The principle that all persons possess inherent dignity and rights that cannot be stripped by power or authority, a foundation for resisting corruption.
Central to Sor Juana's philosophy is an assertion of dignity: as a woman, as an intellectual, as a human being. She insisted on her right to learn, think, and exist fully as a person despite a system designed to restrict her to narrower roles. This defense of dignity is profoundly anticorruption because corruption often depends on denying the dignity of those affected. Exploitation, theft, abuse of power—these become possible when the powerful view others as objects to be used rather than persons to be respected. Sor Juana's insistence that all humans possess inherent worth, deserving of respect and justice, provides an ethical foundation for anticorruption. When institutions and individuals practice seeing others as dignified beings with rights, corruption becomes morally intolerable. Defending dignity means creating systems that protect the vulnerable, give voice to the marginalized, and ensure that power cannot strip people of their rights or humanity. Anticorruption is, at its core, a defense of human dignity against systems that would exploit it.
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