Favorites About

Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

Français

The producer can no longer survey the market at a glance, or even in thought; he can no longer picture its limits, since it is, so to speak, limitless.

1893

Such is the blessed condition of the intelligible world that in doing nothing it does great things, and in remaining within itself it produces important works.

c. 253-270 AD

Often, by wanting to keep everything, one loses everything, and by being unwilling to part with false customs [...] one gives enemies the opportunity to shake the good [...] traditions.

c. 1552-1553

A somewhat lofty soul loves to struggle against an evil fate, [...] and the fight pleases it even without the victory.

1746

Etruscan artist

Statuette of a woman

Statuette of a woman

3rd–1st century BCE

The mechanical arts [...] are like so many two-edged swords that serve sometimes to do evil, sometimes to remedy it.

1620

If justice is indelible in the human heart, it has a reality in this world.

1943

The lure of profit has multiplied them too much, and [businesses] harm each other through competition.

1776

[The superstitious person] believes [...] he can speak as pertinently about a thing that, in his view, the greatest naturalist knows no better than he does.

1790

Roman Artist

Bronze statuette of Minerva

Bronze statuette of Minerva

2nd century CE

[...] true Christians are made to be slaves, [...] that one must not teach the catechism to children, because they do not have the spirit to believe in God.

1766

The mystery of the resurrection [...].

1841

It is impossible for us to see around our own corner: it is a hopeless curiosity that wants to know what other kinds of intellects and perspectives there might be.

1882

If he is a man, he is an animal; if he is a stone, he is not an animal; but he is a man, therefore he is not a stone.

c. 1270

Jacob van Ruisdael

Grainfields

Grainfields

mid- or late 1660s

There are then in the soul, it seems, false pleasures, which only ridiculously imitate the true ones [...].

c. 360 BC

One never manages to prove that the man represents the work and that the work represents the man.

1926

A difficulty [...] will perhaps vanish entirely with new meditations.

1661-1676

He was led to the theater, and all the children were brought from the schools to witness the most beautiful of spectacles, the punishment of a tyrant.

100-120 AD

Paulus Moreelse

Portrait of a Young Boy

Portrait of a Young Boy

1591

They are worlds in miniature, [...] fruitful simplicities; unities of substance, but virtually infinite, through the multitude of their modifications.

1702

Freedom [...] admits of degrees.

1889

Love me, for it is dreadful to be loved by no one.

1741-1784

Not daring to speak frankly of oneself indicates a lack of courage.

1580

Cypriot artist

Fragment of a limestone funerary stele with a disk and a crescent

Fragment of a limestone funerary stele with a disk and a crescent

2nd half of the 6th century BCE

A beautiful retreat in war brings as much honor as a proud attack.

1636

All silencing of discussion is an assumption of infallibility.

1859

If all objects strongly affect youth, it is because all are new to them.

1772

Observe yourselves accordingly when you act, and you will find to what School you belong.

c. 108 AD

Cypriot artist

Terracotta female head

Terracotta female head

late 3rd–2nd century BCE

Neither reed nor ink should trace thoughts [...]; for one gives a precise form to ideas, and the other, a color that strikes the eye.

3rd or 4th century AD

As long as [our judgments] are difficult and slow, we have a detailed consciousness of them, and as soon as they have been repeated often enough [...], they occur almost without our noticing.

1801

Just as Prometheus, having stolen fire from heaven, begins to build houses [...], so philosophy, having expanded to the dimensions of the world, turns toward the world of phenomena.

1841

It would require a genius stronger than that of Socrates [...]; for, since it did not save him from imprisonment or death, he has not much reason to boast of it.

1643-1649

Martín Rico y Ortega

A Spanish Garden

A Spanish Garden

1871

The unlimited independence of the individual will cannot be a barrier against the vices that each of us carries within.

c. 350 BCE

Indeed, it is not necessary for a simile to extend to all parts of an object; it is enough that it is accurate from the chosen point of view.

86-82 BC

It would be unreasonable to believe that one could destroy in servitude the vices that servitude naturally and necessarily gives birth to.

1864-1866

I am convinced that impudence and obstinacy are the companions of error: men who go astray give free rein to passion, without ever remaining in that state of reasonable suspension, which alone can protect them from the grossest absurdities.

1751

Cypriot artist

Limestone statuette of a beardless male votary with a wreath of leaves

Limestone statuette of a beardless male votary with a wreath of leaves

late 5th or early 4th century BCE

True liberty is to have the freedom to dispose of one's person, actions, and possessions [...] according to the laws one lives under.

1690

All the religions we see on earth show us nothing but a heap of impostures and reveries that equally revolt reason.

1766

It should not be difficult for a prudent prince [...] to inspire firmness in the inhabitants, and to maintain them in this disposition as long as they do not lack the means to feed and defend themselves.

1513

They announce, by their attire, that they know the things of heaven and earth [...]. They wear the costume, without knowing the thing itself.

4th century BC

Nicolas Henri Jacob

Portrait of a Woman

Portrait of a Woman

1817

A very intelligent blind man could, with what he has heard about colors, compose a theory of them.

1819

Society has made man weaker, not only by taking away the right he had over his own strength, but especially by making it insufficient for him.

1762

One would often be mistaken if one always judged what others must feel by what one feels oneself.

1674-1675

The sick must look upon their bed as an altar where they continually offer to God the sacrifice of their life, to give it back to Him when He pleases.

1643-1662

French (Fontainebleau) Painter

The Nymph of Fontainebleau

The Nymph of Fontainebleau

1550