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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

Français

These ideas, these categories, are as little eternal as the relations they express. They are historical and transitory products.

1847

Gravity, which entirely governs the movements of matter on earth, is the image of the carnal attachment that governs the tendencies of our soul.

1962

He accustomed his soldiers above all to obey simply, without meddling in controlling or discussing their captain's plans...

1580

Man is visibly made for thinking; that is all his dignity and all his merit.

1670

Greek Artist, Attic

Terracotta statuette of a woman

Terracotta statuette of a woman

late 4th–early 3rd century BCE

Of Mixtion where there is total penetration.

c. 253-270 AD

One is naturally inclined to detest what one fears.

c. 72-126 AD

As soon as he was grown, the first thing he did was to go [...] to court a daughter of one of his masters, whom he married.

1764

Men must be either pampered or crushed, because they can get revenge for small injuries, but not for grievous ones.

1855

Cypriot artist

Buckle

Buckle

3900 BCE - 100 CE

God, this purely ideal, purely rational entity, does not exist outside of our idea, outside of our reason.

1841

Revolutions arise from inequality of honors just as much as from inequality of fortunes.

c. 350 BCE

My foolish ambition sought fortune only through adventures: and, seeing no woman in all of this, this way of succeeding seemed slow, painful, and sad to me.

1782-1789

[...] I will confess that they seem to me to speak a language as absurd as if one were to say that a circle has taken on the nature of a square.

1661-1676

Roman Artist

Bronze statuette of Minerva

Bronze statuette of Minerva

2nd century CE

[...] if there is no such evidence, this teaching is called persuasion; it produces in the listener only that which is solely in the opinion of the speaker.

1772

'But I wanted to live and experience no discomfort!' Such a cowardly wish is not worthy of a man.

63-64 AD

The necessary being and the being by its essence are but one and the same thing.

Late 17th - early 18th century

It is the mark of a wise man to anticipate these declines [...] without waiting for his turn to experience them abruptly.

1636

Greek Artist, Attic

Terracotta statuette of an actor

Terracotta statuette of an actor

late 5th–early 4th century BCE

Love breathes [...] a dormant and covered fire that winter had concealed within our veins.

1546/1563

If you have learned [the principles], you can be ready for any name you are asked.

c. 108 AD

The ideas of relation, such as that of 'father', are often clearer and more distinct than the ideas of the substances to which they belong, such as that of 'man'.

1689

Which is not to waste time, but to use it well.

1643-1649

Etruscan artist

Statuette of a man ?

Statuette of a man ?

3rd–1st century BCE

We live for the external world rather than for ourselves; we speak rather than we think; we 'are acted' rather than we act ourselves.

1889

Either he is healthy, or he is sick; but he is not healthy, therefore he is sick.

c. 1270

Helvétius had corrected and perfected his work; many notes were removed or merged into the text; entire chapters were redone or deleted.

1758

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

1747

Roman Artist

Marble portrait of Livia

Marble portrait of Livia

ca. 14–37 CE

I ask [...] that they be content with our money and our property, without wanting our blood and our lives.

79 BC

Any man who has managed to deeply understand human nature can always be the architect of his own fortune, and is born to command.

1609

The artistic sense of the contemporary public? It is synonymous with perfect obedience. I much prefer complete ignorance, the kind that leaves natural sensitivity or insensitivity intact.

1926

A source of initiative is thus opened, which did not exist until then. There is now someone who can produce something new and even [...] depart from collective customs. The balance is broken.

1893

Maestro delle Storie del Pane

Portrait of a Man, possibly Matteo di Sebastiano di Bernardino Gozzadini

Portrait of a Man, possibly Matteo di Sebastiano di Bernardino Gozzadini

1494(?)

We call habit the permanent disposition, the way of being, that arises from frequent repetition: this is the true meaning of the word habit.

1801

The author and the publisher are two players in a game: if the latter pays as he wishes, on the other hand he does not know what he is buying.

1741-1784

The union of the senses increases the number of ways of being: the chain of ideas becomes more extensive and varied.

1754

[...] I consider justice grounded on utility to be the most important, the most sacred part of morality.

1861

Cypriot artist

Limestone inscribed base

Limestone inscribed base

3900 BCE - 100 CE

I have, from an early age, distrusted all the decisions of philosophers: & I have always felt more inclined to dispute their dogmas than to embrace them.

1742

Moderate exercises promote health.

End of the 4th century BC

There are two ways of looking at beings; either as distinct entities, or as all being one in the great whole.

4th century BC

A man who does not himself believe what he says to another [...] has even less value than a mere thing.

1797-1798

Paulus Moreelse

Portrait of a Young Boy

Portrait of a Young Boy

1591

The industrial class has a greater need to be regulated, supervised, and restrained than other classes, and it is natural that the powers of government should grow with it.

1835-1840

The gait of one's sentences indicates if the author is tired.

1879

Financial embarrassment = bankruptcy.

1830-1831

We must respect antiquity, they say. [...] We fail to consider that Aristotle, Plato, and Epicurus were men like us [...] and that in our time, the world is older [...] and ought to be more enlightened.

1674-1675

Greek Artist, Laconian

Statuette of a cock, 2?

Statuette of a cock, 2?

7000 BCE - 30 BCE