The recognition that knowledge and wisdom, while originating in individual minds, naturally circulate and belong to broader communities of discourse.
Sor Juana's learning drew from centuries of accumulated knowledge across cultures and disciplines; her work contributed to ongoing conversation. While she defended her individual right to study and create, she implicitly recognized that ideas are not purely private property but part of humanity's common heritage. This concept reconciles individual property rights with the reality that intellectual goods have social dimensions. Libertarian justice need not mean pure individualism; it can accommodate the idea that knowledge flows between minds, builds on prior work, and serves collective purposes. Sor Juana's citations of ancient and contemporary thinkers show intellectual humility alongside intellectual courage. This framework suggests that property rights in ideas should protect creators' attribution and compensation while enabling circulation, building on prior work, and communal benefit. It rejects both state monopoly over knowledge and absolute intellectual property restriction, seeking instead a system where individual rights and communal flourishing coexist.
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