Dead philosophers's quotes that are unpleasant and unsophisticated by today's standard?

Not in the slightest, but it's doubtful many 'modern' women appreciate be told so, especially by a dead old German man, despite it being celebrated by many as their greatest achievement and ultimate legacy.

I suspect he would consider it's renouncement a riot of unnatural values, a symptom of cultural decline, weakening women in the name of 'improvement' similarly to how he's wrote about men.

If a woman possesses manly virtues one should run away from her, and if she does not possess them she runs away herself.

If you understand what he wrote about George Sand 'this prolific writing cow', compared to say Napolean, Dostoyevsky and Stendhal, you probably understand him better than me. I'm unsure he really thought that much about women, they weren't as interesting as his abiding obsessions, art, music, philosophy, morality and literature among others.

The best I think I can do is point you at some potent passages that demonstrate the power of his mind and singularness of his thought. A good example is #39 Criticism of Modernity, from Expeditions of an Untimely Man in Twilight of the Idols. It's a short but penetrating indictment of institutions, leading to modern marriage. His thoughts are surprisingly blunt, but considered 'sexist' today, probably unpopular (not that he would care considering himself a 'posthumous' or 'untimely' man). You may not like the idea that marriage now 'limps with both legs' among others, but his vision and clarity are often compelling. Especially so when you consider the 'progress' of many such institutions in the 20th century.

Modern marriage has lost its meaning - consequently it is being abolished.

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