The moral obligation to speak truth through scholarship and writing as a form of resistance against unjust authority.
Sor Juana's refusal to silence her intellectual voice despite ecclesiastical pressure demonstrates that civil disobedience need not be loud protest—it can be the quiet insistence on thinking freely and publishing honestly. Her defense of women's right to education and theological inquiry challenged patriarchal power structures through reason itself. In civil disobedience traditions, this concept reveals how intellectual work becomes transgressive when authorities demand conformity of mind. Sor Juana teaches that maintaining one's conscience across traditions means refusing to accept imposed limits on knowledge-seeking, even when punishment is isolation or censure. This applies today in contexts where governments suppress scholarship, control curriculum, or criminalize certain questions. The act of continuing to think, write, and teach truthfully becomes civil disobedience when the system forbids it.
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