Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Duty to Defend the Defenseless

The obligation of the intelligent and articulate to speak for those denied voice, rooted in conscience and social responsibility.

Juana
Why It Matters

Though Sor Juana occupied a privileged position as an educated woman in the convent, she used her intellect and access to defend those with less power: indigenous peoples, the enslaved, women denied education. Her tradition teaches that fairness demands those with voice use it for the voiceless, and those with learning serve justice by making it accessible and by advocating for the powerless. This is not charity but duty. Civilizations claiming justice require their intellectuals, professionals, and privileged members to translate, explain, and defend the interests of those excluded from power. The lawyer serves the wrongly accused; the doctor serves the poor; the writer speaks uncomfortable truths power wishes silenced. Sor Juana's example shows that real intellectual work is not detached from justice but inseparable from it. Fair societies expect their smartest and most educated members to strengthen rather than exploit the vulnerable, to use learning for liberation rather than dominance.

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