Children's fundamental right to develop their minds, curiosity, and capacity for critical thinking without restriction or coercion.
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz fought fiercely for her right to study, read, and think freely despite societal constraints on women's intellectual life. This concept extends that struggle to all children, asserting that intellectual development is not a privilege but a foundational right. Through Sor Juana's tradition, we recognize that children deserve access to knowledge, the freedom to ask questions, and protection from systems that suppress their cognitive potential. This right encompasses education quality, library access, and cultural permission to pursue learning across all domains—science, philosophy, arts, and letters. Intellectual flourishing acknowledges that a child's mind is sacred and must be nurtured, not controlled or diminished by arbitrary restrictions based on gender, class, or social status.
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