The duty to think critically and speak truth even when it challenges authority, grounding civil disobedience in the integrity of the mind.
Sor Juana's life exemplified the power of intellectual conscience—the refusal to silence one's reasoning in the face of institutional pressure. She challenged the Church's restrictions on women's scholarship, insisting that the pursuit of knowledge itself was a moral act. For civil disobedience across traditions, this concept reveals how resistance rooted in epistemic integrity differs from mere political protest. When individuals disobey unjust laws, intellectual conscience asks: Am I thinking clearly? Am I speaking my deepest truth? Sor Juana's letters and poems demonstrate that civil disobedience becomes sustainable when grounded not in anger alone, but in cultivated wisdom. This framework applies across cultures wherever marginalized communities assert their right to knowledge and voice, transforming disobedience into an act of intellectual self-defense.
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