Animals' entitlement to exercise their natural instincts and problem-solving abilities, paralleling Sor Juana's struggle for freedom of thought and inquiry.
Just as Sor Juana resisted constraints on her intellectual pursuits, animals require freedom to express their inherent cognitive abilities—hunting, foraging, socializing, and exploring according to their nature. Captivity, domestication, and industrial agriculture deny animals the cognitive freedom essential to their flourishing. Sor Juana's philosophy of the unrestricted intellectual life translates into an animal ethics that prioritizes environmental enrichment, behavioral autonomy, and species-appropriate living conditions. When we confine animals to spaces that prevent natural cognition and choice, we commit the same injustice she protested: the suppression of a being's fundamental right to think, choose, and develop according to their nature. This concept demands that we design systems—sanctuaries, conservation efforts, legal protections—that honor animals' cognitive agency rather than merely reducing their suffering while denying their freedom to be fully themselves.
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