Recognizing children as active knowers and reasoners rather than empty vessels to be filled or problems to be managed.
Sor Juana insisted on her own intellectual authority and refused to be treated as a mere object of others' judgment or desire. Applied to children's rights, this means seeing each child as a legitimate thinker whose observations, questions, and reasoning matter. Children are not simply to be acted upon—they are subjects with their own emerging understanding of justice, fairness, and truth. This philosophical shift changes how we listen to children, how we involve them in decisions affecting them, and how we respond when they notice contradictions between what adults say and what adults do. Sor Juana's domain of knowledge insists that intelligence and capacity for reason are not the monopoly of adults or the powerful. Children's rights frameworks built on this concept prioritize genuine participation, consent, and consultation with children themselves. It transforms child protection from paternalistic rescue to respectful partnership, recognizing that children bring irreplaceable insight into their own experiences and needs.
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