The right to think independently and question all claims to authority, grounding secular identity in personal reason rather than external dogma.
Sor Juana's fierce defense of her intellectual pursuits against institutional pressure models how secular identity requires autonomous thought. She refused to surrender her mind to authorities claiming divine sanction, instead claiming reason as her legitimate tool. For secular identity, intellectual autonomy means rejecting appeals to supernatural revelation as justification for belief or behavior. This concept honors the capacity to examine all ideas—religious, political, scientific—through critical reasoning. Sor Juana's example shows that secular identity is not mere absence of faith but active assertion of one's right to think, question, and revise beliefs based on evidence and logic rather than inherited doctrine.
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