Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Duty to Educate and Illuminate Others

Using your knowledge and authority to teach, mentor, and uplift others—especially those excluded from traditional systems of learning.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana saw her intellectual work not as private achievement but as public service: she taught, wrote plays for her community, mentored younger women, and used her platform to advocate for female education. Her tradition teaches that authenticity is incomplete without generosity—without using your position and knowledge to illuminate paths for others. This is particularly vital when you have access that others are denied. Authenticity across traditions means recognizing that your own liberation from ignorance creates responsibility to help others escape similar constraints. This concept transforms learning from a solitary pursuit into a relational practice rooted in justice and solidarity. For those navigating multiple traditions, it means actively creating bridges, explaining unfamiliar concepts, and insisting that others have the right to the same intellectual freedoms you claim. Education becomes both an act of authenticity and an act of love—a way of honoring your own journey by ensuring the journey remains possible for those who follow.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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