The recognition that animals possess forms of intelligence and consciousness worthy of moral respect, extending Sor Juana's defense of intellectual capacity beyond human boundaries.
Sor Juana's relentless assertion of women's intellectual equality challenges us to question arbitrary hierarchies of consciousness. Just as she demanded recognition of female reason, we must acknowledge the varied intelligences present in animal minds—from problem-solving corvids to emotionally complex elephants. This concept reframes animal consideration not as sentimental charity but as intellectual justice: honoring the demonstrable reasoning, memory, and agency that animals exhibit. Sor Juana's own marginalization for her gender reveals how power structures deny recognition to those deemed intellectually inferior. Applied to animals, this principle demands we examine our assumptions about which minds deserve moral consideration, moving beyond anthropocentric frameworks that reserve dignity exclusively for humans. Recognition becomes an act of epistemic justice.
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