The practice of using rigorous intellectual inquiry to deconstruct the illusion of a fixed authorial self, mirroring Buddhist anatman doctrine.
Sor Juana's relentless intellectual pursuit—particularly her defense of women's right to knowledge in the Reply to Sor Philotea—demonstrates how sustained philosophical inquiry can dissolve the boundaries of a fixed self. Her willingness to question authority and convention mirrors the Buddhist dismantling of the ego-self through wisdom. When Sor Juana writes herself into increasingly complex philosophical positions, she enacts a kind of intellectual non-attachment: each argument reveals the constructed nature of identity categories like 'woman,' 'nun,' 'intellectual.' This parallels Buddhist meditation on anatta, where direct investigation of experience reveals no unchanging self-essence. For contemporary practitioners, this suggests that rigorous thinking—not mere passive acceptance—can be a gateway to understanding emptiness and interdependence, challenging the notion that enlightenment requires withdrawal from intellectual life.
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