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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

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The only habit a child should be allowed to form is to contract none [...].

1762

If one likes to imagine a man flying in the air [...], it does not follow from this alone that the man can indeed fly. Thus, thoughts [...] are not realities.

c. 350 B.C.E.

Man, without wanting to, without knowing it, creates God in his human image: later this created God creates, wanting to, knowing it, the universe and man.

1841

This movement [...] follows as necessarily from the disposition of the organs alone [...] as does that of a clock from the force, situation, and shape of its counterweights and wheels.

1637

Vincent van Gogh

La Berceuse (Woman Rocking a Cradle; Augustine-Alix Pellicot Roulin, 1851–1930)

La Berceuse (Woman Rocking a Cradle; Augustine-Alix Pellicot Roulin, 1851–1930)

1889

Little by little, the people grow accustomed to irreverence towards the magistrate, [...] learn to disobey willingly, and let themselves be led by the bait of liberty, or rather license, which is the sweetest and most tantalizing poison in the world.

c. 1552-1553

The predicaments belong to the first operation of the intellect, in which there is no composition by being, nor any division by non-being.

c. 1270

Wherever the law, without force, cannot protect the weak from the powerful, opulence can be seen as a means of escaping injustice [...].

1772

When one is wicked enough to commit a dark deed, one should not have the cowardice to deny it.

1765-1769

Roman Artist

Spoon or ligula

Spoon or ligula

670 BCE - 330 CE

The unity and simplicity of this concept would easily make one forget what a long series of obstacles had to be overcome to achieve it.

1663

[Some] perish for having preferred what they should have feared to what could not harm them.

c. 108 AD

...when one had bought it, one still had to give money to prevent it from being sold to others.

1776

Two empires are in relation to one another as two individuals in the state of nature.

1677

Bernardo Daddi

The Assumption of the Virgin

The Assumption of the Virgin

ca. 1337–39

There is a word without words... Sometimes there is no need for words...

4th century BC

Forgetting the past, banishing the worries of the future, let us enjoy the present; in each moment of our existence, let us seize this good, over which fate and fortune cannot exercise their whims.

1742

One does not refute Christianity; one does not refute a disease of the eyes.

1888

The chief defect of all hitherto existing materialism [...] is that the thing, reality, [...] is conceived only in the form of the object or of contemplation, but not as concrete human activity, not as practice.

1841

Unknown Artist

Buckle

Buckle

7000 BCE - 330 CE

Needs are arranged in pairs of opposites, and must be combined in a balance. Man needs food, but also an interval between meals; he needs warmth and coolness, rest and exercise.

1943

Democracy there is less a regular form of government than a weapon that has been habitually used to destroy [...] the old society.

1864-1866

The present time is always [...] the disciple of the preceding time, and [...] we are moved today by the habits [...] acquired under the old social order.

1797-1798

[...] the harsher a law is, the less it is applied.

1926

Francesco Guardi

Fantastic Landscape

Fantastic Landscape

ca. 1765

Who does not see, in these sublime counsels, the language of enthusiasm, of hyperbole? Are these marvelous counsels not made to discourage man, and to cast him into despair?

1766

[The victor] rendered liberty to all nations and to all cities.

100-120 AD

If understanding in general is defined as the faculty of conceiving rules, judgment will be the faculty of subsuming under rules, that is, of deciding whether something falls under a given rule or not.

1781

In a civil dissension, [...] votes should be weighed, not counted.

54-51 BC

French Painter

Marquis de Lafayette (1757–1834)

Marquis de Lafayette (1757–1834)

1785

Financial embarrassment = bankruptcy.

1830-1831

Hatred and envy depart with life, and it is especially among the dead that they cease.

c. 387 BC

Humanity has never done without religion. It is therefore likely that [...] religion was the raison d'être of the fabulatory function.

1932

What a pity, what a poverty of thought, to have said that beasts are machines, deprived of knowledge and feeling!

1764

Cypriot artist

Bronze axe head

Bronze axe head

ca. 2500–1900 BCE

The more defined beliefs and practices are, the less room they leave for individual differences.

1893

Others, on the contrary, go running after the most minute details, which have no influence on the substance of actions.

1623

The more necessary vice is, the more it is vice; nothing in the world is more vicious than that which, by its nature, is incapable of being good.

1746

Above all these gods reigns the God par excellence, the absolute Good, principle of all that is divine, source of the divinity of the other gods.

c. 253-270 AD

Roman Artist

Bronze jug

Bronze jug

late 1st–2nd century CE

One should never give full consent except to propositions that appear so evidently true that one cannot refuse it to them without feeling an inner pain and secret reproaches from reason.

1674-1675

To cure the ills of the people, a few words suffice; the sword must be used to root out those of princes.

1855

Adversity only breaks the souls that prosperity has deceived.

42-43 AD

A beautiful retreat in war brings as much honor as a proud attack.

1636

Théodore Chassériau

Scene in the Jewish Quarter of Constantine

Scene in the Jewish Quarter of Constantine

1851

All this amounts to saying that all bodies whose parts are only mechanically united are not substances, but only machines or aggregates of several substances.

1686

The 'power of the people over themselves' does not express the true state of the case; [...] self-government [...] is not the government of each by himself, but of each by all the rest.

1859

The essential role of [the soul] is to master our passions.

1580

Men, [...] being all naturally free, equal, and independent, no one can be removed from this state and subjected to the political power of another without his own consent.

1690

Roman Artist

Bronze tweezers

Bronze tweezers

1st–2nd century CE