Favorites About

Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

Français

There is no one who is happy in all things.

329-323 BC

[The Senate] always made a sound judgment of things; it always regarded the least disastrous course of action as the best.

1513-1519

What is the use of seeking darkness, of fleeing the eyes and ears of others?

63-64 AD

It is not a flaw in a limited mind to not know certain things; it is only a flaw to judge them. Ignorance is a necessary evil, but one can and must avoid error.

1674-1675

Cypriot artist

Limestone funerary stele of a boy

Limestone funerary stele of a boy

3900 BCE - 100 CE

God is the efficient cause of things, of their essence as well as of their existence.

1661-1676

The most useful books are those of which the readers themselves make half.

1764

Christianity adds superfluous evils to inevitable evils, [...] bodily sufferings to sufferings of the soul, natural contrasts to unnatural contrasts.

1842-1845

Some have spoken all their lives without saying anything... Some, who were silent their whole lives, have spoken a great deal.

4th century BC

Nicolas Poussin

Orpheus and Eurydice

Orpheus and Eurydice

1650

It is clear that there is a great difference between sensation and thought.

1270

Philosophical historiography [...] must differentiate between the mole of true philosophical knowledge that never ceases its work and the chattering phenomenological consciousness [...] of the subject who is the receptacle and energy of these developments.

1841

There are a multitude of acts that have been or still are regarded as criminal, without being in themselves harmful to society.

1893

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

1546/1563

Antoine Vollon

Still Life with Cheese

Still Life with Cheese

probably late 1870s

At whatever price, one must subdue the affections of one's heart, [...] if one aspires to heroism.

1636

The last thing one finds when creating a work [...] is knowing what one must put first.

1663

Before experience, there are the conditions that make experience possible.

1900

Pusillanimity [...] having been unable to join the first act, enters the stage for the second: that of massacre and blood.

1580

Roman Artist

Bronze jug

Bronze jug

ca. 1st century BCE–1st century CE

[...] it is not the truth, it is the image that excites the passion: a well-acted tragedy affects as much as the sight of a murder.

1772

What is more rational than to see those who have worked for a thing have more of that thing for which they have worked?

c. 108 AD

Under the influence of contemplated truth, man now perceives everywhere only the horror and absurdity of existence.

1872

By this means [man] no more increases his knowledge than he increases his riches who, taking a bag of counters [...] names one a Crown, another a Pound [...] without however being richer by a mite.

1689

Roman Artist

Bronze statuette of an actor

Bronze statuette of an actor

ca. 1st–2nd century CE

I would rather die than slavishly beg for my life and be granted an existence far more dreadful than death.

4th century BC

Men do not always agree in their judgments on the utility of an action, or of a custom...

1751

It is with extravagant zeal and powerless efforts that men gather to perform intellectual work, expecting everything [...] from the superiority of genius.

1620

It seems to me rigorously proven that many judgments had to be made before a single articulated sign was created.

1801

Greek Artist, Attic

Marble stele (grave marker) of a woman

Marble stele (grave marker) of a woman

ca. 375–350 BCE

Why is it that men never make syllogisms to themselves when they are seeking the truth or teaching it to those who sincerely desire to know it?

1704

Praise is a tribute that youth willingly pays to merit, and which mature age will always refuse it.

1772

Why then is it a crime to be sensitive to merit, and to love what one must honor?

1761

The imagination may perhaps be excused if it sometimes raves [...]. But that the understanding, whose business it is to think, should instead rave, is something that can never be forgiven.

1783

Greek Artist, Cypriot

Arrowhead

Arrowhead

ca. 480–330 BCE

Ever since people have been writing about luxury, some have praised it, others have satirized it, and nothing is proven. This is because no one seeks to understand each other.

1776

One does not see [...] how a mode of production based on the subordination of those who execute to those who coordinate could fail to produce a social structure defined by the dictatorship of a bureaucratic caste.

1934-1942

His faith, very sincere in his later years, in no way prevented him from imagining, in words, the most beautiful blasphemies.

1926

Shame! The morality of Pariahs [...] which fails to recognize the eternal essence, present in all that has life, the essence which shines in every eye open to the light of the sun [...].

1840

Minoan

Steatite (?) pendant in the form of a bull's head

Steatite (?) pendant in the form of a bull's head

ca. 2200–1050 BCE

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

This very pathetic drama produced the usual effect of wringing the heart and causing abundant tears. There were as many handkerchiefs as spectators.

1758

Such is the blessed condition of the intelligible world that in doing nothing it does great things, and in remaining within itself it produces important works.

c. 253-270 AD

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

1746

Cypriot artist

Limestone statuette of Geryon

Limestone statuette of Geryon

probably early 5th century BCE

[One must] understand that [the salvation of all] is tied to [that of one], and that on the life of one depends the life of all citizens.

46 BC

Utility is the ultimate appeal on all ethical questions; but it must be utility in the largest sense, grounded on the permanent interests of man as a progressive being.

1859

Among the public men of democracies, there are hardly any but the very disinterested or the very mediocre who wish to decentralize power. The first are rare and the second are powerless.

1835-1840

I am on a continuous journey.

1643-1649

Bernardo Strozzi

Tobias Curing His Father's Blindness

Tobias Curing His Father's Blindness

1630–35