"There is no doubt: the study of man is just beginning, at the same time that his end is in sight"
About this Quote
The subtext is postwar Europe, and Canetti's lifelong obsession with crowds, coercion, and the machinery of mass death. Born in 1905, writing in the shadow of fascism, genocide, and the technocratic state, he saw how quickly modernity can turn human beings into units: bodies to be counted, moved, eliminated. So the "beginning" isn't a triumph; it's a recoil. We start studying "man" because we've witnessed how easily he can be unmade - by ideology, by bureaucracy, by the crowd's hunger to dissolve individual conscience.
"His end" carries double voltage. It's apocalyptic (species-level annihilation in the age of total war and nuclear threat) and philosophical (the death of the humanist subject, replaced by systems, statistics, and power). Canetti's intent is not to predict doom as a parlor trick; it's to indict a civilization that needs catastrophe to take self-knowledge seriously. The sentence is engineered like a trapdoor: it lures you with the promise of understanding, then drops you into the realization that understanding may arrive too late to matter.
Quote Details
| Topic | Deep |
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| Source | Help us find the source |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Canetti, Elias. (2026, January 17). There is no doubt: the study of man is just beginning, at the same time that his end is in sight. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/there-is-no-doubt-the-study-of-man-is-just-49170/
Chicago Style
Canetti, Elias. "There is no doubt: the study of man is just beginning, at the same time that his end is in sight." FixQuotes. January 17, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/there-is-no-doubt-the-study-of-man-is-just-49170/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"There is no doubt: the study of man is just beginning, at the same time that his end is in sight." FixQuotes, 17 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/there-is-no-doubt-the-study-of-man-is-just-49170/. Accessed 18 Feb. 2026.







