The commitment to constant self-reflection, questioning, and intellectual rigor as a form of resistance to unthinking obedience and injustice.
Sor Juana embodied the Socratic principle that the examined life is worth living—but in her context, this was radically political. A woman examining her own thoughts, questioning authority, pursuing knowledge for its own sake, and refusing easy answers was committing an act of rebellion. She wrote philosophical treatises, engaged in theological debate, and documented her intellectual journey in letters and poems. The act of examination itself—of asking why, of testing ideas, of following logic wherever it led—became her protest against a system that demanded women's intellectual passivity. In an unjust world, living justly means maintaining a rigorous internal life. It means asking hard questions about your own complicity, examining your assumptions, and refusing the comfort of received wisdom. The examined life prevents you from becoming merely another instrument of the unjust system. Sor Juana teaches that constant, disciplined self-reflection is not a luxury; it is a necessity for anyone committed to justice.
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