Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Collective Inheritance and Intellectual Commons

Knowledge belongs to humanity; fairness means each generation both receives intellectual inheritance and contributes to it regardless of social position.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana drew on classical philosophy, theology, mathematics, and science—an intellectual inheritance built by countless thinkers across cultures and centuries. Yet the system attempted to restrict her access and prevent her contribution. She understood that knowledge is collective: each person learns from those before, and fairness requires each person's opportunity to add their insight. This concept treats intellectual life as commons, not property. Indigenous peoples practiced this—knowledge belonged to the community, transmitted and enriched across generations. Pre-modern monasteries preserved texts collectively. Modern science ideally functions this way: researchers build on others' work, contributing back. Fairness means ensuring this circulation reaches everyone. When knowledge becomes property (restricting access through paywalls, credentials, gatekeeping), circulation breaks and unfairness deepens. Sor Juana's life exemplifies the principle: she received intellectual inheritance across cultures, genders, and centuries, and her own contributions enriched that inheritance for future generations. Fairness requires systems treating knowledge as humanity's common resource, not elite property.

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Identity & Justice
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