The recognition that knowledge, education, and intellectual freedom are legacies we must actively preserve and expand for future generations.
Sor Juana's relentless pursuit of knowledge despite institutional barriers reveals that intellectual inheritance is not a passive gift but an active moral debt. She fought for the right to think, to question, to learn—understanding that denying access to education is a form of injustice across time. For intergenerational justice, this means we must ask: what intellectual resources, freedoms, and capacities are we leaving behind? Are we protecting the conditions for future minds to flourish? Sor Juana's legacy teaches that every book burned, every woman silenced, every question suppressed represents a theft from the future. Building just institutions of learning, defending academic freedom, and ensuring equitable access to knowledge are not luxuries but foundational obligations to those who come after us.
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