The fundamental right to pursue knowledge, question authority, and articulate one's understanding without persecution, which Sor Juana exemplified through her defiant scholarship.
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz risked her position and safety to engage in rigorous intellectual work in a society that denied women formal education and autonomy. Her insistence on the right to study theology, philosophy, and science challenged the fairness systems of her time. This concept affirms that justice requires protecting individuals' capacity to seek truth and express insights, regardless of social position. Every stable civilization eventually recognizes that intellectual suppression breeds corruption and injustice. Sor Juana's example shows that fairness depends on creating space for questioning voices. Her defense of her own learning as a spiritual and moral obligation established that intellectual expression is not a luxury but a prerequisite for equitable societies. When people cannot think freely or voice their understanding, power becomes concentrated and tyranny emerges.
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