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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

Français

Silence [...] at first seemed the wisest course to take in this rather delicate circumstance.

1763

Mercy, rarely used and with judgment, is a beautiful and singular virtue in a prince; but ordinary clemency without distinction [...] is the complete subversion of all order.

c. 1552-1553

Fanaticism and enthusiasm form the basis of Christ's morality; the virtues he recommends tend to isolate men, to plunge them into a somber mood, and often to make them harmful to their fellow beings.

1766

Boredom, without a doubt, formerly played a part in the institution of chivalry.

1772

Egyptian

Bronze statuette of Osiris

Bronze statuette of Osiris

664–31 BCE

To make oneself the object of universal hatred without profiting from it is a thoroughly imprudent and reckless course of action.

1513-1519

Servitude debases men to the point of making itself loved.

1747

But there is no one here reasonable enough to understand them [...].

1643-1649

Thus we are born free, as we are born rational; though we do not actually exercise either at first. Age that brings one, brings the other with it.

1690

Jacopo Tintoretto (Jacopo Robusti)

The Miracle of the Loaves and Fishes

The Miracle of the Loaves and Fishes

ca. 1545–50

It is from this conflict [between dream and reality] that what has been called the romantic malaise is born, which sometimes goes as far as disgust for life.

1926

There is no finer sight than a city governed by a wise prince; while the most odious of all sights is to see it governed by a tyrant.

100-120 AD

He has a very good mind, but he is not a geometer (which is, as you know, a great flaw) and he does not even understand that a mathematical line is infinitely divisible.

1643-1662

[The diversion] is a shameless strategy for attacking your opponent.

1830-1831

Rogier van der Weyden

The Holy Family with Saint Paul and a Donor

The Holy Family with Saint Paul and a Donor

1430

The instinct for causality thus depends on the feeling of fear that produces it.

1888

To impose on the people what they please to call their experience, is that not worse than abandoning them to themselves?

4th century BC

My purpose [...] is to make of you men who are freed from all hindrance, all constraint, all obstacle, free, tranquil, and happy.

c. 108 AD

It will not be the imitators who, like cattle, follow the beaten path.

1704

Greek Artist, Attic

Marble stele (grave marker) of a woman

Marble stele (grave marker) of a woman

ca. 375–350 BCE

Each language expresses the character of the people who speak it.

1746

The Assembly [...] was great as long as it had to fight; it only became wretched after the victory and when it felt itself collapsing from the very effect [...] of that victory.

1893

It is good to have a scrupulous friend who reminds you of your duties; but your conscience must be the head of your council.

1764

The more [ideas] extend to a great multitude, the fewer elements they contain specific to each individual.

1817

Minoan

Steatite spindle whorl

Steatite spindle whorl

ca. 2400–1900 BCE

[The ancient sages] regard sacred traditions as vague and instinctive premonitions of a higher truth [...] and attribute the obscurity that envelops them to the infancy of human thought.

c. 253-270 AD

Among these [meteorological] phenomena, some are inexplicable to us; others are accessible to us to a certain extent.

c. 334 BC

The errors [of the human mind] are corrigible. It is capable of rectifying its mistakes by discussion and experience. Not by experience alone: discussion is necessary to show how experience should be interpreted.

1859

It is conscience rather than pride that hides behind a doorkeeper.

63-64 AD

Greek Artist, Tarentine

Terracotta group of women seated around a well head

Terracotta group of women seated around a well head

2nd half of 4th century BCE

Truly, one would rob a great deal from a man, were he to be judged without the honor and greatness of his end.

1580

Modesty [...] announces a distrust of one's own judgment, & a suitable deference for that of others; this quality is, especially in young people, a sure sign of wit & sense.

1751

A single day spent following the precepts [of philosophy] is preferable to the immortality of one who strays from them.

45 BC

It was necessary for eternal wisdom to finally make itself perceptible to instruct men who question only their senses.

1674-1675

Cypriot artist

Terracotta plank-shaped figurine

Terracotta plank-shaped figurine

ca. 1900–1800 BCE

I orient myself geographically, with all the objective data of the heavens, only with the help of a subjective ground of distinction.

1786

[Propositions] are sometimes made by reason of concomitance, [...] sometimes by reason of cause.

c. 1270

Time is not a line that one can travel over again.

1889

One could use [amber] to preserve [...] the bodies of illustrious men. This material [...] is quite rare; but great men are even rarer.

1623

Andrea Mantegna

Rodolfo Gonzaga (1451–1495)

Rodolfo Gonzaga (1451–1495)

1490

The more defined beliefs and practices are, the less room they leave for individual differences.

1893

To be just, one must be naked and dead. Without imagination.

1947

Therefore, what you are describing is not a part of virtue, but virtue as a whole.

c. 380 BC

The study of modes of production constitutes [...] the materialist suppression of philosophy.

1841

Greek Artist

Terracotta mold of a grotesque figure

Terracotta mold of a grotesque figure

2nd–1st century BCE

'The poet is the conscious voice of what is unconscious in us.'

1896

Extraordinary actions can only come from a heart that is also extraordinary.

1636

Reason [...] counsels man to peace, and peace is possible only through obedience to the common law.

1670

Sovereignty, being nothing but the exercise of the general will, can never be alienated.

1762

Roman Artist, Cypriot

Inscribed marble plaque

Inscribed marble plaque

2nd–3rd century CE