The right to pursue knowledge and form independent judgments as a prerequisite for just social participation and personal dignity.
Sor Juana's relentless defense of her right to study, question, and write established intellectual autonomy as inseparable from fairness itself. She argued that denying someone the capacity to think freely denies them fundamental humanity. In her tradition, fairness requires protecting spaces where individuals can develop their own understanding of truth, justice, and right action. This concept challenges systems that gatekeep knowledge or demand intellectual conformity. Across civilizations, from ancient Athens to medieval Baghdad, fair societies have recognized that justice cannot exist without minds free to examine it. When we restrict who may learn, study, or question authority, we undermine the very foundation upon which fair judgment rests. Intellectual autonomy thus becomes the bedrock principle: fairness requires the freedom to know.
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