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Curated Questions

Celebrating The Power Of Questions

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#86 Ken Woodward: The Smallest Act of Authorship

"The smallest act of authorship is a question." - Ken Woodward

Nine months ago, Naomi Campbell of the Right Question Institute said one word that gave me a word I had been searching for: agency. I felt it land in my body before I understood it in my head. I promised my listeners I would come back with an answer. This episode is that answer.

Agency is the authorship of our own lives. Not control, which none of us has. Authorship is something smaller and more stubborn. It is the refusal to be only what the world wrote about us. And the smallest act of authorship, it turns out, is a question. The moment we ask, we stop receiving the world and start writing on it.

I carry two stories from my walk across Washington. A man I call Doc, raised by a mother who would not let him absorb anything without questioning it first. A woman I call Pearl, who answered the worst day of her life by building a neighborhood for the children coming up behind her.

Agency is inherent. It can be suppressed, but never removed. The whole question is whether we pick up the pen.

This Curated Questions episode can be found on all major platforms and at CuratedQuestions.com.

Be sure to subscribe to the weekly Curated Questions Dispatch newsletter for more fun with questions and curiosity! (https://substack.com/@curatedquestions)

Keep questioning!

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tags: Ken Woodward, Curated Questions, agency, authorship of your life, the power of questions, asking questions, self-advocacy, Right Question Institute, Naomi Campbell, personal agency, curiosity, human dignity and AI, why we ask questions, inquiry, picking up the pen, Curated Questions podcast, questions and agency
categories: Community, Community Service, Connection, Leadership, Listening, Personal Growth, Equity, Imagination
Wednesday 06.03.26
Posted by Kenneth Woodward
 

#40 Ken Woodward: Reviving Franklin's Junto: How Questions Built America

In this episode of Curated Questions, host Ken Woodward uncovers a forgotten antidote to our fractured discourse: Benjamin Franklin's Junto. In 1727 Philadelphia, a 21-year-old printer gathered tradesmen—the 'leather apron crowd'—for Friday night discussions that would revolutionize American civic life. This wasn't just a social club; it was a systematic experiment in collective wisdom that led to the creation of America's first volunteer fire company, lending library, public hospital, and the University of Pennsylvania.

Ken explores Franklin's 24 carefully crafted questions that transformed ordinary workers into civic leaders, revealing how debates conducted 'without fondness for dispute, or desire of victory' built both personal character and community institutions. Through themes of personal development, community awareness, civic engagement, and mutual support, the Junto proved that structured curiosity could turn individual ambition into collective flourishing.

Drawing from Franklin's original rules, including banning words like 'certainly' and fining members who spoke too definitively, Ken explains how the Junto combined three elements that modern groups often keep separate: personal growth, civic action, and genuine friendship. The episode includes a vulnerable reflection on intellectual loneliness and ends with a direct challenge: Start this Friday. Find three curious people. Ask one of Franklin's questions. See what happens.

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tags: Ken Woodward, Curated Questions, Benjamin Franklin, Junto, founding fathers, American history, civic engagement, productive disagreement, conversation skills, community building, intellectual curiosity, Philadelphia history, colonial America, 1727, structured dialogue, asking questions, civic discourse, leather apron crowd, working class intellectuals, Library Company Philadelphia, social innovation, truth seeking, civil debate, mastermind group, intellectual community, political discourse, mutual aid, personal development, democratic values, historical wisdom, conversation framework, collective wisdom
categories: Listening, Community, Connection, Gratitude, Justice, Leadership, Politics, Relationships
Wednesday 07.16.25
Posted by Kenneth Woodward
 

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