The liberatory practice of educating oneself independently to escape institutional control and claim intellectual autonomy.
Sor Juana could not attend formal universities—they excluded women—so she taught herself through disciplined, voracious reading and reflection. This self-directed education was her path to freedom and authority. Rather than waiting for permission or institutional validation, she claimed the right to know. This practice embodies a libertarian principle: individuals can and should cultivate their own freedom through direct engagement with ideas. Self-education requires no permission, cannot be easily controlled, and produces genuine autonomy. It bypasses gatekeepers and creates intellectual property in one's own mind. Sor Juana's example shows that systematic study, pursued independently, becomes an act of liberation and property accumulation. In contemporary contexts, this validates homeschooling, autodidacticism, open-source learning, and community knowledge-sharing as valid paths to freedom. It challenges the institutional monopoly on legitimacy and expertise, asserting that self-directed learning generates real knowledge and real claims to property in one's capabilities.
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