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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

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In each of us [...] there exist two beings [...]. One is the individual being. The other is [...] the social being. To constitute this being in each of us, such is the end of education.

1922

Must we therefore entrust the practice of all virtues of this class to the sure, though blind, instinct of feeling and taste?

1751

By natural reason alone, we can indeed make many conjectures to our advantage and have fine hopes, but by no means any assurance.

1643-1649

As the state of society becomes democratic, [...] the power of opinion exercised by the father over his sons becomes less great, as does his legal power.

1835-1840

Roman Artist

Marble cornice fragment

Marble cornice fragment

2nd century CE

As long as one desires, one can do without being happy; one expects to become so: if happiness does not come, hope is prolonged [...].

1761

Especially in winter, when the days are short, [...] one does not dare to venture to come and go through the streets, for lack of light.

1662

How has this stubborn will to serve become so deeply rooted that it now seems that the very love of liberty is not so natural.

c. 1552-1553

The just man is one who, in his relations with others, wants only equality.

4th century BC

Cypriot artist

Seated goddess (Aphrodite?)

Seated goddess (Aphrodite?)

4th–3rd century BCE

Who can be happier than the one who only does what pleases them?

1741-1784

A religion that was clear would soon be finished; our sacred interpreters would have nothing to tell us if God had spoken too clearly.

1768

The face of the entire universe, which remains always the same, although it changes in an infinity of ways.

1661-1676

Enjoy your happiness, your glory, and above all the goodness of your character: for the wise, there is no sweeter reward [...].

46 BC

Carlo Crivelli

Madonna and Child

Madonna and Child

ca. 1480

The development of the State exhausts the country. The State eats the country's moral substance, lives on it, fattens itself on it, until the food runs out, which reduces it to languor through starvation.

1943

Others hastily stitch together small accounts and small commentaries, from which they form a fabric full of inequalities.

1623

[...] heat is the cause of heating.

c. 1270

To bring a being into the world solely for it to be there, without subjective passion, [...] deliberately and in cold blood, would be a very questionable moral action.

1851

Roman Artist, Cypriot

Limestone cippus of Philon

Limestone cippus of Philon

ca. 2nd–3rd century CE

One only succeeds on the condition of letting one's nature act. Constraint prevents success.

4th century BC

To maintain one's conclusion, without proving it [...] I call that begging the question; which is entirely unworthy of a philosopher.

1715-1716

The common person says very well that one cannot do two things at once.

c. 108 AD

The two hypotheses are equivalent for the mathematician. But the same is not true for the philosopher.

1922

Greek Artist

Bronze hydria (water jar)

Bronze hydria (water jar)

early 4th century BCE

[...] all our knowledge consists only in our judgments.

1803

Hegel remarks somewhere that all great world-historic facts and personages appear, so to speak, twice. He forgot to add: the first time as tragedy, the second time as farce.

1851/1852

God placed the soul in the world so that, seeing the evils of which matter is the principle, it might return to the Father and be forever freed from such contagion.

c. 253-270 AD

It is not individuals, but the species alone that can reach this goal.

1797-1798

Etruscan artist

Bronze bowl from a thymiaterion (incense burner)

Bronze bowl from a thymiaterion (incense burner)

late 4th century BCE

This word [great] has, at the very least, only a relative meaning. It is impossible to measure it once and for all.

1926

Old discoveries do not stand in the way of new ones.

63-64 AD

The dogma of the Trinity therefore requires man to think the opposite of what he imagines and to imagine the opposite of what he thinks [...].

1841

If we were to make smells, tastes, and sounds succeed one another in her, she would see herself as a color that is successively fragrant, savory, and sonorous.

1754

Roman Artist, Egyptian

Terracotta statuette of Harpocrates

Terracotta statuette of Harpocrates

2nd century CE

God [...] will judge us on our actions, and not on our understanding of the Hebrew language.

1763

No one was seen so beaten by wounds that he did not try in his last breath to take revenge still [...] and console his own death in the death of an enemy.

1580

Today the victory was in the hands of the enemies, if they had had a leader who knew how to win.

100-120 AD

There is scarcely any absurdity or mischief which may not be made to act on the human mind with all the authority of conscience.

1861

Camille Pissarro

The Public Garden at Pontoise

The Public Garden at Pontoise

1874

Even misfortune has its charms in great extremities; for this opposition of fortune elevates a courageous spirit, and makes it gather all its forces which it was not using.

1746

Our circle [...] resembles a lost thing: poor frightened birds, the same dovecote no longer gathers us.

1513-1527

Riches and dignities are [...] the only goods visible to all eyes, the only ones reputed to be true goods, and are universally desired.

1758

This power [to punish] is not absolute and arbitrary [...], it is to inflict on him the penalties that calm reason and pure conscience naturally dictate and ordain, penalties proportionate to his fault.

1690

Bernardo Daddi

The Assumption of the Virgin

The Assumption of the Virgin

ca. 1337–39

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

1636

The best way to defend the truth [...] is not to argue, for in the end it is better [...] to leave [false scholars] in their errors than to attract their aversion.

1674-1675

[To make a] critique of philosophy as a nihilistic movement.

1888

Why be surprised [...] if divinity judges it more advantageous for me to leave this life at this very moment?

4th century BC

Greek Artist, South Italian, Tarentine

Terracotta appliqué

Terracotta appliqué

3rd century BCE