The principle that children's mental and intellectual boundaries are rights-bearing, requiring informed consent for educational, medical, and psychological interventions.
Sor Juana's intellectual life was constantly subject to oversight and control by others. Cognitive autonomy recognizes that children's minds and thinking processes deserve protection from violation. This extends the consent principle beyond physical touch to include intellectual and psychological domains: children should understand and consent to psychological testing, medication affecting cognition, educational tracking that limits future choices, and interrogation of their beliefs. This concept challenges paternalistic assumptions that adults always know what's best for children's minds. It requires that children receive clear information about interventions, have genuine choice where possible, and are protected from coercive thought-control tactics like shaming, isolation, or threats. Cognitive autonomy is particularly crucial for children with disabilities, where systems often bypass their input entirely. Sor Juana's fierce defense of her own intellectual independence models the kind of respect children deserve—not as future adults who might matter later, but as thinking beings whose cognition matters now.
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