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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

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Imprudence [...] excites one to defend others, while one neither knows how nor is able to protect oneself from danger.

1513-1519

Syllogisms made from simple propositions are better understood than those made from compound propositions.

c. 1270

I am so bad a flatterer, that I am never more at ease than when I can freely give my opinion on the things that pass before our eyes.

1574

Each type of people has its own education, which can serve to define it in the same way as its moral, political, and religious organization.

1922

Matthijs Naiveu

The Newborn Baby

The Newborn Baby

1675

Precepts are not given to be practiced, but practice is prescribed for the understanding of precepts. They are scales.

1947

Any useless law [...] does not remedy any evil, and creates a new one, by providing a new opportunity to fail [...] in the respect due to public authority.

1797-1798

The best way to defend the truth [...] is not to argue, for in the end it is better [...] to leave [false scholars] in their errors than to attract their aversion.

1674-1675

It is customary to call youth the happy time, and old age the sad time of life. This would be true if the passions brought happiness.

1851

Bicci di Lorenzo

Saints John the Baptist and Matthew

Saints John the Baptist and Matthew

possibly 1433

One desires above all what is lacking.

329-323 BC

As for me, I will take the safest course [...] and will not make use of it.

1643-1649

[...] that is what has preserved our innocence and our felicity.

1759

I recognize this main difference between religion and superstition, that the latter is founded on ignorance and the former on wisdom.

1661-1676

Louis de Carmontelle

Madame la Comtesse de Boufflers and Thérèse

Madame la Comtesse de Boufflers and Thérèse

mid-1760s

After the freedom to act alone, the most natural to man is that of combining his efforts with the efforts of his fellow men and of acting in common.

1835-1840

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

1746

It takes great qualities to make a hero.

1636

Man is free when he exercises the faculty of the reasonable soul [...]. He is subject to necessity [...] when he exercises the faculties of the irrational soul and the body.

c. 253-270 AD

Greek Artist, Laconian

Statuette of a cock, 2?

Statuette of a cock, 2?

7000 BCE - 30 BCE

When men wish to solve riddles [...], their haste and impatience cause them to miss the solution.

1609

Listen to the protestations of men, there is nothing of which they are so assured as the truth of their religion. Look at their conduct: you will doubt they ever had any religion at all.

1757

There is a limit to the legitimate interference of collective opinion with individual independence: to find that limit [...] is as indispensable [...] as protection against political despotism.

1859

Public esteem is the only one worthy of envy, the only one desirable, since it is always a gift of public gratitude, and consequently the proof of a real merit.

1758

Etruscan artist

Patera

Patera

mid 6th century BCE

The artist triumphs over his faith, rises above it by making the objects of his faith objects of art.

1842-1845

An artist [...] only reaches the final summit of his greatness when he knows how to look down on himself and his art—when he knows how to laugh at himself.

1887

It is the constant tendency of capital to [...] prolong the working day as much as possible, because surplus labor, and [...] the profit derived from it, will increase.

1865

If no sobs can bring back to life what is no more; if destiny is immutable [...], let us cease a grief that would be fruitless.

37 AD - 41 AD

Etruscan artist

Bronze patera (salver)

Bronze patera (salver)

ca. 550 BCE

I am one of those over whom imagination has great sway. [...] I would gladly spend my life in the company of healthy and cheerful people.

1580

Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws.

c. 375 BC

[...] his soul, which is good, will win over his head; he will end up not replying to me, and loving me more.

1741-1784

[He] had that natural quality which, according to Plato, constitutes literary and philosophical aptitude: he was capable of embracing all sciences, and disdained no kind of study or literary knowledge.

100-120 AD

Pietro di Giovanni d'Ambrogio

Saint Nicholas of Bari

Saint Nicholas of Bari

mid-1430s

It seems to me that true love is the most chaste of all bonds.

1761

Nothing enters our mind from the outside, and it is a bad habit we have of thinking as if our soul received some messenger species and as if it had doors and windows.

1686

Displeasure is not simply a lack of pleasure; it is a positive cause that destroys [...] the pleasure resulting from another cause, which is why I call it a negative pleasure.

1763

Our character is still us [...].

1889

Roman Artist, Pompeian

Wall paintings on black ground:  from the imperial villa at Boscotrecase

Wall paintings on black ground: from the imperial villa at Boscotrecase

last decade of the 1st century BCE

The universal Propositions of which we can have certain knowledge of their truth or falsehood do not relate to existence.

1689

[...] wherever we believe it is important for us to know the truth [...], we never proceed lightly. But when it comes to the [...] cause of our happiness or our misfortune, [...] only then do we act lightly and at random!

c. 108 AD

It is false that we are worthy of others' love. It is unjust that we should want it.

1670

Books are but assemblies of words. Words convey ideas. But true ideas derive from a non-sensible principle, and can hardly be better expressed in words than it can.

4th century BC

Etruscan artist

Bronze thymiaterion (incense burner)

Bronze thymiaterion (incense burner)

ca. 325–275 BCE

In Religion, [duties] are those which are founded on the relations that exist between men and their Priests. From which we see that it is up to the Priests alone to determine the duties of a good Christian.

1768

Philosophers themselves have affected to be obscure. Each sect has had an interest in devising ambiguous or meaningless terms. It is by this means that they have sought to hide the weak points of so many systems.

1746

Debauchery has overcome modesty, audacity has overcome fear, delirium has overcome reason.

66 BC

It is not uncommon to see two old friends call each other scoundrels, but it is rare that they are not both right.

1926

Henry Fuseli

The Night-Hag Visiting Lapland Witches

The Night-Hag Visiting Lapland Witches

1796