The daily habit of questioning assumptions, testing beliefs through reason, and pursuing wisdom as an ongoing practice rather than fixed doctrine.
Sor Juana's written work—her responses to critics, her philosophical poems, her defenses of her own learning—embodies Socratic examined life as a spiritual discipline. For atheist identity, this means rejecting both dogmatism and passivity. Your secular worldview is not merely the absence of belief; it is an active practice of thinking, testing, and refining understanding. The examined life requires regular intellectual engagement: reading philosophy, engaging in genuine dialogue, questioning your own assumptions, following evidence where it leads even when uncomfortable. This is how you prevent secular identity from becoming its own unexamined dogma. Sor Juana modeled this by refusing to accept institutional answers passively—she wrote, questioned, defended, revised. For contemporary atheists, the examined life means staying intellectually alive, remaining open to evidence and argument, and treating your worldview as a living practice rather than settled inheritance. It transforms atheism from negative identity—not believing—into positive identity: someone committed to truth-seeking as a way of life.
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