Extending Sor Juana's passionate defense of intellectual liberty to include animals' freedom to exercise their capacities and pursue their own interests.
Sor Juana's greatest anguish was the suppression of her intellectual pursuits—the denial of her fundamental freedom to think, learn, and create. Animals experience analogous deprivations: confinement that prevents natural investigation, social isolation that blocks learning, environments stripped of cognitive stimulation. This concept argues that moral consideration must include protecting the conditions under which animal minds can flourish. Just as Sor Juana needed access to books and intellectual community, animals need environments enabling their cognitive capacities: birds must fly, social creatures must form bonds, predators must hunt. The right to intellectual freedom becomes concrete—not abstract philosophy but embodied in sanctuary spaces, enriched environments, and social structures that respect animal agency. Denial of these freedoms violates something fundamental to dignity.
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