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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

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In revolution as in war, it is of the utmost necessity to risk everything at the decisive moment, whatever the risks may be.

1851-1852

Often what pleases them one day, displeases them the next; whatever efforts they make, it is not in their power to recall their past inclinations [...].

1742

If this republic that we dream of for ourselves is not to be found, then rest becomes a necessity for us all.

c. 62-65

When a certain number of people have agreed [...] to form a community [...], they make up a single political body, in which the majority has the right to decide and to act.

1690

Cypriot artist

Limestone statuette of a male votary (worshipper)

Limestone statuette of a male votary (worshipper)

mid-6th century BCE

The relation of the cerebral state to representation may well be that of the screw to the machine, that is, of the part to the whole.

1919

The soul can only see and feel in general through the medium of a body: for, when it is completely separated from the body, it lives in the intelligible world.

c. 253-270 AD

My reverie had been consumed by the lamp of winter's wells...

1926

An intimate society between people who are radically different from each other is a pure reverie. Difference may attract, but it is resemblance that retains.

1869

Giuseppe Abbati

A Man Seated and Asleep

A Man Seated and Asleep

ca. 1865

One can [...] call aversion a negative desire, hatred a negative love, ugliness a negative beauty, blame a negative praise.

1763

The mind must judge all things according to its inner lights, without listening to the false and confused testimony of its senses and its imagination.

1674-1675

Our sensibility, like any other object, manifests itself to us only through its effects. To trace back to its causes, we must first know it, and to know it, we must study its effects.

1817

The purpose of our foundation is to know the causes [...] and the secret virtues that nature contains [...]; to give to the empire of the human mind all the extension it can have.

1627

Greek Artist, Attic

Marble statue of a kouros (youth)

Marble statue of a kouros (youth)

ca. 590–580 BCE

[...] one cannot conceive of a Christian republic, one of these two words excluding the other. Christianity preaches only servitude and dependence.

1762

Consciousness, or the feeling of the self, proves a moral or personal identity.

1704

Naturally [the servant and the master] are not inferior to one another; they only become so momentarily by the effect of the contract.

1835-1840

The man whose heart is alive acts upon other living hearts, like the sun which gives life to the world.

4th century BC

Anthony van Dyck

Study Head of a Young Woman

Study Head of a Young Woman

ca. 1618–20

The harmony of these two attributes [judgment and spirit] is essential for great men, to provide them with [...] resources that are both certain and prompt.

1636

Everyone is biased to think that their feeling is the measure of others'. They do not believe that one can take pleasure in a thing that gives them none.

1755

One can only regard [he who is inspired by God] as the blind instrument of divine omnipotence.

1855

The finest renown [...] does not have the gift of immortality, it perishes with men and is extinguished in the oblivion of posterity.

54-51 BC

Roman Artist

Bronze statuette of Minerva

Bronze statuette of Minerva

2nd century CE

The necessary existence of God must be concluded from his [true] definition.

1661-1676

One came to command by favor of his reputation [...], the other arrived there, despised because of his previous position.

100-120 AD

Those who, without caring for the order and connection of the reasons, will amuse themselves by quibbling over each of the parts [...] will not profit much from the reading.

1641

To die proudly when it is no longer possible to live proudly.

1888

Greek Artist

Limestone head of a girl

Limestone head of a girl

3rd century BCE

I always call reason that appearance of discourse which everyone forges in himself: this reason [...] is an instrument of lead and wax, stretchable, pliable, and adaptable to all biases and all measures.

1580

No one is more hated than he who speaks the truth.

c. 375 BC

All particular motives are errors. The energy that is not supplied by any motive is the only good one [...].

1947

The dogma of the Trinity therefore requires man to think the opposite of what he imagines and to imagine the opposite of what he thinks [...].

1841

Johannes Lingelbach

Peasants Dancing

Peasants Dancing

1651

One is nowhere as well hidden as in a crowd.

1893

If I knew it was my destiny to be sick, I would go towards the sickness of my own accord.

c. 108 AD

A hundred times I wanted to kill myself, but I still loved life.

1759

The censure of the wicked is an approval of our life; it is a clear sign that we are beginning to have some justice when we begin to displease those who do not please God.

1263-1264

Cypriot artist

Limestone statuette of a male votary with Cypriot shorts and a diadem

Limestone statuette of a male votary with Cypriot shorts and a diadem

early 6th century BCE

A sovereign can shower his favorite with riches, but he cannot give him knowledge or virtue.

1773

True politicians know men better than those who make a profession of philosophy; I mean that they are truer philosophers.

1746

[...] irrational beings (animals, consequently) are things, and should be treated as means that are not at the same time ends. [...] I say that such thoughts are odious and abominable.

1840

There is an internal war in man between reason and the passions.

1670

Matthijs Naiveu

The Newborn Baby

The Newborn Baby

1675

What is reason? And what is right reason?

4th century BC

These swallows that go [...] are the messengers of spring.

1546/1563

Holy water [...] possesses, according to them, the most astonishing virtues; it makes sacred the places and things that were previously profane.

1766

In any country where the powerless law cannot protect the weak from the strong, one seeks wealth and positions [...] as a means of escaping oppression.

1772

Luca di Tommè di Nuto

Madonna and Child

Madonna and Child

ca. 1360–65