The inviolable right to think independently and pursue knowledge regardless of institutional or hierarchical opposition.
Sor Juana's conflict with church authorities over her scientific and theological inquiries illustrates the tension between individual conscience and institutional power. She claimed the right to question, investigate, and form her own conclusions—a radical assertion in 17th-century Mexico. Her famous *Response* defends this freedom as essential to human dignity and intellectual integrity. For libertarian justice, freedom of conscience means no authority—religious, political, or corporate—can legitimately coerce thought or suppress inquiry. This protects the space where property rights and personal autonomy originate: the sovereign mind. Sor Juana's example shows that when institutions punish independent thinking, they violate fundamental freedom. Applied today, this concept resists censorship, intellectual conformity, and systems that weaponize authority to suppress dissent or alternative knowledge.
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