The obligation to speak truth and question authority as a moral defense against systemic corruption and institutional decay.
Sor Juana's life exemplified intellectual conscience—the refusal to remain silent when injustice demands witness. She used her pen to expose contradictions in power structures, particularly when religious and secular authorities conflicted with reason and justice. In fighting corruption, intellectual conscience means cultivating individuals who prioritize truth-telling over institutional loyalty, who ask difficult questions, and who document wrongdoing despite personal risk. This Sophian approach reframes anti-corruption work not merely as policy enforcement but as a moral practice rooted in the dignity of the thinking person. When citizens develop intellectual conscience, they become natural checks on corrupt systems.
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