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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

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The entire occupation of kings [...] relates to only two objects: to extend their domination abroad, and to make it more absolute within.

1762

Only he who transforms himself remains my kinsman.

1886

[He] saw all these adventures with a cool head.

1759

If I were to say more, it would amount to a compliment, and we have banished that enemy of sweet and easy conversations.

1643-1662

Raphael (Raffaello Sanzio or Santi)

The Agony in the Garden

The Agony in the Garden

ca. 1504

Financial embarrassment = bankruptcy.

1830-1831

One gains public esteem through some extraordinary and brilliant action [...] the outcome of which covers you with glory and honor.

1513-1519

One can certainly offer a limited understanding a supply of rules [...], but the student must already possess the faculty to use them correctly himself.

1781

He who knows how to think, reigns visibly or invisibly over all those who only know how to speak or act.

1609

Greek Artist

Marble grave relief with a funerary banquet and departing warriors

Marble grave relief with a funerary banquet and departing warriors

2nd century BCE

The most shameful reproach is to be accused of having a philosophy of words, not of deeds.

63-64 AD

Does it not seem to you that I have been preparing for it all my life? [...] By living without committing the slightest injustice, which is, in my eyes, the most beautiful way to prepare a defense.

4th century BC

Why are celibacy, fasting, macerations, self-denial, humility [...] and all monastic virtues rejected by all sensible men? It is because they lead to nothing.

1751

I cannot grant that sin or evil is something positive, much less that anything could exist or happen against the will of God.

1661-1676

Etruscan artist

Bronze bowl from a thymiaterion (incense burner)

Bronze bowl from a thymiaterion (incense burner)

late 4th century BCE

Whoever knows anything, knows above all things that he need not look far for examples of his Ignorance.

1689

I persist in thinking that man's thought consists only in feeling sensations, memories, judgments, and desires.

1801

We must seek methods of work [...] that stimulate the highest motives in workers [...] and give them maximum freedom without undermining order.

1934-1942

However, I fear—the meeting must have been a stormy one.

1926

Raphael (Raffaello Sanzio or Santi)

Madonna and Child Enthroned with Saints

Madonna and Child Enthroned with Saints

ca. 1504

Providence is evidently the conviction that man has of the infinite value of his existence; it is religious idealism.

1841

If quickness of mind alone should not command in chief, it can at least command in second.

1636

The revolution [...] made the middle class a theoretically predominant class; [...] but, in practice, the supremacy of this class was far from being established.

1851-1852

It would be useful for those who engage in inventing new machines if they knew nothing more of this matter than what I have just written about it [...].

1637

Cypriot artist

Standing female figurine

Standing female figurine

ca. 600–480 BCE

Universal Providence consists in the universe being in conformity with Intelligence, and Intelligence being anterior to the universe, [...] not in time, [...] but because Intelligence precedes by its nature the world which proceeds from it.

c. 253-270 AD

A bad example is the most pernicious doctrine [...] for the indiscreet populace, who thinks that whatever evil is done and suffered is permissible.

c. 1552-1553

What is a man's opinion? The one that is habitual to him; it is the hypothesis to which he always returns, and not the one from which he has never departed.

1745

Until the time of Socrates, philosophy was confined to physics: and it was he [...] who first, by taking it from the moral side, gave it entry into private homes.

45 BC

Etruscan artist

Bronze phiale (libation bowl) with four swinging handles

Bronze phiale (libation bowl) with four swinging handles

ca. 550 BCE

Every person maintains that equality is dictated by justice, unless they think that utility requires inequality.

1861

Here as elsewhere, what exists is the particular and the individual, and the general is only a schematic expression of it.

1893

[...] it is supposed that this natural union could not be approved by heaven if the ceremonies of a priest did not render it valid.

1766

In America, the majority draws a formidable circle around thought. Within these limits, the writer is free; but woe to him if he dares to step out of it.

1864-1866

Etruscan artist

Bronze thymiaterion (incense burner)

Bronze thymiaterion (incense burner)

ca. 325–275 BCE

The ease of recalling a complex memory would be [...] in direct proportion to the tendency of its elements to spread out on the same plane of consciousness.

1919

[The gladiators never let] slip a word showing weakness or imploring pity, turn their back, or make even a movement that could make them suspected of cowardice.

1580

He who has not gotten to the bottom of things, however ancient he may be, is not in my eyes an authority [...].

4th century BC

We are, so to speak, innate to ourselves, and since we are beings, being is innate to us; and the knowledge of being is enveloped in the knowledge we have of ourselves.

1704

Cypriot artist

Bes

Bes

1st century BCE–1st century CE

If, indeed, there were an infinite body, [...] this body would not be in 'where' (ubi).

c. 1270

One must work without cease not to be mistaken, since one wishes without cease to be delivered from one's miseries.

1674-1675

When we believe attention is difficult to bear, it is because we mistake the fatigue of boredom and impatience for the fatigue of application.

1758

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

Unknown Artist

Ornament, flower-shaped mount for stone base

Ornament, flower-shaped mount for stone base

7000 BCE - 330 CE

If you long for a crown, take one of roses and place it on your head: it will surely be more graceful to behold.

c. 108 AD

What is presumption in the weak, is elevation in the strong.

1746

Where there are many well-to-do fortunes, there are far fewer revolutionary movements and dissensions.

c. 350 BCE

Nature gives us organs to warn us through pleasure of what we must seek, and through pain of what we must flee. But it stops there.

1754

Unknown Artist

Ear probe

Ear probe

7000 BCE - 330 CE