The framework that certain knowledge—philosophy, literature, theology—constitutes a shared human inheritance that should remain accessible to all.
Sor Juana read widely across traditions—classical authors, contemporary scholars, theological debates—treating this intellectual inheritance as her birthright despite institutional attempts to restrict her access. She implicitly recognized these works as part of a commons: shared human knowledge that belongs to humanity, not to gatekeeping authorities. A libertarian conception of justice can include this commons framework—recognizing that certain foundational knowledge represents accumulated human effort and should not be monopolized. Sor Juana's defense of her right to read was a defense of the commons against privatization. However, this differs from property restriction: the commons exist because people have the property right to share knowledge freely. This concept balances individual intellectual property (your original creation belongs to you) with collective intellectual commons (humanity's philosophical and literary heritage belongs to all). It opposes copyright absolutism while supporting creators' rights, and it challenges institutions that hoard knowledge to maintain power. In practice, it supports open-access scholarship, public libraries, and the sharing of ideas.
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