"The family is the nucleus of civilization"
About this Quote
The subtext is conservative without being merely nostalgic. Durant is not romanticizing the hearth; he’s warning that institutions can’t out-perform the habits that feed them. If families fracture, the state expands to compensate, but at a cost: bureaucracy replacing intimacy, policy replacing duty, enforcement replacing trust. That implication fits Durant’s broader project in The Story of Civilization, where he treats social cohesion as a precondition for cultural brilliance, not a side effect of it.
Context matters: Durant wrote across the era of world wars, mass urbanization, the Great Depression, and the early Cold War, when “civilization” felt both precious and precarious. The quote reads like a stabilizing claim amid modern churn. It also smuggles in a contestable premise: which “family” counts as the nucleus? The power of the sentence is its compression; the risk is its vagueness. It invites societies to measure their future not only in GDP or military strength, but in the daily competence of care.
Quote Details
| Topic | Family |
|---|---|
| Source | Later attribution: Will Durant (Will Durant) modern compilation
Evidence:
r it the twilight of the gods is the afternoon of states every civilization come |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Durant, Will. (2026, January 13). The family is the nucleus of civilization. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-family-is-the-nucleus-of-civilization-129747/
Chicago Style
Durant, Will. "The family is the nucleus of civilization." FixQuotes. January 13, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-family-is-the-nucleus-of-civilization-129747/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The family is the nucleus of civilization." FixQuotes, 13 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-family-is-the-nucleus-of-civilization-129747/. Accessed 25 Feb. 2026.








