Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Conscience as Court of Last Appeal

A principle holding that individual moral conscience supersedes unjust law, empowering citizens to disobey governmental commands when they violate fundamental justice.

Juana
Why It Matters

When Sor Juana submitted to ecclesiastical pressure to renounce intellectual work, she was choosing institutional obedience over conscience—a decision she later regretted in her final writings. MLK invoked conscience as the ultimate authority: "I have a moral obligation to disobey unjust laws." This concept establishes that conscience—the individual's reasoned judgment about right and wrong—must be the final arbiter when law and morality conflict. This is not mere subjectivity; it requires rigorous moral reasoning grounded in principles of justice, not personal preference. The conscience must be educated, informed, and tested against reason and community standards. But when this disciplined conscience recognizes that a law contradicts fundamental human dignity, obedience to conscience becomes obligatory. Civil disobedience rooted in conscience claims authority beyond government, grounding resistance in the deepest moral truth.

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Identity & Justice
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