Regular, honest self-reflection and the pursuit of self-knowledge as a core spiritual practice, secular in its methods and aims.
Sor Juana kept journals, wrote letters of intimate reflection, and produced works that examined her own thinking and development. She treated self-examination not as confession to a priest but as genuine inquiry into her own mind and motivations. This practice—the examined life—is an ancient philosophical ideal and remains central to secular meaning-making. For atheists and secular people, self-reflection serves the purpose that meditation or confession might in religious traditions: it clarifies values, reveals biases, integrates experience, and guides growth. Unlike religious confession, which aims at absolution from sin through priestly mediation, secular self-examination aims at understanding and change through one's own agency. Sor Juana's example shows that rigorous honesty with oneself is not less profound for being naturalistic. The practice of examining one's beliefs, motivations, relationships, and choices is a reliable path to wisdom and authenticity. For secular identity, this concept affirms that the examined life—pursued through writing, conversation, therapy, contemplation, or any honest practice—is a valid and vital spiritual practice, complete without religious framework or divine judgment.
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