Embracing incompleteness and intellectual humility as authentic positions rather than failures to achieve final truth.
Sor Juana's final years saw her renounce her intellectual work, a decision scholars debate endlessly. Rather than viewing this as failure or tragedy, we might see it as authentic evolution—her willingness to change her mind, to remain unfinished, to prioritize conscience over consistency. Authenticity across traditions requires this courage. You will contradict yourself. Your beliefs will evolve. What felt true at thirty may feel incomplete at fifty. Rather than rigidifying into unchanging positions, authentic life means staying in dialogue with experience, tradition, and reality. This is especially important across traditions where you're integrating multiple inheritances: you won't reach final synthesis quickly. Sor Juana teaches that intellectual and spiritual maturity includes the humility to remain open, questioning, and willing to revise—to be perpetually becoming rather than finally fixed.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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