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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

Français

Would you then prefer to see me die justly rather than unjustly?

4th century BC

It is a political law of nature that those who are under any power of ancient origin never begin by complaining of the power itself, but only of its oppressive exercise.

1869

Reason demands [...] that we judge them [the ancients] more ignorant than the new philosophers, since, in our time, the world is two thousand years older and has more experience.

1674-1675

We must resign ourselves to knowing little if we do not want to be ignorant of everything.

1882

Christian Friedrich Zincke

Mrs. Vanderbank

Mrs. Vanderbank

ca. 1730

The man of proven and perfect virtue desires no other glory than that which is the fruit of public trust, and which opens the way for him to great undertakings.

100-120 AD

Their zeal for the glory of God is not a zeal directed by knowledge.

1263-1264

The spirit of invention stirs [...] in an unregulated manner; it seeks. The spirit of method arranges, orders, and supposes that everything has been found...

1773

No generous mind stops within itself. It always aims for and goes beyond its strength.

1580

Cosmè Tura (Cosimo di Domenico di Bonaventura)

The Flight into Egypt

The Flight into Egypt

1470s

A soul [...] returns almost whole to the eyes of anyone who reads them attentively, no less in the white spaces dividing the text than in the text itself...

1926

Far from feasting on acquired glory, [a great heart] forgets it to always seek a new one.

1636

[Under tyranny], virtues were death sentences. [...] the slave was the spy of his master, the freedman of his patron, the friend of his friend.

1758

Social life, wherever it is normal, is spontaneous: and if it is abnormal, it cannot last.

1893

Unknown Artist

Element

Element

7000 BCE - 330 CE

Thus, blind and confident in my hopes, I have always been passionate about what was to cause my misfortune.

1782-1789

Whoever asks for a greater certainty does not know what he is asking for.

1704

When a matter is begun, and the main point is agreed upon, I see no profit in seeking delays.

1643-1649

The essence of religion in general.

1841

Roman Artist

Bronze left leg and foot

Bronze left leg and foot

1st or 2nd century CE

Other people note what they wish to remember. Here, Kant had noted what he must forget: 'Mem. — February 1802 — the name Lampe is no longer to be remembered.'

1827

[A prince] cannot help you, either because distance [...] does not allow it, or because the disorders in his own states require the use of all his forces.

1513-1519

Either this cause is comprised in the nature and definition of the thing itself [...], or it is external to it.

1661-1676

One calls deliberation those desires and fears which succeed one another for as long as it is in our power to do or not to do the action upon which we are deliberating.

1772

Unknown Artist

Bolt

Bolt

7000 BCE - 330 CE

My dear master, [...] you are always astonished by everything.

1759

No one is unaware that there are two entrances by which opinions are received into the soul, [...] the understanding and the will. The most natural is that of the understanding, [...] but the most common [...] is that of the will.

circa 1658

Knowledge kills action; for action, the mirage of illusion is necessary — this is what Hamlet teaches us.

1872

It is quite certain that we never know anything but our perceptions, and that we never see anything in this world but our own ideas [...].

1805

Carlo Crivelli

Saint George

Saint George

1472

If we could trace all primitive nouns back to their source, we would find that there is no abstract noun that does not derive from some adjective or verb.

1746

There is nothing superfluous (except for the overly delicate).

1574

What, indeed, is more fortunate than to be able [...] to converse with the most eloquent characters, with the best people who ever lived?

45 BC

I esteem a man whose self-love [...] is so directed as to give him a concern for others and to make himself useful to society.

1751

David Teniers the Younger

Peasants Dancing and Feasting

Peasants Dancing and Feasting

ca. 1660

This idea of unity [...] was, in fact, very widespread, especially in the smaller states.

1851-1852

Congress shall make no law relative to the establishment of a religion, or to prohibit one; nor may it restrict the freedom of speech or of the press.

1835-1840

Oh, how contrary are the wishes of those who love us, and all the more so when they are granted!

63-64 AD

Is there not for man what the race is for the horse [...]? Is there not honesty, loyalty, justice?

c. 108 AD

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

God, my soul needs the flesh to hide its shame, the flesh that eats and sleeps, without future and without past.

1968

Through irony, one makes a jest for one's own sake, while the buffoon is concerned with another.

329-323 BC

Wisdom knows how to effortlessly bring together all conditions and all ages [...].

1746

Do all souls form a single soul?

c. 253-270 AD

Greek Artist, Laconian

Lead figure of a goddess with spear and aegis, possibly Athena

Lead figure of a goddess with spear and aegis, possibly Athena

6th–5th century BCE

Just as rest clarifies water, so it enlightens the vital spirits, among them intelligence.

4th century BC

In the pilgrimage of this life, man finds everywhere the opportunity to learn and subjects for meditation.

1609

A moral necessity has meaning and value only in relation to a threat of punishment or a promise of reward.

1840

The great and unfortunate errors [...] on the matter of government, have arisen [...] from the fact that these different powers have been confounded.

1690

Edouard Manet

The "Kearsarge" at Boulogne

The "Kearsarge" at Boulogne

1864