“Work is a substitute religious experience for many workaholics.”
Mary Daly“The Adequate Protest demands far more than protests. It calls for Great and Daring Leaps of Integrity and Courage to See.”
Mary Daly“Courage to be is the key to revelatory power of the feminist revolution.”
Mary Daly“Work is a substitute religious experience for many workaholics.”
Mary Daly“Women have had the power of naming stolen from us.”
Mary Daly“Almost everything has been stolen from us by the patriarchy. Our creativity has been stolen, our creative energies, our religion. I want it back.”
Mary Daly“Work is a substitute "religious" experience for many workaholics.”
Mary Daly“Courage to be is the key to revelatory power of the feminist revolution.”
Mary Daly“...the essential task of feminism is not to go looking around for a ready-made theory and then try to make it relevant to our (little?) "issue" or "problem". This is self-depreciating in the extreme, a fact that is obvious if one realises that feminism is cosmic in its dimensions.”
Mary Daly“The word ‘sin’ is derived from the Indo-European root ‘es-,’ meaning ‘to be.’ When I discovered this etymology, I intuitively understood that for a [person] trapped in patriarchy, which is the religion of the entire planet, ‘to be’ in the fullest sense is ‘to sin'.”
Mary Daly“The method that is required is not one of correlation but of liberation. Even the term “method” must be reinterpreted and in fact wrenched out of its usual semantic field, for the emerging creativity in women is by no means a merely cerebral process. In order to understand the implications of this process it is necessary to grasp the fundamental fact that women have had the power of naming stolen from us. We have not been free to use our power to name ourselves, the world or God. The old naming was not the product of dialogue- a fact inadvertently admitted in the genesis story of Adam’s naming the animals and the women. Women are now realizing that the universal imposing of names by men has been false because partial. That is, inadequate words have been taken as adequate.”
Mary Daly, Beyond God the Father: Toward a Philosophy of Women's Liberation