"Culture must have its ultimate aim in the metaphysical, or it will cease to be culture"
About this Quote
The intent is polemical, and the subtext is anti-modern in a specific early-20th-century way. Huizinga lived through the mechanized slaughter of World War I, the rise of mass politics, and the encroachment of bureaucratic rationality. In works like The Waning of the Middle Ages, he reads history as a story of forms losing their inner charge, rituals turning into pageantry, symbols into decoration. The metaphysical here functions like a battery: it’s what keeps art, play, scholarship, and civic life from becoming purely instrumental.
What makes the sentence work is its controlled absolutism. “Must” and “ultimate” refuse compromise, while “cease to be culture” threatens an identity collapse, not a minor decline in taste. He’s not nostalgic for medieval piety so much as anxious about a future where meaning is outsourced to markets and states. The provocation still lands: if a society can’t name what it holds sacred, it will still have culture-looking products, but no culture with a spine.
Quote Details
| Topic | Wisdom |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Huizinga, Johan. (2026, February 19). Culture must have its ultimate aim in the metaphysical, or it will cease to be culture. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/culture-must-have-its-ultimate-aim-in-the-56267/
Chicago Style
Huizinga, Johan. "Culture must have its ultimate aim in the metaphysical, or it will cease to be culture." FixQuotes. February 19, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/culture-must-have-its-ultimate-aim-in-the-56267/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Culture must have its ultimate aim in the metaphysical, or it will cease to be culture." FixQuotes, 19 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/culture-must-have-its-ultimate-aim-in-the-56267/. Accessed 22 Feb. 2026.









