The process of identifying and rejecting foundational lies that corrupt systems embed in culture and consciousness.
Sor Juana lived within rigid systems—colonial hierarchy, religious orthodoxy, gender restriction—yet she refused to accept their foundational premises as natural or inevitable. She exposed the logical flaws and injustices built into accepted wisdom. Corruption operates through false premises: that power demands obedience without question, that self-interest justifies harm to others, that certain people are inherently trustworthy or untrustworthy. Anti-corruption work requires cognitive liberation—the deliberate process of identifying these embedded lies and rejecting them. This means examining the stories we tell ourselves about authority, entitlement, and inevitability. Following Sor Juana's model, we must develop the intellectual humility to question what we've inherited, the courage to name what we see as untrue, and the persistence to build alternatives rooted in clearer principles and more honest understanding of how power actually works.
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