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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

Français

It is so, because it is so; it is not so, because it is not so.

4th century BC

Therefore, one must not believe men because men have spoken, for every man is a deceiver.

1674-1675

We can [...] place cleanliness among the virtues [...] it makes us agreeable to others & serves to win their friendship & goodwill.

1751

For us, there exist only two kinds of evidence: that of feeling and that of deduction.

1817

Italic

Statuette of a youth

Statuette of a youth

6th century BCE

The ravages of age, which gradually consume intellectual forces, do not affect moral qualities.

1819

The devils themselves [...] preferred to return to burn in hell than to live in this world under the orders of such a woman.

1518-1527

To be truly clever, one must avoid appearing so and sometimes even seem a fool.

1609

A free judgment offends the ears of the great.

1574

Baldassare Tommaso Peruzzi

Frescoes from the Villa Stati-Mattei

Frescoes from the Villa Stati-Mattei

1501

The conquests of Mexico and Peru are prodigies of audacity; the cruelties exercised there [...] are excesses of horror.

1756

Should we be surprised, then, to find so few virtuous men, so few men instructed in their duties to society?

1772

However, we have an instinct, since we have habits, and it is the most extensive of all.

1755

Fortune sometimes lies in wait for the last day of our life to show its power to overthrow in a moment what it had built over many years.

1580

Cypriot artist

Strainer

Strainer

10th century BCE

There is no ferocious animal more cruel than man when he has the power to satisfy his passion.

100-120 AD

One should judge people by their deeds rather than their words.

c. 380 BC

[Objection:] That this proposition, that a space is empty, is repugnant to common sense.

1647

[Situation] does not admit of contrariety.

c. 1270

Sir Godfrey Kneller

Lady Mary Berkeley

Lady Mary Berkeley

ca. 1700

I held him capable of anything, except acting cowardly or speaking in a vulgar way.

1893

You will have complete freedom to philosophize, the prince being convinced that you will not abuse it to disturb the established religion.

1661-1676

After having based all his physics on motion, [Descartes] seemingly ruins it by positing motion as purely relative.

17th century

The darkening of the sky over man has always increased in proportion to the shame man has felt at the sight of man.

1887

Roman Artist

Bronze statuette of an actor

Bronze statuette of an actor

ca. 1st–2nd century CE

The only thing one could give him was love, 'that homeland of his art,' as he himself calls it.

1896

The wicked rule only through the cowardice of those who obey them: it is more just that it be so than otherwise.

c. 253-270 AD

The apparent decline of memory, as intelligence develops, is due [...] to the growing organization of memories with actions.

1896

In all the work of [...] Spencer, the methodological problem has no place.

1895

Auguste Renoir

Figures on the Beach

Figures on the Beach

1890

If one must be just to others, one must be true to oneself; it is a homage that the honest man owes to his own dignity.

1776-1778

An injury is aggravated by memory beyond its effect at the moment it is experienced; we persuade ourselves that we were not angry enough, and we become too angry.

1774

Solitude is to the mind what diet is to the body: deadly when it is too long, although necessary.

1746

Show that you are superior to me in [honesty, loyalty, justice], if you want to be superior to me as a man.

c. 108 AD

Roman Artist

Wall painting fragment

Wall painting fragment

1st century CE

Diagoras the Atheist. [...] the Athenians put a price on his head.

45 BC

The king [...] very quickly saw that he was just as necessary to these 'liberal' ministers as they were indispensable to him.

1851-1852

Some are born virtuous, it is true; but care, reflection, and effort can give to others what nature has denied them.

1636

What the evening is to the day, old age is to life. One will therefore say: 'the evening, old age of the day,' and 'old age, evening of life'.

c. 335 BC

Jean François de Troy

The Garter

The Garter

1724

It is the decree of fate that nothing should be constantly prosperous and standing in the same place.

42-43 AD

Space, taken as something real and absolute without bodies, would be an eternal, impassible thing, independent of God.

1715-1716

It is with a very painful reflection [...] that I realize I have lost some of my sensitivity.

1926

Great thieves punish the small ones to keep people in obedience; and [...] are rewarded with laurels and triumphs, because they are too powerful [...] for the weak hands of justice.

1690

Roman Artist

Lower right corner of a marble sarcophagus, illustrating the discovery of Achilles by Odysseus on the island of Skyros

Lower right corner of a marble sarcophagus, illustrating the discovery of Achilles by Odysseus on the island of Skyros

ca. 160–180 CE

There is scarcely any absurdity or mischief which may not be made to act on the human mind with all the authority of conscience.

1861

All industry is equally forbidden to perfect Christians, who lead a provisional life on earth, and who must never worry about the morrow.

1766

I can defile the entire universe with my misery and not feel it, or gather it within myself.

1947

The adverse fate that always attaches itself to metaphysics willed that Hume was understood by no one.

1783

Italic

Statue of a man

Statue of a man

6th century BCE or later