The principle that human dignity—inherent worth and respect—is foundational to all libertarian rights and cannot be stripped through legal or social systems.
Despite institutional attempts to render Sor Juana silent, controllable, and subordinate, she asserted her dignity as a thinking, reasoning being—a dignity no authority could legitimately diminish. Libertarian justice rests on the conviction that all humans possess inherent dignity, not granted by institutions or earned through status. This dignity grounds all rights: to property, consent, self-definition, and freedom. Systems that deny dignity—treating humans as instruments, property, or subordinates—delegitimize themselves. Sor Juana's intellectual pride and refusal of humiliation embody this principle: she would not accept the reduction of her being to a role, however prestigious. This concept opposes utilitarian frameworks that treat dignity as disposable when efficiency demands, and resists hierarchical systems that allocate dignity by status. Applied today, it protects against dehumanization in labor systems, criminal justice, poverty, and discrimination—insisting that libertarian justice must preserve every person's fundamental worth.
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