The principle that rational capacity and inner life merit moral consideration regardless of biological classification, extending Sor Juana's defense of women's intellectual rights to all sentient beings.
Sor Juana fought against those who denied women's capacity for intellectual pursuits based solely on gender rather than demonstrated ability. This concept applies her argument to animal moral consideration: we cannot deny moral status based on species membership alone, just as gender should not determine intellectual worth. Animals possess forms of consciousness, emotional complexity, and adaptive intelligence that demand ethical recognition. Sor Juana's refusal to accept arbitrary hierarchies—her insistence that intellect and identity transcend external categories—provides a framework for recognizing that animal sentience and subjective experience, not species taxonomy, should ground moral consideration. This challenges anthropocentric assumptions just as she challenged patriarchal ones, proposing that moral status emerges from capacity for suffering, relationship, and autonomous being rather than conformity to human-defined standards.
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