Sor Juana's defense of intellectual capacity across boundaries suggests animals possess forms of reasoning deserving moral recognition.
Sor Juana famously argued that intellectual capability should not be confined by social hierarchies or gender. Applied to animals, this principle suggests that moral consideration need not depend on human-like rationality. Instead, we might recognize diverse forms of intelligence—emotional, social, instinctive—as sources of moral worth. Sor Juana's insistence that knowledge and understanding exist in multiple forms challenges the assumption that only human logic matters. For animal rights, this means acknowledging that a bird's navigation, an octopus's problem-solving, or an elephant's memory represent genuine forms of cognition. Rather than measuring animals against human standards, Sor Juana's tradition invites us to honor different intelligences as intrinsically valuable. This reframes animal moral consideration from utility to recognition of distinct but legitimate forms of mind.
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