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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

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The universal Propositions of which we can have certain knowledge of their truth or falsehood do not relate to existence.

1689

Men are driven from one ambition to another; they first seek to secure themselves from offense, and then to oppress their rivals.

1855

With freedom of morals, finally regained, life resumes its normal course; poetry is possible. If it does not flourish, it is henceforth without excuse.

1926

In our days we see wars that are less frequent, but more just; actions less astonishing, but more heroic; victories less bloody, but more glorious [...].

1750

Greek Artist, Cypriot

Terracotta head of a woman

Terracotta head of a woman

late 4th–early 3rd century BCE

The whole inferiority of the animal lies there: it is a specialist. It does what it does very well, but it cannot do anything else.

1882

An intimate society between people who are radically different from each other is a pure reverie. Difference may attract, but it is resemblance that retains.

1869

The favor [...] obliges me more than any I could receive from elsewhere.

1643-1649

Power and hatred are two things [...] put together on earth.

62-65 AD

Cypriot artist

Terracotta woman baking bread

Terracotta woman baking bread

ca. 600–480 BCE

There are fashionable whims which, for a time, become the whims of an entire people.

1751-1772

In the domain of the moral law, I can only look at my fellow men from one perspective: as instruments of Reason.

1840

If, because of the body, we are surrounded by evils, God has nevertheless given us virtue, which has no master.

c. 253-270 AD

It very often happens that God uses external means to make [holy things] understood and to leave all the less material for human vanity.

1656-1657

Louis Léopold Boilly

Portrait of a Man

Portrait of a Man

1781

The acts that morals alone repress are not of a different nature from those punished by law; they are only less serious.

1893

[My own existence] consists in what I feel.

1817

It is not the largest population, considered in itself, that should be the judge of a State's prosperity.

1776

He who has not gotten to the bottom of things, however ancient he may be, is not in my eyes an authority [...].

4th century BC

Cycladic

Marble female figure

Marble female figure

4500–4000 BCE

The sinner always becomes the slave of the priest; it is the multiplication of sins that favors the trade in indulgences [...] and increases the power and wealth of the clergy.

1772

Once the main dogmas and principles of religion have been [...] entirely removed from the examination of reason; only then is it permissible to deduce [...] consequences from them.

1623

There is nothing so unjust as the complaints of those who want to know everything and want to apply themselves to nothing. They [...] want to be moved always, and for their senses and passions to be incessantly flattered.

1674-1675

[These societies] knew that the overthrow of an established government was but a passing stage in the great impending struggle, and their purpose was to prepare [...] the party [...] for the final, decisive battle which must one day or another put an end to the domination [...] of capital over labor.

1851-1852

Peter Adolf Hall

Portrait of a Woman

Portrait of a Woman

1775

In public, do not encroach: do not claim for yourself what belongs to all.

c. 108 AD

To be revolutionary, is it to call for with one's wishes and to help with one's actions all that can [...] lighten or lift the weight that crushes the mass of men, [...] to refuse the lies [...]?

1934

You must never have spared yourself; hardness must be part of your habits to be joyful and in good spirits amidst hard truths.

1888

One must exhort the living to imitate the virtue of the dead and to console their descendants.

c. 387 BC

Roman Artist, Cypriot

Limestone cippus of Philon

Limestone cippus of Philon

ca. 2nd–3rd century CE

Indeed, how could we give sense and meaning to concepts if some intuition [...] were not subordinated to them?

1786

All good maxims are in the world, [...] one only has to apply them; but that is very difficult.

1746

If pain is violent, it is short; if it is long, it is light.

1580

One could not stand his pride or his stubbornness, that companion of solitude.

100-120 AD

Peter Candid (Pieter de Witte, Pietro Candido)

The Annunciation

The Annunciation

ca. 1585

The most abstract thoughts require some imagination.

1702

The inclinations of the heart are like sure paths; as soon as they are known, everything is paved, everything is open to take possession.

1636

Homer is not only the greatest of poets; he is also the most philosophical. A country that produces such masterpieces so early is destined to later create all the wonders of science.

c. 350 B.C.E.

[...] or I know little of the depths of your soul.

1741-1784

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

Mademoiselle Nys

Mademoiselle Nys

1899

A harvest of scents and flowers, perfuming the air and the earth.

1546/1563

Democracy, which destroys [...] old social conventions [...] only modifies [natural feelings], and often gives them an energy and a gentleness they did not possess.

1835-1840

You dared to speak thus, O you, of all men the most.... For I do not know what name to give you that would be worthy of your character.

86-82 BC

God as a moral being or law.

1841

Bartolomeo Vivarini

The Madonna of Humility, the Annunciation, the Nativity, and the Pietà

The Madonna of Humility, the Annunciation, the Nativity, and the Pietà

ca. 1465

While they seek all means to act as they please, [men] find a course of action that has general approval and which no one had previously thought of.

1677

The sight of God requires silence and secrecy.

1263-1264

[I wanted] to show the uncertainty of all our judgments on the characters of men, and [...] that customs, fashion, and laws are what primarily determine matters of morality.

1751

Human life can be compared to a race [...] where one has no other goal and no other reward than to outpace one's competitors.

1772

Roman Artist

Top of a marble funerary relief with portrait busts of a young man and an elderly woman

Top of a marble funerary relief with portrait busts of a young man and an elderly woman

ca. 138–141 CE