Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Curiosity as a Moral Right

The inherent right to ask questions and pursue understanding without penalty, foundational to intellectual freedom and civilizational justice.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana famously declared her insatiable curiosity from childhood—the drive to understand how things work, why the world is as it is, and what truth demands. Her tradition treats curiosity not as a luxury or eccentricity but as a moral right, even a moral imperative. Yet many civilizations punish questioning, especially from those without power: women, the poor, the colonized, religious minorities. Fair societies protect the right to wonder aloud, to pursue strange questions, to follow intellectual threads without preapproval from authorities. Suppressing curiosity suppresses human flourishing and perpetuates ignorance that benefits the powerful. Sor Juana's life demonstrates that fairness requires defending the questioner, the one who asks uncomfortable questions about injustice, gender, power, and truth. Every civilization that claims justice must safeguard space for intellectual exploration, even—especially—when it challenges established order.

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Identity & Justice
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