The moral obligation to speak truth about climate injustice despite institutional resistance, grounded in Sor Juana's model of fearless intellectual inquiry.
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz challenged the patriarchal institutions of her time through rigorous scholarship and bold questioning, refusing silence despite pressure. This concept applies her legacy to climate justice by emphasizing that ecological defense requires intellectual courage—the willingness to question dominant economic narratives, corporate greenwashing, and political inaction on climate change. Just as Sor Juana advocated for women's right to knowledge and critique, climate justice demands that scientists, activists, and citizens speak uncomfortable truths about planetary limits, consumption patterns, and systemic responsibility. This intellectual courage becomes a practice of global responsibility: using reason and evidence to challenge power structures that externalize environmental costs onto vulnerable populations. In our interconnected world, remaining silent about climate injustice perpetuates the same silencing mechanisms Sor Juana resisted, making fearless intellectual engagement essential for transformative change.
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