Favorites About

Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

Français

The will is but a desire that is not fought, that has its object in its power, or at least believes it has [...].

1746

The apostles agree on religion itself, but they are far from agreeing on its foundations.

1670

The time that is no more is ours, and nothing is in a safer place than that which has been.

63-64 AD

Be that as it may, you have examined a very important truth for those who research natural things, and by this examination, have obliged the public, and me in particular [...].

1653-1662

Vittore Carpaccio

The Meditation on the Passion

The Meditation on the Passion

ca. 1490

Perhaps [...] it is out of benevolence that the god grants me [...] to end my life not only at the most suitable time, but in the least painful way.

4th century BC

The desire to love the beauty of the world in a human being is essentially the desire for the Incarnation. It is by mistake that it believes itself to be something else.

1942

The man is nothing, the work is everything.

1888

When ambition [...] sought to retain and increase power, without caring to consider for what end it had been committed, it was thought necessary to examine [...] the origin and rights of government.

1690

Christoffel van den Berghe

A Winter Landscape with Ice Skaters and an Imaginary Castle

A Winter Landscape with Ice Skaters and an Imaginary Castle

ca. 1615–20

[...] languages are as necessary for thinking as for speaking, for having ideas as for expressing them.

1801

Neither the reminders of our past life proved anything: someone could have discovered our secrets.

1926

The only collective sentiments that have become more intense are those whose object is not social things, but the individual.

1893

It is [April's] gentle hand that, from nature's bosom, releases a harvest of scents and flowers [...].

1546/1563

William Etty

The Three Graces

The Three Graces

1807

Works [of art] are mirrors; when a monkey looks into them, they cannot reflect the features of an apostle.

1851

The material interest of the bourgeoisie [...] is intimately interwoven with the maintenance of this extensive and intricate [state] machinery. It is here that it finds posts for its surplus population [...].

1851/1852

The lie [...] is properly the corrupted point in human nature.

1796

People who are not afraid, in times of revolution, are like princes in the army; they make a great impression with very ordinary actions, because the particular position they occupy naturally sets them apart from the crowd.

1893

Greek Artist

Head of a Black African youth

Head of a Black African youth

7000 BCE - 30 BCE

The creation of the world means that it is but a phantom, a nullity. With the beginning of a thing, its end is also necessarily posited.

1841

The syllogism is a discourse in which, certain principles having been laid down [...], a result must follow from what has been laid down and agreed upon.

c. 1270

The soul, purified of all evil and reunited with the Father, would be eternally sheltered from the evils of this world.

c. 253-270 AD

There must be only one element, and one and the same matter, for all the qualities that change into one another.

c. 350 B.C.E.

British Painter

A Man with the Initials RH

A Man with the Initials RH

1775

The markets make the law for the government.

1776

There is no longer a contradiction between freedom and necessity, between idealism and realism.

17th century

All deliberations [...] shall be decided by the minority of members present; [...] those who obtain the fewest votes shall always be the ones who prevail.

16th century

Aristotle [...] recognizes [Zeno of Elea] as the inventor of dialectics.

45 BC

Roman Artist

Colossal marble head of the emperor Augustus

Colossal marble head of the emperor Augustus

ca. 14–30 CE

Men are not content with the obedience of women, they arrogate to themselves a right over their feelings. [...] they neglect nothing to enslave their minds.

1869

The principle of the need for a sufficient reason for a thing to exist, for an event to happen, for a truth to obtain. Is this a principle that needs proof?

1715-1716

A man who has learned to divest himself even of his personality can travel the entire world without experiencing conflict.

4th century BC

She was charmed by a man who made conversation with her, and who doubted everything.

1766

Etruscan artist

Bronze patera (shallow bowl with handle)

Bronze patera (shallow bowl with handle)

late 4th–early 3rd century BCE

What am I then? A living being endowed with reason. Now, what is asked of such a being?

c. 108 AD

If by some enchantment I suddenly found you beside me, there are moments when I could die of joy.

1759-1774

One must save the sharpness and brilliance of the mind for subjects that deserve it, just as the lion reserves its efforts for dangers worthy of it.

1636

[...] man takes pleasure in discovering an unexpected resemblance between things that seemed disparate, in which consists the excellence of imagination [...].

1772

Cypriot artist

Limestone head of a female votary

Limestone head of a female votary

late 1st century BCE(?)

we will fulfill all the duties that humanity inspires in us.

1627

Often, far above our heads, we see a beautiful village; and beneath our feet, as if at the Antipodes, another [...]. It does not seem to me that any painting can represent such a rich landscape.

1774

Placed back in the evolution of life, [instinct and intelligence] appear as two divergent and complementary activities.

1932

[We must distinguish] possession, which is merely the effect of force [...], from property, which can be founded only on a positive title.

1762

Roman Artist

Top of a marble funerary relief with portrait busts of a young man and an elderly woman

Top of a marble funerary relief with portrait busts of a young man and an elderly woman

ca. 138–141 CE

Truth is only perceived and generated in the fermentation of contrary opinions.

1758

It is not our senses that deceive us, but our will that deceives us through its hasty judgments.

1674-1675

The rampart that protected his life, the instrument that made his success, was his eloquence...

100-120 AD

There is nothing which is, in itself, beautiful or ugly, worthy of love or hatred [...] these different qualifications depend solely on the sentiments and affections of each man [...].

1742

Greek Artist

Terracotta statuette of an actor

Terracotta statuette of an actor

late 5th–early 4th century BCE