The practice of engaging others as intellectual peers in dialogue, creating conditions where ideas are tested through mutual respect rather than hierarchy.
Sor Juana's primary intellectual practice was dialogue and correspondence with learned minds—bishops, philosophers, other writers. She insisted on being treated as an equal in these exchanges, not as a subordinate whose role was to listen and obey. She modeled intellectual community based on mutual respect and genuine exchange rather than authority and deference. In Libertarian justice, this speaks to how voluntary society operates: through dialogue among equals rather than command from above. When people engage as intellectual peers, they are more likely to reach voluntary agreements, to be honest, to think critically. Hierarchical knowledge-transfer—teacher to passive student, authority to subject—often masks coercion. Dialogue among equals assumes everyone has something to contribute and that truth emerges through collective inquiry. Sor Juana's practice of scholarly correspondence and debate models how libertarian communities can function: through networks of peers exchanging ideas, testing arguments, and building knowledge together without any single authority dictating truth.
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