A framework for understanding how silencing thinkers, restricting questions, and controlling knowledge production causes cumulative harm across generations and centuries.
Sor Juana's forced renunciation of her library and intellectual work near the end of her life represents a tragedy not just personal but civilizational. The knowledge she might have created, the students she might have taught, the insights she might have shared were lost. Multiply this across millions of women, Indigenous scholars, and others systematically excluded from intellectual life, and we begin to grasp the immeasurable debt of human potential. For intergenerational justice, we must soberly calculate what suppression costs. Every person denied education is a contribution lost to human knowledge. Every silenced voice is a perspective missing from our collective problem-solving. When we restrict intellectual freedom—through censorship, gatekeeping, or marginalization—we are not just harming individuals; we are impoverishing the inheritance available to future generations. Justice requires acknowledging this cost and reversing it through radically expanded access to intellectual life.
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