [...].

1849

[...] one should not exclude from civil society Pagans, nor Mohammedans, nor Jews, because of the religion they profess.

1686

Experience provides no universal conclusion.

1772

Jean Marc Nattier

Madame Bergeret de Frouville as Diana

Madame Bergeret de Frouville as Diana

1756

Properly speaking, we cannot have a real memory of a simple and pure sensation: nor can we truly make it known to another who has not experienced it.

1805

Man will never rise to virtue if he thinks that death is an evil.

63-64 AD

As for drugs, whether from Apothecaries or from Empirics, I hold them in such low esteem that I would never dare advise anyone to use them.

1643-1649

We lack the sense of architecture and the feeling for it. Other senses and other feelings have developed within us, stifling that one.

1926

Greek Artist

Marble grave relief with a funerary banquet and departing warriors

Marble grave relief with a funerary banquet and departing warriors

2nd century BCE

When the possessors of a privilege make concessions to those who are deprived of it, it is rarely for any other reason than because the latter acquire the power to extort them.

1869

For my part, I will state clearly the substance of my thought and show clearly what the matter is.

1670

One can affirm of a thing what one clearly conceives to be contained in the idea of that thing.

1707

Paganism sacrificed bodies, whereas Christianity sacrifices souls.

1842-1845

Roman Artist

Stucco relief panel

Stucco relief panel

2nd half of 1st century CE

The moral part of education is undoubtedly the most important and the most neglected part.

1772

To see a million men serve miserably, with their necks under the yoke, not constrained by a greater force, but [...] enchanted and charmed by the name of one man alone.

c. 1552-1553

To accomplish great things, one must live as if one were never to die.

1747

Give folly all that it desires, it will believe it still does not have enough: wisdom, on the contrary, always content with what it presently possesses, never murmurs at its lot.

45 BC

Joachim Wtewael

The Golden Age

The Golden Age

1605

All faith is [...] a conviction that is subjectively sufficient, but accompanied by the consciousness of its objective insufficiency. It is thus opposed to knowing.

1786

[This establishment] provides [opportunities] to those who will be employed in this activity; for example to a number of laborers [...] who, in the winter season, can find no work to earn their living.

1662

When one passes away with a body full of health and a soul full of tenderness, how could one not be an object of regret?

4th century BC

All saints are therefore lights; but it is by believing in Jesus Christ that they are enlightened by him, from whom one cannot be separated without falling back into darkness.

1263-1264

Cypriot artist

Limestone statuette of a temple girl

Limestone statuette of a temple girl

3rd century BCE–1st century CE

Give to faith what belongs to faith.

1623

As soon as a man's life is in danger, no one has the right to think of their own safety anymore.

1840

It must be admitted that there are very sweet pleasures, and they come at a good price.

1741-1784

Men love to change their master in the hope of improving their lot; but [...] experience shows them that they were mistaken and have only worsened their situation.

1513

Master of the Saint Barbara Legend

Abner's Messenger before David; The Queen of Sheba Bringing Gifts to Solomon; The Annunciation

Abner's Messenger before David; The Queen of Sheba Bringing Gifts to Solomon; The Annunciation

ca. 1480

Trade in Asia was no longer conducted except with a sword in hand; and each nation of our West sent out in turn merchants, soldiers, and priests.

1764

A social fact can only be called normal for a given social species, in relation to a given phase of its development.

1895

The evil is not in dying, but in dying shamefully.

c. 108 AD

The simplicity of God's ways [...] properly applies to the means, while on the contrary, variety, richness, or abundance applies to the ends or effects.

1686

David Ryckaert III

Rustic Interior

Rustic Interior

1632