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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

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There are sensitive egoists, [...] who suffer from the misfortune of those who love them, because it disturbs their own peace of mind.

1926

It is this philosophy that must be acquired above all; [...] that with which you must begin.

63-64 AD

As the gods acquire more knowledge and authority, they become more fearsome.

1757

We have a very gentle medicine, philosophy: for with other remedies, one feels the pleasure only after the cure, but this one pleases and cures at the same time.

1580

Bernardino Campi

Portrait of a Woman

Portrait of a Woman

late 1560s

It often happens that we are esteemed in proportion as we esteem ourselves.

1746

the public square of Syracuse had become deserted, and the grass there was so high that it served as pasture for the horses, and as a bed for the grooms.

100-120 AD

If necessity is referred only to phenomena, and freedom only to things in themselves, there is no contradiction [...].

1783

It seems that this new morality has made men weaker, and has delivered the world to audacious scoundrels.

1513-1519

Nicolaes van Veerendael

A Bouquet of Flowers in a Crystal Vase

A Bouquet of Flowers in a Crystal Vase

1662

I learned not to believe anything too firmly of which I had been persuaded only by example and custom.

1637

To hate one's soul is to resist its guilty desires. [...] When our soul suggests thoughts contrary to the law of God, we must reject it with horror.

1263-1264

The diversion is a particularly shameless stratagem when it consists of completely abandoning the subject to raise a personal objection.

1830-1831

The ruin of [Fan] did not take my life. It is not certain that the prosperity of [Tch'ou] will preserve yours.

4th century BC

Etruscan artist

Bronze kyathos (single-handled jug)

Bronze kyathos (single-handled jug)

ca. 450–400 BCE

Life is not an argument; among the conditions of life might be error.

1882

There are men who judge what is unseen by what is seen; the greatness [...] of the mind [...] by the nobility, dignities, and riches [...]. One is often measured by the other.

1674-1675

The sovereign, in a State, is the interpreter of the law, because his authority alone defends it, and his testimony alone establishes it.

1670

A divided city is half taken.

c. 1552-1553

Benjamin-Constant (Jean-Joseph-Benjamin Constant)

Scene in a Harem (Un Envoi de Serbie)

Scene in a Harem (Un Envoi de Serbie)

1876

Thought is an action and cannot be the essence: but it is an essential action, and all substances have such.

1704

It is therefore in the decomposition of the proposition into its elements that the separation between the brute and the intelligent species par excellence is marked.

1803

The most dissolute men [...] corrupt public morals less than those whose vices are allied with some virtues, and who are only partly wicked.

1623

Does one judge according to one's sensations [...]? The judgments are always right. Does one judge according to one's prejudices, that is to say, according to others? The judgments are always false.

1772

Garofalo (Benvenuto Tisi da Garofalo)

Saint Nicholas of Tolentino Reviving a Child

Saint Nicholas of Tolentino Reviving a Child

ca. 1530

it is not permissible for an inspired author to contradict himself so shamefully.

1764

Classical paganism was characterized by unity; dualism, division, disagreement in all things are the character of Christianity.

1842-1845

The study of modes of production constitutes [...] the materialist supersession of philosophy. [...] [Philosophy] is already superseded in the real development of which it was only the distorted reflection.

1841

The one who is at the very bottom, whom no one pities, who has the power to mistreat no one [...], their suffering remains within them and poisons them.

1947

Roman Artist

Bronze statuette of a dancing Lar

Bronze statuette of a dancing Lar

1st century CE

Such a dogma is good only in a Theocratic Government; in any other, it is pernicious.

1762

Of Essence and Quality.

c. 253-270 AD

Pleasure and Pain are two Ideas, one or the other of which is joined to almost all our Ideas, both those that come to us by sensation and those that we receive by reflection.

1689

Science can and should only retain from reality that which is spread out in space, homogeneous, measurable, and visual.

1922

Greek Artist

Bronze statuette of a bull

Bronze statuette of a bull

7th century BCE

It is always pleasure and pain that are the prime mover of [our] faculties.

1754

In the act of exchange, the various agents remain outside of one another and, when the operation is over, each one finds himself and takes himself back entirely.

1893

And if it should happen that their number reaches fifteen or sixteen hundred, then they could be posted at the corners and in the middle of the streets, every three hundred paces.

1662

If a man neglects education, he walks lame to the end of his life.

c. 375 BC

Roman Artist

Upper right corner of a marble sarcophagus: head of a Black African and a maenad

Upper right corner of a marble sarcophagus: head of a Black African and a maenad

1st quarter of the 3rd century CE

If it is not certain that [the penitentiary system] makes the inmates better than they were, it is at least certain that it prevents them from becoming worse; and that is an immense result.

1864-1866

We know that the jackdaw is naturally a thief: to entrust gold to it would be to want to lose it.

59 BC

And what will one get out of it? One will become more talkative and more tiresome than one is now.

c. 108 AD

Reason makes itself heard intermittently. The persistent heart speaks ceaselessly.

1757

Greek Artist, South Italian

Terracotta statuette of a veiled woman

Terracotta statuette of a veiled woman

2nd century BCE

It is for the sake of wicked men that laws must be established.

1869

[Reason] is of all things in this world the most harmful to a reasonable being: God leaves reason only to those he wishes to damn, he removes it in his goodness from those he wishes to save.

1768

Two things identical to a third are identical to each other.

End of the 4th century BC

It is perhaps no less difficult to define than it is rare to possess a gift of this nature [the fiery spirit].

1636

Minoan

Stone spindle whorl

Stone spindle whorl

ca. 2400–1900 BCE