The collective resource of education and knowledge-sharing that enables individual growth without requiring institutional gatekeeping.
Sor Juana's education came through voracious self-teaching, conversations, observation, and access to the palace library—learning commons that existed outside formal institutional control. She built her knowledge through networks of curious minds rather than through credentialed institutions. In Libertarian justice, the commons of learning represents a vision where knowledge, education, and intellectual resources remain accessible without monopolistic control. This framework protects freedom by ensuring that education isn't solely owned by states or corporations, but exists in distributed networks—libraries, salons, mentorships, and communities. It recognizes property rights in the sense of protecting individuals' and communities' stewardship of shared intellectual resources. The learning commons enables economic mobility and freedom without requiring submission to institutional hierarchies, allowing people like Sor Juana to become formidable thinkers and contributors on their own terms.
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