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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

Français

We must not [...] present social life as a simple resultant of individual natures, since, on the contrary, it is rather the latter that result from the former.

1893

It is the all-or-nothing changes that awaken human intelligence and prevent it from falling asleep in immobility.

c. 350 B.C.E.

This power cannot legitimately be an absolute and arbitrary power with regard to their lives and their property.

1690

Men have never shown more wit than when they have been jesting.

1702

Roman Artist

Fragmentary marble sarcophagus with scenes from the Oresteia

Fragmentary marble sarcophagus with scenes from the Oresteia

mid-2nd century CE

Some, too fond of their own wit, audaciously invent facts.

1623

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

c. 108 AD

The fires of dawn are not as sweet as the first glances of glory.

1746

Only he is cited as a fool who is not a fool of the common foolishness.

1758

Cypriot artist

Male head wearing a helmet

Male head wearing a helmet

ca. 600 BCE

Religion acquires the force of law only by the decree of those who hold the right to command.

1670

It must be admitted that evil is but a defect of good (éllipsis toû agathoû).

c. 253-270 AD

The courts [...] have often put the innocent to death, and often acquitted the guilty whose language had moved their pity or flattered their ears.

4th century BC

If to have liberty it is necessary only to desire it, if only a simple act of will is needed, will there be any nation in the world that still deems it too expensive [...]?

c. 1552-1553

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

first half of the 6th century BCE

Immense treasures [...] have dissipated and vanished, but fame has collected and preserved the witty words they have spoken.

1636

Not only is [a brilliant deed] necessary to begin to gain credit, it is indispensable to preserve and increase it.

1513-1519

The two hypotheses are equivalent for the mathematician. But the same is not true for the philosopher.

1922

A man must be judged by himself, not by his adornments.

1580

Auguste Renoir

Young Girl in a Pink-and-Black Hat

Young Girl in a Pink-and-Black Hat

ca. 1891

The absence of discussion causes not only the grounds to be forgotten, but too often the very meaning of the opinion itself. [...] Instead of a strong conception and a living belief, only a few phrases learned by rote remain.

1859

Democracy does not bind men strongly to one another; but it makes their habitual relationships easier.

1835-1840

In the face of the work [...], one thinks neither of what is interesting, nor of what is entertaining, [...] nor of art in general; one only feels what is necessary about it.

1876

He who has modest tastes does not create trouble for himself; he who is concerned only with his inner progress is not affected by any deprivation.

4th century BC

Greek Artist, Corinthian

Terracotta statuette of a dancing girl

Terracotta statuette of a dancing girl

4th century BCE

The chains of diamond are not [...] fear and force [...] but rather the affection, zeal, and gratitude that the justice and virtue of leaders inspire in the hearts of their subjects.

100-120 AD

Faith is a virtue invented by men who feared the enlightenment of reason, who wanted to deceive their fellow men in order to subject them to their own authority [...].

1766

When thinking only of ourselves, we cannot help but consider our free will to be independent.

1643-1649

The practical intellect is compared to artificial things, as the measure to the thing measured; conversely, the speculative intellect is compared to the things it conceives as the thing measured to the measure.

c. 1270

Cypriot artist

Horseman

Horseman

4th–3rd century BCE

There is nothing more comfortable than not thinking.

1940

What is, can appear.

1764

The more the merchant provinces need sustenance, the more they demand from the agricultural provinces; and, consequently, they make agriculture flourish there.

1776

[...] all bodies have a reluctance to separate from one another.

1653-1662

Hans Memling

Virgin and Child with Saints Catherine of Alexandria and Barbara

Virgin and Child with Saints Catherine of Alexandria and Barbara

early 1480s

All legally practical principles must contain rigorous truths, and [...] they can never admit of exceptions, for these would destroy the universality to which alone they owe their name as principles.

1797

Such strange and barbarous customs are not at all suitable for an intelligent and civilized people [...] they revolt human nature...

1751

It is therefore evident that in a finite portion of matter or in a finite mind, one cannot find enough reality to see the infinite.

1707

A man is best portrayed in his career, in his works, and in his words.

1896

John Barry

Portrait of a Man, Said to Be John Durham

Portrait of a Man, Said to Be John Durham

ca. 1790

Culture proper [...] can only be given to a few, and can be received by an even smaller number.

1819

We will fall back if we do not persist in moving from effort to effort; if our zeal [...] weakens in the slightest, we must retreat.

63-64 AD

In what was believed [...] to be a simple idea, a single perception, there are many distinct parts; and [...] many different intellectual operations were necessary to assemble these parts.

1805

[The clement one] seems to have conquered victory itself, by restoring to the vanquished the rights it had acquired over them.

46 BC

Roman Artist

Marble statue head of a youth

Marble statue head of a youth

1st or 2nd century CE

The man of genius knows he is taking a chance, and he knows it without having calculated the odds for or against.

c. 1763

The single individual, who derives them through tradition and education, may imagine that they form the real motives and the starting-point of his activity.

1851/1852

It is much more important to know if a [project] is advantageous than to know its author well.

1743

[...] the beautiful cathedrals were built by a singing and dancing people, happy to satisfy their sensibility, drunk with the work that so fully contented it.

1926

Etruscan or Roman

Statuette of Herakles

Statuette of Herakles

3rd century BCE–2nd century CE