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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

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Our character is still us [...].

1889

In all difficult moral questions [...], I have always found it best to resolve them by the dictates of my conscience, rather than by the light of my reason.

1776-1778

One finds [...] the fundamental, insurmountable antagonism between the mindset of the artist and that of the politician.

1896

As man is the best of animals when perfected, so he is the worst of all when separated from law and justice.

c. 350 BCE

Francesco Guardi

Santa Maria della Salute

Santa Maria della Salute

mid- to late 1760s

Heresy is a separation [...] among men who profess the same religion, because of certain dogmas that are not contained in their rule.

1686

We [...] beseech, in the most urgent manner, to meet our expectations.

1498

Freed from the fear of laws or reprisals, man's injustices have no other measure than that of his power.

1772

If to have liberty it is necessary only to desire it, if only a simple act of will is needed, will there be any nation in the world that still deems it too expensive [...]?

c. 1552-1553

Roman Artist

Marble bust of a bearded man

Marble bust of a bearded man

ca. 150–175 CE

Convinced that the only way to recover from all the evils caused by the civil wars was the authority of one man, they named him perpetual dictator.

100-120 AD

An imperfect reason is far above an absence of reason.

1746

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

c. 1270

Often the Americans call a laudable industry what we name the love of gain, and they see a certain faintness of heart in what we consider the moderation of desires.

1835-1840

Jan van der Heyden

The Huis ten Bosch at The Hague and Its Formal Garden (View from the South)

The Huis ten Bosch at The Hague and Its Formal Garden (View from the South)

ca. 1668–70

[Nature] leaves to experience the task of making us form habits, and of completing the work it has begun.

1754

Infinitely small is that by which he is still a man; infinitely great is that by which he is one with heaven.

4th century BC

The more terrible the god, the more docile and submissive we are to his ministers.

1757

[Evil] consists in privation, that is, in what the efficient cause does not do. This is why the Scholastics used to call the cause of evil deficient.

c. 253-270 AD

Cypriot artist

Terracotta plank-shaped figurine

Terracotta plank-shaped figurine

ca. 2000–1800 BCE

Sharp minds are those who notice by reason the slightest differences in things [...]. But weak minds have only a false delicacy; they are neither quick nor piercing.

1674-1675

The more perfect a thing is, the more it partakes of the Divinity and the more it expresses its perfections.

1661-1676

What troubles [...] the years of youth [...] is the hunt for happiness, undertaken on the firm assumption that it can be found in life. This is the source of ever-disappointed hope, which in turn breeds discontent.

1851

At the same time as domestic obligations become more numerous, they take on [...] a public character.

1893

Paul Ranson

Woman Standing Beside a Balustrade with a Poodle

Woman Standing Beside a Balustrade with a Poodle

ca. 1895

Wit, more often than fortune, comes to us while we sleep.

1926

There is no possibility of satisfying a people's need for truth if one cannot find for this purpose men who love the truth.

1943

Most write only poor and popular accounts, which are the disgrace of history.

1623

Not only are these raindrops pure phenomena, but even their round shape and the very space in which they fall are nothing in themselves.

1781

Etruscan artist

Bronze phiale (libation bowl) with four swinging handles

Bronze phiale (libation bowl) with four swinging handles

ca. 550 BCE

The philosopher is to artists what a pentathlete is to a runner or a wrestler.

End of the 4th century BC

They are no longer friends, they are—what am I saying?—ghosts of friends!

1886

The less a man is fitted for the possession of power, [...] the more he congratulates himself on the power which the law gives him.

1869

The surest way to deceive men and to perpetuate their prejudices is to deceive them in childhood.

1766

Roman Artist

Marble relief fragment with the head of Mars

Marble relief fragment with the head of Mars

early 3rd century CE

Nature desires very little; opinion would have the infinite.

63-64 AD

To carefully examine the subject one wishes to know before passing judgment on it; and to know precisely what one wants to say about it before speaking of it.

1805

Can our new masters, whose glory is to have been born to enlighten and reform reason, decently reason like the rest of mortals?

1765

How common it is for a happy man to deceive himself about the immutability of his happiness!

1636

Greek Artist, Cypriot

Terracotta head of a woman

Terracotta head of a woman

late 4th–early 3rd century BCE

The democrat, because he represents an intermediate class, in which the interests of two classes are blunted, imagines himself elevated above class antagonism altogether.

1851/1852

Since it is necessary for man, superstitious by nature, to have a fetish, the simplest and most innocent fetish will be the best of all.

1741-1784

A craftsman who speaks of riches, a prosecutor who speaks of war [...]. But the rich man speaks well of riches, the king speaks coldly of a great gift he has just made, and God speaks well of God.

1670

I find the effort to endure evils very difficult, but to be content with a modest fortune and to shun greatness, I find very little difficulty in that.

1580

Sano di Pietro (Ansano di Pietro di Mencio)

Saint Bernardino

Saint Bernardino

ca. 1460–70

...philosophers were forbidden to teach in Athens.

45 BC

If we were afraid, not of death and exile, but of fear itself, it is fear that we would strive to avoid as an evil.

c. 108 AD

[...] it is not the pulley that causes this force, but only the movement of the rope which is double that of the weight [...].

1637

Geometric determinations imply an absolute necessity, the contrary of which implies contradiction, but Architectonic ones only imply a necessity of choice, the contrary of which implies imperfection.

1697

Cypriot artist

Limestone funerary stele with antithetical sphinxes

Limestone funerary stele with antithetical sphinxes

ca. 475–450 BCE