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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

Français

Wherever [religion] reigns, do we not see the people enslaved, devoid of vigor, energy, activity, stagnating in shameful lethargy [...]?

1766

We doubt the existence of God, and consequently of all things, as long as we have only a confused idea of God, instead of a clear and distinct one.

1670

It is customary to call youth the happy time, and old age the sad time of life. This would be true if the passions brought happiness.

1851

What is there that one cannot find in the knowledge of man?

1746

Cypriot artist

Limestone statuette of a temple girl

Limestone statuette of a temple girl

3rd century BCE–1st century CE

Hearing by itself is not meant to give us the idea of distance [...] the idea it provides is still the most imperfect of all.

1746

The goal of most commentators is not to clarify their authors and seek the truth; it is to show off their erudition and blindly defend the very flaws of those they comment upon.

1674-1675

Perhaps [...] the valiant knights of yesteryear were [...] bored, boring, talkative, and superstitious.

1772

The word [haughty] is only said of the human species.

1751

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

I am not one of those for whom commitment takes the place of reason.

1695

Buildings that drew everyone's admiration [...] are relegated to the rank of antiquities as luxury finds new ways to outdo itself.

63-64 AD

Paganism sacrificed bodies, whereas Christianity sacrifices souls.

1842-1845

Every appearance must be considered reality until it has been proven to be illusory.

1922

Neroccio de' Landi

Madonna and Child with Saints Jerome and Mary Magdalen

Madonna and Child with Saints Jerome and Mary Magdalen

ca. 1490

Men [...] are inclined to esteem themselves rather above than below their worth, and that is why it is so easy to hurt us by carrying self-esteem too far.

1751

True courage [...] does not consist in fighting, but in fearing nothing.

1761

A good [leader] never has weapons that are too short; what they lack in length, their bravery knows how to supplement.

1636

But, whether through nonchalance or extreme poverty, this useful regulation was only very imperfectly executed.

1662

Etruscan artist

Bronze statuette of a youth carrying a pig

Bronze statuette of a youth carrying a pig

early 5th century BCE

I drove out kings; you bring in tyrants. I gave you liberty [...]; you, who now possess it, do not want to keep it.

86-82 BC

Two [...] letters written in the same week [...] express absolutely contradictory views on life, perhaps because he was bored in the morning and enjoying himself in the afternoon.

1926

Men, most of the time without reason, praise past times and blame the present time.

1513-1519

If a [dissenting] opinion is right, [others] are deprived of the opportunity of exchanging error for truth; if it is wrong, they lose an almost equally great benefit: the clearer perception of truth, produced by its collision with error.

1859

Jean-Léon Gérôme

Woman at a Balcony

Woman at a Balcony

1887–88

Classes are only in our heads and not in nature.

1805

Strength is likewise destroyed, both when one does too much exercise, and when one does not do enough.

4th century BC

Be resolved to serve no more, and you are at once free. [...] Do not support him any longer, and you will see him, like a great colossus whose pedestal has been pulled away, fall of his own weight and break in pieces.

c. 1552-1553

[He] was not an unbeliever but timid in his faith [...] he wanted to be enlightened, but he feared being known.

1263-1264

Cypriot artist

Limestone statuette of a boy with a flat headdress

Limestone statuette of a boy with a flat headdress

6th century BCE

It is not peace, but war, schism, that is to the taste of most.

1623

[One can rise to the pinnacle of glory] by taking one's own nature as the guide for one's life, and not the opinion of the multitude.

100-120 AD

Lovers, friends have two desires. One to love each other so much that they enter into one another and become a single being. The other to love each other so much that having half the globe between them does not diminish their union in any way.

1942

[...] those wretched commonplaces with which, to the shame of human reason, the various schools of theology have resounded every day [...].

1763

French Painter

Portrait of a Man

Portrait of a Man

1695

We should not say that an act offends the common conscience because it is criminal, but that it is criminal because it offends the common conscience. [...] It is a crime because we condemn it.

1893

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

Delaying [a project] that is to become the first successful example [...] is the same as sowing the seed before maturity, and later harvesting weeds.

1777

Natural reason [...] teaches us [...] that we should not leave the certain for the uncertain.

1643-1649

Monogrammist IM

The Crucifixion

The Crucifixion

ca. 1480

[...] the invariable answer is Socialism. Even bourgeois liberalism is declared socialistic, bourgeois enlightenment socialistic, bourgeois financial reform socialistic.

1851/1852

This great charge [...] of commanding so many men is not a situation in which one can remain idle.

1580

Our Ignorance infinitely surpasses our Knowledge.

1689

Will you then never feel who you are, for what end you were born, and why you have received the gift of sight?

c. 108 AD

Filippino Lippi

The Virgin of the Nativity

The Virgin of the Nativity

probably ca. 1500

Idleness is the mother of all psychology. What? Is psychology then a... vice?

1888

The greedy, blind, and coarse passions [...] are almost as formidable to those who sympathize with them without fully abandoning themselves to them as to those who condemn and fight them.

1893

Education makes good men, and good men do noble deeds.

c. 387 BC

[This process is seen] as in the composition of ointments and medicines.

c. 253-270 AD

Lucas Cranach the Younger and Workshop

Christ Blessing the Children

Christ Blessing the Children

ca. 1545–50