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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

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Despair [...] is the greatest of our errors.

1746

How many events it is enough to predict for them to take place.

1623

[The Deluge is a] paternal correction [...] by divine providence, which, for having failed to foresee the malice of men, repented of having made them so malicious, and drowned them once and for all to make them better; which had, as we know, marvelous success.

1768

Do not compound the son's grief with the father's tears, nor the father's sadness with the son's tears.

59 BC

Nicolas Poussin

Orpheus and Eurydice

Orpheus and Eurydice

1650

April, the honor of the green, yellow, and blue-green meadows [...].

1546/1563

The pleasure which necessarily precedes the observation of a law [...] is pathological [...]; but that which is necessarily preceded by the law [...] belongs to the moral order.

1797-1798

Oh my Master! [...] You who destroy without being wicked! You who build without being good! You who were before time, and are not old!

4th century BC

He spoke Latin, argued philosophical theses, and revealed the hidden sins of others.

1518-1527

Cypriot artist

Limestone head of a beardless male votary

Limestone head of a beardless male votary

1st century BCE

[...] the progress of the moral sciences never precedes and indeed only follows from afar that of the physical and mathematical sciences [...].

1797-1798

There is a kind of contradiction between the two principles of human nature upon which religion is founded. Our natural terrors make us see a wicked deity [...]; our inclination to praise paints it as excellent and all-perfect.

1757

Our character is still us [...].

1889

I have in my soul an idea of God and of nature very different from that which the new Christians are accustomed to defend.

1661-1676

Catena (Vincenzo di Biagio)

Portrait of a Venetian Senator

Portrait of a Venetian Senator

ca. 1525

[...] making oneself the sole cherished object of the Supreme Being is a much more powerful pride than that which aspires only to be cherished and admired by present and future men. Christian pride hides itself; it has the appearance of its opposite.

1841

Is the stag inflamed by [physical love]? From timid he becomes brave.

1772

When [a powerful person] causes harm, it is not of small, but of great importance.

329-323 BC

The notion of duration is [...] entirely relative: each person judges it only by the succession of their ideas.

1754

Greek Artist, Attic

Marble stele (grave marker) of a woman

Marble stele (grave marker) of a woman

ca. 375–350 BCE

We hide [...] to build a man, to destroy him we seek broad daylight and vast expanses.

1580

Opinion is the medium between knowledge and ignorance.

c. 375 BC

All the movements we make without our will contributing to them [...] depend only on the conformation of our members [...] in the same way that the movement of a watch is produced by the sole force of its spring and the shape of its wheels.

1649

Chrysippus taught that mixtion is broader than temperation.

c. 253-270 AD

Roman Artist, Cypriot

Marble inscribed base

Marble inscribed base

ca. 2nd century CE

The unity and simplicity of this concept would easily make one forget what a long series of obstacles had to be overcome to achieve it.

1663

The necessary being and the being by its essence are but one and the same thing.

Late 17th - early 18th century

Greek geometry is a prophecy. [...] originally it constituted a symbolic language concerning religious truths.

1962

[The predicament of habitus] is suitable only for humans. It is also true that we dress [...] certain animals with clothing that is foreign to them.

c. 1270

Jean-Baptiste Perronneau

Olivier Journu (1724–1783)

Olivier Journu (1724–1783)

1756

Equality of conditions does not by itself produce regularity of morals; but one cannot doubt that it facilitates and increases it.

1835-1840

Oh! how little one must have had to think, to have been able to read so much!

1905

These are probably the reasons that have made the epithet 'dog' an insult; but we dare not decide.

1764

It would be desirable for important matters to always be treated with the same impartiality and in the same spirit of tolerance.

1773-1774

Roman Artist

Marble portrait bust of a boy

Marble portrait bust of a boy

ca. 35–50 CE

The feeling of pain is more intense than the feeling of pleasure.

1674-1675

The higher we rise, the smaller we appear to those who cannot fly.

1881

Karl Marx before the Cologne Jury.

1848

Society exists and lives only in and through individuals. Should the idea of society be extinguished in individual minds [...], society will die.

1912

Jan van der Heyden

The Huis ten Bosch at The Hague and Its Formal Garden (View from the South)

The Huis ten Bosch at The Hague and Its Formal Garden (View from the South)

ca. 1668–70

Nothing can make a man a member of a society but his actual entering into it by positive engagement, and express promise and compact.

1690

Society is the exact image of an arch that would collapse [...] if its solidity were not ensured by the mutual resistance of its stones.

63-64 AD

You must absolutely and completely be in your soul [...] free or a slave, enlightened or ignorant.

c. 108 AD

The art [...] that no one can mark the limits of your capacity will remain [...] fruitless if you do not add to it the art of hiding the affections of your heart.

1636

Louis Léopold Boilly

Portrait of a Man

Portrait of a Man

1781

I knew that base passions seldom subjugate any but weak men, and have little hold on souls of a strong temper [...].

1782-1789

The laws of most countries are far worse than the people who execute them, and many of these laws owe their continued existence only to the rarity of their application.

1869

He placed his glory and his patriotism in preventing, by his presence, [his city] from diminishing further, and in allowing his fellow citizens to enjoy the esteem attached to his name.

100-120 AD

Since men have been making literature [...], they have lost the ability to imagine these pretty things called fairy tales.

1926

Henri-Edmond Cross (Henri-Edmond Delacroix)

Garden of the Painter at Saint Clair

Garden of the Painter at Saint Clair

1908