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Fenton Johnson quotes
"The free man... believes in destiny and believes that it has need of him," wrote Martin Buber, the great Jewish philosopher. "Destiny," added Marianne Moore, the spinster poet, when she quoted Buber. "Not fate." What is this distinction Moore takes such care to draw between destiny and fate?
Fenton Johnson
We are caught - trapped, some might say - in the web of fate, but we are each just as surely among its multitude of spinners. In our spinning lies our hope; in our spinning lies our destiny.
Fenton Johnson
Counter to the avalanche of messages from our culture, I recognize celibacy not as negation but as a joyous turning inward. "Inebriate of air am I, / And debauchee of dew,” wrote Emily Dickinson, most promiscuous of celibates. "Opulence in asceticism,” Marianne Moore wrote, a phrase that celebrates the solitary life even as it provides a sound bite for saving the planet.
Fenton Johnson
The word "restraint" implies the asking of an essential question, one that is more important now than ever, and is antithetical both to capitalism and to science as we practice them: Because we can do something, must we do it?
Fenton Johnson