The right to analyze, criticize, and question institutions themselves, protecting intellectual autonomy from institutional power and claims of absolute authority.
Sor Juana dared to critique the Church, to question male authority, and to challenge institutional claims about what women could know and do. This critical stance was essential to her intellectual freedom. Libertarian justice requires protecting the right to critique institutions—whether ecclesiastical, state, or educational—because institutions naturally seek to consolidate power and silence opposition. Intellectual freedom means the right to analyze how institutions operate, to identify injustices, and to argue for reform. When institutions suppress criticism, they protect their own power at the expense of freedom and justice. Sor Juana's example shows that robust intellectual freedom includes the freedom to question authority itself. Her tradition teaches that protecting institutional critique is vital to maintaining both intellectual liberty and property rights: institutions that suppress criticism also tend to monopolize knowledge and appropriate intellectual labor. True freedom requires space for rigorous, public, argumentative analysis of institutional power. This is not merely abstract principle—it is necessary for justice, because institutions unchecked by intellectual scrutiny will inevitably violate property rights and suppress freedom.
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