The libertarian principle that individuals possess the right to express thought and publish ideas without state or institutional interference, central to both intellectual liberty and property autonomy.
Sor Juana faced constant pressure from the Church and male intellectual authorities who sought to control, suppress, and redirect her work. Her resistance to censorship was not merely an artistic concern—it was a demand for property rights and freedom. When an institution censors your speech, it seizes your right to distribute your own intellectual property and denies you the freedom to benefit from your ideas. Sor Juana's famous letter defending women's right to learn and question represented a libertarian stance: the individual owns their own expression and no authority can legitimately confiscate it. Freedom from censorship protects both liberty and property simultaneously—you cannot own what you are forbidden to speak or publish. Her tradition illuminates how censorship is a form of dispossession, stripping individuals of their ideas and their right to their own voice. True justice requires removing institutional barriers to free expression.
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