Claiming epistemic authority grounded in direct experience and embodied knowledge, not solely in credentials or institutional position.
Sor Juana grounded her intellectual claims not only in textual learning but in lived observation: her scientific curiosity emerged from direct experiment, her theology from spiritual practice, her understanding of women's minds from her own intellectual life. She insisted that experience itself constitutes valid knowledge, a radical claim in an era that privileged purely theoretical scholasticism. This concept challenges the credentialing systems that narrow professional authority to certified expertise. Someone who has lived through systemic injustice possesses valid knowledge about injustice. A practitioner who has managed thousands of cases possesses practical wisdom that theories alone cannot capture. Indigenous knowledge systems, oral traditions, artistic practices, and community expertise all constitute legitimate professional knowledge often dismissed by credentialism. Sor Juana's insistence on experiential authority particularly empowers professionals—often women and people from marginalized communities—whose knowledge comes from lived reality rather than institutional training. The concept suggests that professional identity becomes richer and more truthful when it integrates experiential authority with other forms of knowledge. It asks professionals: whose lived experience am I dismissing as mere anecdote? How can I honor embodied and experiential knowledge alongside formal credentials?
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.