Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Intellectual Courage as Resistance to Injustice

The development of moral and intellectual courage in children through which they can recognize injustice and refuse participation in systems of harm.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's intellectual work was an act of courage—standing against her society's expectations, risking ecclesiastical punishment, and insisting on truth even when it was dangerous. Intellectual courage is the willingness to think independently and speak truthfully, especially when doing so creates conflict or risk. Children who develop this capacity become capable of resisting peer pressure to participate in bullying, of refusing adults' demands for secrecy about abuse, and of challenging unjust rules. Sor Juana teaches that intellectual courage is not natural but cultivated through practice and modeling. It requires environments where thinking is encouraged, where mistakes are learning opportunities, and where truth-telling is rewarded rather than punished. For children's rights, developing intellectual courage means creating educational and familial spaces where young people practice thinking critically, learn to trust their own judgment, and experience that speaking up matters. This courage becomes the internal resource children draw upon to resist exploitation and injustice.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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