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Parenting & Family Quote by Friedrich Nietzsche

"For the woman, the man is a means: the end is always the child"

About this Quote

Nietzsche lands the line like a provocation dressed up as anthropology: a cold, telegraphic claim that “woman” treats “man” instrumentally because her true telos is reproduction. It “works” the way much of Nietzsche works - not by patiently proving a thesis, but by forcing the reader into a flinch. You either accept the premise and reveal your own romantic pieties as naive, or you reject it and have to explain why your rejection isn’t just moral outrage. The sentence is a trap for modern sentimentality.

The subtext is less about women than about Nietzsche’s obsession with ends, drives, and the demolition of comforting stories. He’s skeptical of love as a pure, egalitarian bond; he prefers to unmask it as strategy, instinct, or will. Here, he uses “child” as the brutal, non-negotiable reality principle beneath courtship: biology as the ultimate author of our metaphors. The sharpness comes from the reduction - complex relationships collapsed into purpose.

Context matters because Nietzsche is writing in a 19th-century Europe steeped in bourgeois family ideals and rigid gender roles, while also flirting with emerging “scientific” accounts of sex and heredity. His own life - famously solitary, often embittered about intimacy - shadows the aphorism. Still, it’s not merely personal spleen; it’s a rhetorical move in his broader campaign against moralized self-deception. The cost is obvious: “woman” becomes a type, “man” a tool, and desire a one-note plot. The sentence exposes a motive and then pretends that motive is the whole story.

Quote Details

TopicParenting
Source
Rejected source: The Nietzsche-Wagner correspondence (Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm, 1844-19..., 1921)IA: nietzschewagnerc00niet
Text match: 47.50%   Provider: Internet Archive
Evidence:
s not the temperament to make friends easily and the same has always been said o
Other candidates (2)
The Reverse Thing (Todd Andrew Rohrer, 2010) compilation95.0%
... of infinity and death itself is afraid of me . So getting back to the lesson , think about these two comments : "...
Friedrich Nietzsche (Friedrich Nietzsche) compilation44.3%
for the first time its entire shape and when we near it again we have the advan
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Nietzsche, Friedrich. (2026, January 13). For the woman, the man is a means: the end is always the child. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/for-the-woman-the-man-is-a-means-the-end-is-246/

Chicago Style
Nietzsche, Friedrich. "For the woman, the man is a means: the end is always the child." FixQuotes. January 13, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/for-the-woman-the-man-is-a-means-the-end-is-246/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"For the woman, the man is a means: the end is always the child." FixQuotes, 13 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/for-the-woman-the-man-is-a-means-the-end-is-246/. Accessed 4 Feb. 2026.

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Friedrich Nietzsche

Friedrich Nietzsche (October 15, 1844 - August 25, 1900) was a Philosopher from Germany.

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