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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

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The fear shown by the new ministers in the face of the rebellious masses was such that any means seemed good to them, as long as it served to consolidate the shaken foundations of authority!

1851-1852

Love breathes [...] a dormant and covered fire that winter had concealed within our veins.

1546/1563

It is impossible that a feeling foreign and contradictory to human nature [...] could have, at all times, been tirelessly described by the genius of poets and could have excited in all men an unalterable sympathy.

1819

We are irritated by those who respond with irony when spoken to seriously, for irony is a form of contempt.

329-323 BC

Melchior d' Hondecoeter

Peacocks

Peacocks

1683

The social subordination of women stands out as an isolated fact in the midst of modern social institutions; it is the only relic of an old intellectual and moral world destroyed everywhere else [...].

1869

[It can happen] that the coachmen refuse to stop to pick up [passengers] on the route, even though there are still empty seats...

1662

[The cultivation of land] is a source that does not run dry. The more one draws from it, the more it grows. Such is the advantage of exploiting the land over exploiting mines.

1776

A good [leader] never has weapons that are too short; what they lack in length, their bravery knows how to supplement.

1636

Edgar Degas

Dancers, Pink and Green

Dancers, Pink and Green

ca. 1890

One can only think and write while sitting.

1888

Either he is well, or he is sick; but he is not sick, therefore he is well.

c. 1270

To act to please the world, [...] to study to be admired, to teach to get rich, to dress up in a disguise of goodness and equity [...] these are things I will never bring myself to do.

4th century BC

There is no one who does not desire to live in security and sheltered from fear, as much as possible; yet this situation is impossible as long as everyone can do everything as they please.

1670

Etruscan, Cerveteri

Terracotta antefix (roof tile) with head of a satyr

Terracotta antefix (roof tile) with head of a satyr

4th century BCE

Who then could you reasonably consider more just than a man who has adapted to his present fortune, to the point of never needing what belongs to others?

4th century BC

Virtue would not go far, if vanity did not keep it company.

1674-1675

What does it matter to you by which road you descend into the underworld? They are all of equal worth.

c. 108 AD

All legally practical principles must contain rigorous truths, and [...] they can never admit of exceptions, for these would destroy the universality to which alone they owe their name as principles.

1797

Roman Artist, Cypriot

Limestone cippus of Philon

Limestone cippus of Philon

ca. 2nd–3rd century CE

The more we are preoccupied with living, the less we are inclined to look, and [...] the necessities of action tend to limit the field of vision.

1911

It is by faith that Enoch was taken up, so that he should not see death; and he was no longer seen, because the Lord had transported him.

1764

Whether it be men, duty, or even necessity that commands, when my heart is silent, my will remains deaf, and I cannot obey.

1776-1778

Besides, if he wanted to live as an honest man, he would have to do two things equally difficult at his age: learn much and forget much.

81 BC

Jacques Charlier

Leda and the Swan, after Boucher

Leda and the Swan, after Boucher

1800

[The Devil] is the lynchpin of the Church. God could with a single word plunge him back into nothingness, but He is careful not to, He needs him too much, to blame on him all the foolishness of which He could be accused.

1768

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

1746

Woman, even in extreme civilization, is always much more natural than man, much closer to life, more physical, in a word.

1926

Happiness consists in rest and in pleasure, it is a state of ease and contentment: happiness flees from vigils; it abhors cares and fatigues.

1742

Massimo Stanzione

Judith with the Head of Holofernes

Judith with the Head of Holofernes

ca. 1640

A duty can be contained and moderated by another duty, but not by purely economic necessities.

1893

[The language of animals] is entirely composed of propositions, of statements of judgments, and it never contains simple names of ideas.

1803

This irreducible 'I' which is the irreducible foundation of my suffering, to make it universal.

1947

Such thoughts leave no room in the soul for any sordid, base, or cruel inclination.

63-64 AD

Etruscan artist

Bronze helmet attachment

Bronze helmet attachment

late 6th century BCE

It has always been very risky [...] to allow soldiers entry as soon as the surrender is obtained.

1580

To try always to conquer myself rather than fortune, and to change my desires rather than the order of the world.

1637

Man is upright or virtuous when, without any base and servile motive [...], he compels all his passions to conspire for the general good of his species.

1745

The Roman Empire [...] turned its arms against itself, less because of the ambition of its leaders [...] than because of the avarice and licentiousness of the soldiers, who drove them out one after another, as one nail drives out another.

100-120 AD

Louis Marie Sicardi

Portrait of a Man

Portrait of a Man

ca. 1780

If the best way to avoid the plague is to have joy, the mere presence of my lover is enough to make it bloom in my heart.

1527

The Christian heaven or personal immortality.

1841

How can one apply this calculus to conjectural matters? I answer that it is as Messrs. Pascal, Huygens, and others have given demonstrations concerning chance (alea).

1686

The most skilled people are the least decisive.

1689

Netherlandish (Antwerp) Painters

The Rest on the Flight into Egypt

The Rest on the Flight into Egypt

1530

The same cause that makes a child a screamer at three makes him rebellious at twelve, quarrelsome at twenty, imperious at thirty, and unbearable his whole life.

1772

The river Lethe is this union with the body that makes the soul forget its true nature.

c. 253-270 AD

[In a time of transition,] obedience loses its morality in the eyes of the one who obeys; [...] he submits to it as a degrading and useful fact.

1835-1840

Civil history [...] by its importance and authority, holds the first rank among human writings.

1623

Cypriot artist

Buckle

Buckle

3900 BCE - 100 CE