The willingness to revise beliefs, acknowledge error, and evolve thinking when confronted with truth, even when it costs you.
Sor Juana's life was not a straight line of consistent ideology. She evolved, revised her views, and responded to challenges and new understanding. She was willing to engage with critiques—even harsh ones from powerful authorities—and to let her thinking be shaped by encounter with truth. Near the end of her life, facing pressure and possibly recognizing the limits of what she could achieve within her constraints, she made difficult choices about where to focus her energy. This willingness to change, to be wrong, to revise—this is a form of courage often overlooked. In unjust systems, people often cling to fixed positions out of fear or pride. But living justly requires flexibility, humility before truth, and willingness to revise when evidence demands it. This does not mean abandoning your convictions; it means holding them with enough humility to let them be refined. Sor Juana teaches that intellectual integrity includes the capacity to change your mind, to admit error, and to follow truth even when it disrupts your settled positions. This kind of courage is essential for genuine justice work.
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