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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

Français

One has certainly heard it said that the property is in the subject; but one has never heard it said that the subject is in its property.

1715-1716

The revolutionary threats of the petty bourgeois [...] are merely attempts to intimidate the antagonist. [...] When they have sufficiently compromised themselves [...], they avoid nothing so much as the means to the end, and look for excuses for defeat.

1851/1852

Poets have created these fictions only to present to us, in foreign characters, a portrait of our customs and an image of ordinary life.

79 BC

Only a few perfect beings are dead and naked here below, while still alive.

1942

Roman Artist

Stucco relief panel

Stucco relief panel

2nd half of 1st century CE

If the passions have no other causes than those we have indicated, we need only make good use of our understanding [...] to be sure not to be led astray by them.

c. 1660

The day of glory almost never shines except upon the tomb of great men.

1772

Little by little, the people grow accustomed to irreverence towards the magistrate, [...] learn to disobey willingly, and let themselves be led by the bait of liberty, or rather license, which is the sweetest and most tantalizing poison in the world.

c. 1552-1553

A being, fundamentally, is that which represents itself, and which is represented by itself, but whose existence in itself is neither in the act of representation nor in the quality of a represented object.

1819

Alexandre-Gabriel Decamps

The Turkish Patrol

The Turkish Patrol

ca. 1855–56

I believe that the return of industrial crises is an endemic disease in democratic nations [...]. It can be made less dangerous, but not cured.

1835-1840

These mercenaries [the priests] would soon dominate the household and oppress both mother and child.

1733

For the legislator [...] to establish a government is neither the only nor the greatest difficulty; it is rather to know how to make it last.

c. 350 BCE

One does not realize the vitality of institutions that place right on the side of force; one does not know with what tenacity people cling to them.

1869

Greek Artist, Cypriot

Arrowhead

Arrowhead

ca. 480–330 BCE

Our actions are neither as good nor as vicious as our intentions.

1747

Light is entirely incorporeal, although it is the act of a body.

c. 253-270 AD

In a word, let us distinguish between an art of cultivating sciences and an art of inventing them.

1620

When spirits have begun to cool, it will be found that the damage has already been done and suffered, and that there is no longer any remedy.

1513

Unknown Artist

Dagger blade

Dagger blade

7000 BCE - 330 CE

The land of chimeras is in this world the only one worth living in, and [...] there is nothing beautiful except that which is not.

1761

To believe that the existence of the world is explained by a creator is a psychological illusion.

1841

For an idea to be unique, it is sufficient that it be considered as a single image, although it may be composed of the greatest number of particular Ideas.

1689

The perfect woman is a higher type of humanity than the perfect man: she is also something rarer.

1926

Egon Schiele

Two Women Embracing

Two Women Embracing

1913

Why be surprised [...] if the divinity judges it more advantageous for me to leave this life at this very moment?

4th century BC

I couldn't teach it to my son, and at seventy years old, to have a good wheel, I still have to make it myself.

4th century BC

I equally blame [...] those who choose to praise man, [...] to blame him, and [...] to amuse themselves; and I can only approve of those who seek in sorrow.

1670

[Doctrine] is what every good Christian must believe, on pain of being burned [...]. The dogmas of Religion are immutable decrees of God who can only change his mind when the Church changes hers.

1768

Roman Artist

Bronze statuette of a comic actor

Bronze statuette of a comic actor

ca. 1st–2nd century CE

[A ruler] knows that if he punished all who insult him, he would have no one left to rule.

c. 108 AD

It is [...] such a praiseworthy virtue to judge others favorably.

1643-1649

Style, in its origin, was poetic; since it began by painting ideas with the most perceivable images, and was moreover extremely measured.

1746

He who governs in a gentle and popular manner is less blameworthy than those who treat the people with contemptuous pride, so as not to seem to flatter them.

100-120 AD

Anthony van Dyck

James Stuart (1612–1655), Duke of Richmond and Lennox

James Stuart (1612–1655), Duke of Richmond and Lennox

ca. 1633–35

So vain and frivolous a thing is human prudence! And through all our projects, our counsels, and precautions, fortune always maintains possession of events.

1580

The universe is vaster than our mind; life is short, education is long, truth is infinite.

1882

The only way to rejuvenate collective representations [...] is to re-immerse them in the very source of religious life, that is to say, in assembled groups.

1912

To express a judgment, one must state the two ideas, one of which contains the other, plus the act of the mind that perceives this relationship. [...] This is what constitutes a proposition.

1803

Etruscan or Roman

Statuette of Herakles

Statuette of Herakles

3rd century BCE–2nd century CE

The habit of success is so flattering that most people always aspire to new successes [...], like those with dropsy who cannot quench their thirst.

1636

There is nothing, it seems to me, more unhappy than a man who has never experienced misfortune.

c. 64 AD

Luxury may be harmful in Switzerland. It would ruin a man, whereas it only encourages industry [...] among the French or the English; one should not therefore expect to find the same laws established in Bern, London, and Paris.

1751

Every deep thinker is more afraid of being understood than of being misunderstood.

1886

Corneille de Lyon

Portrait of a Dwarf

Portrait of a Dwarf

1525

[The frontispiece depicts] Truth removing her mask from Superstition [...] holding her broken scepter in one hand, while her crown rolls on the ground.

1746

Each particular experience is only a part of the whole of its domain; but the absolute whole of all possible experience is no longer an experience.

1783

The division of being into ten predicaments is a division into ten really different things.

c. 1270

desire for a mere trifle, or for something manifestly harmful [...], ceaselessly justifies itself against reason, since so many passions work towards its justification.

1674-1675

Francesco Guardi

The Villa Loredan, Paese

The Villa Loredan, Paese

early 1780s