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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

Français

Nothing prevents a thing which does not have in its nature the reason for another thing, from nevertheless being able to have it from another cause.

1270

Tobacco, the first product to be cultivated in America, but always negligently.

1770

For how many great captains have iron and fire sometimes succeeded less than a cleverly placed witticism?

1636

The idea of a miracle necessarily includes the idea of something rare and extraordinary. [...] [Natural things] are not miracles, because they are common things.

1715-1716

Netherlandish (Antwerp) Painters

The Rest on the Flight into Egypt

The Rest on the Flight into Egypt

1530

The art of destruction is within the reach of the most limited minds. Nothing prevents a coarse lout from taking a hammer and knocking the nose off every statue [...], after which he can snicker with pleasure at his work.

1926

A free judgment offends the ears of the great.

1574

To sleep is to lose interest. We sleep in the exact measure in which we lose interest.

1919

I am of the opinion that the best thing [...] is for all of us to seek out the best possible teacher together, first for ourselves, for we are in the greatest need of one.

c. 380 BC

Roman Artist

Spoon or ligula

Spoon or ligula

670 BCE - 330 CE

Perfect happiness is not on earth, but the greatest of misfortunes, and the one that can always be avoided, is to be unhappy by one's own fault.

1762

Above all, old men are dangerous, in whom the memory of things past remains, while they have lost the memory of their own repetitions.

1580

Ideals are realities.

1922

These minds are excessive in all encounters: they elevate low things, they enlarge small ones, they bring distant ones near. Nothing appears to them as it is.

1674-1675

Greek Artist

Bronze statuette of a bearded man

Bronze statuette of a bearded man

late 6th century BCE

Those [...] who, by the most perfect renunciation of their reason, most fully enter into the spirit of their inconceivable religion...

1766

As for the interests of our house, I have long since abandoned them to destiny, seeing that prudence itself [...] would waste its efforts on them.

1643-1649

[Pain is] light if I can bear it, and fleeting if I cannot.

63-64 AD

He preferred the care of his life to the care of the empire. How much more would he have preferred the care of his life to lesser cares?

4th century BC

Horace Hone

Portrait of a Woman, Said to Be Lady Agnes Anne Wrothesley

Portrait of a Woman, Said to Be Lady Agnes Anne Wrothesley

1791

All that exists is just and unjust, and in both cases equally justifiable.

1872

I have no principle of ascent within me. [...] It is only by directing my thought toward something better than myself that this something pulls me upward. If I am truly pulled, this something is real.

1947

We speak of luxury as if it were something of which we had an absolute idea, yet we only have a relative one.

1776

Nature [...] demands of us not only a commendable use of our activity, but also a noble use of our leisure.

c. 350 BCE

Frei Carlos

Saint Vincent, Patron Saint of Lisbon

Saint Vincent, Patron Saint of Lisbon

1525

He delighted in the honors and pomps of the world, and valued the praise of men, which threw him into great prodigality.

1518-1527

The interests it defends become class interests. But the struggle of class against class is a political struggle.

1847

Passions can do everything.

1772

'The artist stands before his finished work of art as before an enigma, about which he can fall into the same errors as others'.

1896

Cypriot artist

Female head, perhaps from a standing tambourine player

Female head, perhaps from a standing tambourine player

ca. 600–480 BCE

The principles and arguments of the sciences penetrate the mind, seize it and master it to such an extent that it remains subjugated [...] and cannot resist conviction.

1609

Everything through our sensations and nothing without them, that is our story.

1817

Who could ever [...] strip himself of his power in favor of another [...] to the point of ceasing to be a man?

1670

This discourse smacks of heresy. My confessor [...] will infer from it that you do not believe in Providence.

1764

Sir Henry Raeburn

John Gray (1731–1811) of Newholm

John Gray (1731–1811) of Newholm

1776

'To live well is better than to live'. From which one could conclude: Not to live is better than to live badly. [...] and yet the great majority prefer to live very badly than not to live at all.

1819

Every individual has, even now, a deeply rooted conviction that he is a social being, that his feelings and aims should be in harmony with those of his fellow creatures.

1861

As [Plato] philosophized [...] in a place called the Academy, his followers kept the name Academics.

45 BC

Spirits are [...] images of the divinity itself [...], capable of knowing the system of the universe and of imitating something of it [...], each spirit being like a small divinity in its own department.

c. 253-270 AD

Emile Loubon

Landscape Study with Clouds

Landscape Study with Clouds

ca. 1829–31

All abstraction is but the suppression of certain manifest ideas [...]. One can therefore call abstraction a negative attention, that is, a real action opposed to that by which the representation becomes clear.

1763

Man, be grateful for these gifts, but at the same time, consider what surpasses them still.

c. 108 AD

Notwithstanding this great vogue, the use [of the concept], three or four years after its establishment, was so despised that it was hardly used anymore [...].

1662

I think that nations, like men, almost always indicate, from their youth, the principal features of their destiny.

1835-1840

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

To attain Knowledge and certainty, it is necessary that we have determined ideas, and to make our Knowledge real, our Ideas must correspond to their Archetypes.

1689

However sublime the definition [...] that a religion may give of the divinity; [...] most believers will seek to attract divine favor less by virtue [...] than by frivolous observances [...], by fanatic ecstasies [...].

1757

No one is more prone to mistakes than those who act only upon reflection.

1747

In all their actions, they carried integrity and justice.

100-120 AD

François Meuret

Portrait of a Woman, Said to Be Marie de Mautesson

Portrait of a Woman, Said to Be Marie de Mautesson

ca. 1830