The ethical priority of individual conscience over institutional directives when the two conflict, grounded in the dignity of human reason.
Sor Juana faced direct conflict between her conscience—her conviction that women's intellectual development was valuable and necessary—and ecclesiastical command to obey male authority unquestioningly. She ultimately privileged conscience, refusing the false piety that demands intellectual self-abnegation. This concept provides a critical framework for religious identity crises, where individuals often experience conscience and command in direct opposition. A person may conscientiously believe that LGBTQ+ inclusion is just, that women deserve equal authority, or that core doctrines no longer ring true—contradicting institutional command. Sor Juana's tradition validates prioritizing conscience, not as arrogance but as spiritual maturity. This doesn't mandate leaving religion; rather, it establishes that conscience is not subservient to hierarchy. For those navigating faith transitions, this principle legitimizes the internal knowing that guides evolution—whether toward deepened faith, productive doubt, or departure from the tradition.
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