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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

Français

...it is not the storm that torments me, but the seasickness.

49 to 62 A.D.

It is the characteristic of a great power to make evils themselves serve the accomplishment of its work, to use to produce other forms things that have become formless.

c. 253-270 AD

It seems to me that courage is the knowledge of what is to be feared and what is to be hoped for, both in war and in all other circumstances.

c. 380 BC

History shows [...] that, as a rule, administrative law is more developed the more societies belong to a higher type.

1893

Greek Artist

Painted limestone funerary slab with a soldier taking a kantharos from his attendant

Painted limestone funerary slab with a soldier taking a kantharos from his attendant

2nd half of 3rd century BCE

It is from the depths of imagination that [the system] of the universe has been drawn so far; [...] philosophers have only [...] truncated news of the world's system.

1758

If you want to wage war on a prince to whom you are bound by treaties, you will use an attack on one of his friends as a pretext.

1513-1519

One must not believe, therefore, that the universal Being [...] values a man more than an ant, a lion more than a stone.

17th century

Sacrifice is myself present in this body.

1942

Etruscan artist

Bronze statuette of a priest or offrant

Bronze statuette of a priest or offrant

3rd–1st century BCE

The objects surrounding my body reflect my body's possible action on them.

1896

Superstition and despotism thus made an eternal alliance, and united their efforts to make the people enslaved and unhappy.

1766

Upon due consideration of all these collective Ideas, [...] they are but artificial representations that the Mind draws.

1689

It is absolutely necessary that this world be connected without discontinuity [...] to the higher revolutions, so that its entire powerful order is governed by these revolutions.

c. 334 BC

Greek Artist, South Italian, Tarentine

Fragment of a terracotta relief of a woman and child

Fragment of a terracotta relief of a woman and child

mid-4th century BCE

The only way to advance the sciences is to separate them well, to first take each one apart as a whole, and only then to try to consider them in their union.

1793

Reasoned errors and truths spread from one to another [...] until they establish themselves as articles of faith.

1741-1784

The mechanism of all intelligence is quite simple [...]. A single primitive fact is inexplicable; all others are necessary consequences of it.

1805

This is when a man is unhappy; this is when his city is taken by assault [...]: it is when his true opinions are taken from him and destroyed.

c. 108 AD

Quirijn van Brekelenkam

The Spinner

The Spinner

1653

The only freedom which deserves the name, is that of pursuing our own good in our own way, so long as we do not attempt to deprive others of theirs [...].

1859

When one knows neither the human spirit nor the customs of nations, [...] one must know how to doubt, shake off the dust of the academy, and never express oneself with outrageous insolence.

1764

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

The straightest tree will be the first to be cut down. The well with the sweetest water will be the first to run dry. Your knowledge scares the ignorant, your enlightenment offends the fools.

4th century BC

Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione (Il Grechetto)

Saint Francis in Ecstasy

Saint Francis in Ecstasy

ca. 1650

The word of warriors [...] is subject to caution.

1580

When distant nations cannot have continuous trade with each other [...], value is assessed differently in each.

1776

Their nature is much easier to conceive when we see them gradually come into being in this way, than when we consider them only as already made.

1637

What makes a man worthy of envy is not being considered great by a public so incapable of judging [...], it is being great.

1851

Henri Fantin-Latour

Pansies

Pansies

1903

An imperfect reason is far above an absence of reason.

1746

The man of the world is entirely in his mask. Being almost never in himself, he is always a stranger there [...]. What he is, is nothing; what he appears to be is everything to him.

1762

Knowledge kills action; for action, the mirage of illusion is necessary — this is what Hamlet teaches us.

1872

The instrument compensates for the defect of ignorance [...], and through necessary movements, it performs by itself, without even the intention of its user, all possible shortcuts.

1642-1645

Greek Artist

Bronze handle

Bronze handle

late 5th century BCE

I am convinced that impudence and obstinacy are the companions of error: men who go astray give free rein to passion, without ever remaining in that state of reasonable suspension, which alone can protect them from the grossest absurdities.

1751

Exercise this soul in the most excellent functions. There are none higher than to watch over the salvation of the homeland.

54-51 BC

The science he needs is less that of Norms than that of pleasure; his ideal does not aim very high.

1926

Wherever there are men sensitive to passions, and where imagination is master of reason, there is strangeness, and an incomprehensible strangeness.

1674-1675

Italian, Lombard (probably Pavia)

Madonna and Child with Saint Catherine of Siena and a Carthusian Donor

Madonna and Child with Saint Catherine of Siena and a Carthusian Donor

ca. 1411–24

it was still better to fail in logic than to risk failing in humanity.

1864-1866

Man, without wanting to, without knowing it, creates God in his human image: later this created God creates, wanting to, knowing it, the universe and man.

1841

The true consists in being what it is and in not being what it is not; the false in being what it is not and in not being what it is.

c. 1270

Any man who enters a tyrant's house becomes his slave, though he came there a free man.

100-120 AD

Jean Antoine Laurent

Portrait of a Young Woman

Portrait of a Young Woman

ca. 1795

Montaigne is slightly mistaken...

c. 1552-1553

[A heroic heart] wanted no middle ground between All or Nothing.

1636

It is with extravagant zeal and powerless efforts that men gather to perform intellectual work, expecting everything [...] from the superiority of genius.

1620

I believe that dreams often renew old thoughts in this way.

1704

Cypriot artist

Limestone upper body of a woman

Limestone upper body of a woman

late 6th century BCE