A practice of asking foundational questions that expose corruption by interrogating its logical and moral contradictions.
Sor Juana's philosophical method involved asking dangerous questions: Why can men study but women cannot? Why does authority demand obedience while acting unjustly? These questions were dangerous because they exposed logical contradictions at the heart of corrupt systems. Anti-corruption work requires cultivating this questioning practice in institutions: auditors who ask not just 'what happened' but 'why was this permitted'; journalists who ask 'who benefits from this silence'; citizens who ask 'why is this normal.' Corrupt systems depend on people accepting the official narrative without interrogation. When organizations embed the practice of dangerous questioning—encouraging challenge, rewarding intellectual rigor, protecting questioners from retaliation—they create internal resistance to corruption. This method transforms intellectual activity into institutional health.
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