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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

Français

A general proposition can never be the real cause of the truth of a particular proposition.

1805

It is not enough for man to be fit for all sorts of ends; he must also make it his maxim to choose only good ones.

1797-1798

It is ignorance which, even more barbarous than interest, has poured the most calamities upon the earth.

1758

God as a moral being or law.

1841

Greek Artist

Bronze handle of a hydria (water jar)

Bronze handle of a hydria (water jar)

4th century BCE

there is always some evil so closely linked to the good that it seems impossible to enjoy one without suffering the drawbacks of the other.

1855

The great business of mankind consists in action, and it is to action that all that is the subject of laws relates.

1689

Generally speaking, the psychological state seems to us, in most cases, to extend far beyond the cerebral state.

1896

Although two things may be perfectly similar, they do not cease to be two things.

1715-1716

Cypriot artist

Box, inscribed

Box, inscribed

3900 BCE - 100 CE

There is nothing so contrary to my style as a lengthy narrative. I cut myself off so often, for want of breath.

1580

Everything that exists necessarily has a positive cause through which it exists.

1661-1676

I am poor, but I have a just opinion of poverty; what does it matter to me then that I am pitied for my poverty!

c. 108 AD

It is these results of our practice that we would like to present here in their entirety and submit for discussion.

1895

Goya

A City on a Rock

A City on a Rock

1800

Where vice reigns so imperiously, it cannot be overstated, let us not believe that peace of mind and pleasure can dwell.

1746

Pulverize jade and pearls, and there will be no more thieves. Burn the contracts, break the seals, and men will become honest again.

4th century BC

The complete subordination of the worker to the enterprise [...] rests on the structure of the factory and not on the system of ownership.

1934

What, indeed, is more fortunate than to be able [...] to converse with the most eloquent characters, with the best people who ever lived?

45 BC

Cypriot artist

Copper alloy spearhead

Copper alloy spearhead

ca. 2500–2000 BCE

Man is extremely subject to error; the illusions of his senses, the visions of his imagination, and the abstractions of his mind deceive him at every moment.

1674-1675

Even while giving it a moderate length, [one can make] a war that is too crowded with varied incidents.

c. 335 BC

Only thoughts that come to you while walking are of any value.

1888

He who blames the whole of the world by considering only its parts is therefore unjust; he should examine the parts in their relation to the whole, to see if they are in accord and in harmony with it.

c. 253-270 AD

Cypriot artist

Chlorite pestle

Chlorite pestle

ca. 1600–1050 BCE

The world would be destroyed in the blink of an eye if God withdrew His regulating action from it.

1263-1264

Everything changes, nothing perishes.

1623

It is shameful to be a people-pleaser to acquire power; but an authority based on terror, violence, and oppression is both a shame and an injustice.

100-120 AD

This multiplication of ideas only produces obscurity, and serves only to make one lose sight of the main object.

1636

Henri-Edmond Cross (Henri-Edmond Delacroix)

Garden of the Painter at Saint Clair

Garden of the Painter at Saint Clair

1908

The whole mind is in action in the application of thought to an object.

17th century

Truth is simple and clear; the marvelous always announces falsehood.

1766

Goodness finds a thousand obstacles in large cities, where there is always a multitude of men interested in perpetuating evil.

1759-1774

As if it were not better to live a novel than to write one, as if, after all, to write a good novel, one did not first have to live it!

1926

Roman Artist

Bronze statuette of Minerva

Bronze statuette of Minerva

2nd century CE

The feeling fades in the end; but the sensitive soul always remains.

1761

Nothing allows us to say whether [one] was made based on [the other], or vice versa.

1643-1662

April, the grace, and the smile [...], the scent and the sweet breath.

1546/1563

The 'tyranny of the majority' is now generally included among the evils against which society is required to be on its guard.

1859

German Painter

Portrait of a Child

Portrait of a Child

1790

If a province believes itself richer because it has more money, it is [...] under an illusion.

1776

Let us never judge a man's morals by the fervor of his zeal [...]. The most enormous crimes are, on the contrary, very apt to give birth to religious terror, and to increase superstition.

1757

[It is] a liberty acquired by natural law, which is older than all human laws.

1766

The American crisis came and [...] wages, taken as a whole, were suddenly reduced to about a quarter of their previous amount. Did the price of wheat fall? No, it rose.

1865

Roman Artist

Bronze statuette of a camillus (attendant)

Bronze statuette of a camillus (attendant)

ca. 50 BCE–50 CE

The public [...] does not persuade its beliefs, it imposes them and makes them penetrate souls by a sort of immense pressure of the mind of all on the intelligence of each.

1835-1840

Every physical explanation [...] needs a metaphysical explanation that gives it the key to all its assumptions.

1819

Do you not see that the courts [...], offended by a defense, have often put innocent men to death, and often acquitted the guilty whose words had moved their pity or flattered their ears?

4th century BC

Consider how sweet it is to ask for nothing, how beautiful it is to say: 'I have enough'.

63-64 AD

Nicolaes Eliasz Pickenoy

Man with a Celestial Globe

Man with a Celestial Globe

1624