Favorites About

Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

Français

By setting [the fine], it would be to admit guilt.

4th century BC

In everything that is not under your control, be full of confidence; but in everything that is, be on your guard.

c. 108 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

Bentham's dictum, 'everybody to count for one, nobody for more than one,' might be written under the principle of utility as an explanatory commentary.

1861

Italian (Venetian) Painter

A Patrician Couple

A Patrician Couple

1730

Delicacy comes essentially from the soul.

1746

He who blames the whole of the world by considering only its parts is therefore unjust; he should examine the parts in their relation to the whole, to see if they are in accord and in harmony with it.

c. 253-270 AD

Everything that has some relation to beauty must be withdrawn from the course of time. Beauty is eternity here below.

1942

My position was not my self, my self was not my position. Favor and disfavor were attached to my position, not to my self.

4th century BC

Pieter de Hooch

Leisure Time in an Elegant Setting

Leisure Time in an Elegant Setting

ca. 1663–65

[...] we sometimes sense the truth before we have grasped its demonstration. We discern it by instinct.

1755

All religions claim to emanate from heaven; all forbid the use of reason [...]; all claim to be true, to the exclusion of others.

1766

The essence of the soul [...] is entirely in the idea of the body existing in act.

1661-1676

It is commerce that has gradually established the naval forces, by which the English are masters of the seas.

1733

Giovanni Boldini

The Dispatch-Bearer

The Dispatch-Bearer

?1879

We must not forget that the point of view of critique is entirely different from that of psychology...

1896

It is enough to define a lie as a willfully false statement made to another man.

1797

When the crowd turns its thumb upwards, to please it, the gladiators must kill each other.

1580

A man is best portrayed in his career, in his works, and in his words.

1896

Adriaen Isenbrant

Man Weighing Gold

Man Weighing Gold

ca. 1515–20

The knowledge of Man cannot extend beyond his own experience.

1689

[...] whatever the desire, or even the need, I may have for it.

1741-1784

The essence of its worship consists in the love of the God it adores; which is a most singular character, and which visibly distinguishes it from all other Religions.

1670

If two individuals were perfectly similar [...] and indistinguishable in themselves, there would be no principle of individuation; and I would even dare to say that there would be no individual distinction [...] under this condition.

1704

French Painter

Portrait of a Member of the de Thou Family

Portrait of a Member of the de Thou Family

1540

To please mediocre people, one must generally lend oneself to common errors, conform to customs, and resemble everyone else.

1758

[...] we are more envious of those who seem to make more progress in virtue.

c. 72-126 AD

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

c. 1270

It is a contemptible lightness and baseness of mind to believe blindly in the authority of men on subjects that depend on reason.

1674-1675

Greek Artist

Gold pin with pomegranate head

Gold pin with pomegranate head

7th–6th century BCE

[A remedy is] certain in the hands of a good practitioner [...] but [it is a] deadly instrument in the hands of an ignorant person.

1623

To compensate for the departure of the troops [...] a leader capable of commanding the army is needed.

1498

Glory flees from those who seek it and follows those who neglect it, because the former accommodate the taste of their contemporaries, while the others confront it.

1851

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

John Hoskins

Dr. Brian Walton (born about 1600, died 1661)

Dr. Brian Walton (born about 1600, died 1661)

1657

This act of judging consists in seeing that the idea I have of one thing belongs to the idea I have of another.

1817

There is nothing which is, in itself, beautiful or ugly, worthy of love or hatred [...] these different qualifications depend solely on the sentiments and affections of each man [...].

1742

If the human mind undertook to examine [...] all the particular cases that strike it, it would soon be lost in the midst of the immensity of details and would see nothing.

1835-1840

Outlawed again, Marx took refuge in London, where he settled.

March 17, 1883

Georges Seurat

The Forest at Pontaubert

The Forest at Pontaubert

1881

Wherever I stop, I resume the thread of my thoughts; and I occupy my mind with some wholesome reflection.

63-64 AD

It is the masterpiece of insight to understand another's heart; it is also the ultimate effort of self-mastery to keep one's own heart unknown to the most skilled scrutineers.

1636

[...] metaphor, ornament, and the other forms [...] will remove vulgarity and baseness from the style; the proper term will give it clarity.

c. 335 BC

It is because you are a fool that you are silent, but you are not a fool for being silent.

86-82 BC

Giuseppe Bartolomeo Chiari

Bathsheba at Her Bath

Bathsheba at Her Bath

ca. 1700

[The only] remedy [...] is to divert one's imagination and senses as much as possible, and to use only the understanding to consider them.

1643-1649

Malo periculosam libertatem quam quietum servitium. [I prefer dangerous liberty to quiet servitude.]

1762

If, when these various jobs were created, women had been called to them, we would be accustomed to it [...] and it would seem no more singular to us to see them sitting in Parliament than behind a counter.

1926

Theft can only exist to the extent that property exists.

1893

Roman Artist

Wall painting fragment

Wall painting fragment

1st century CE