Children need the right to ask critical questions and challenge authority without fear of punishment or rejection.
Sor Juana famously questioned religious and institutional authority through her writing and her life choices, understanding that intellectual freedom depends on the ability to interrogate established truths. She risked her standing to pursue questions that mattered to her. For children's rights, this concept protects the developmental need to question—parents, teachers, traditions, and systems. Children who are punished for asking 'why' learn to suppress their critical faculties and become passive. Conversely, children in environments that welcome questioning develop into thoughtful, engaged adults capable of ethical reasoning. This doesn't mean children should be indulged without boundaries, but rather that curiosity and intellectual challenge should be welcomed as signs of healthy development. Sor Juana's life demonstrates that the freedom to question is foundational to all other intellectual rights.
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