Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Intellectual Inheritance and Gratitude

The recognition that our knowledge builds on others' work, making fairness a matter of honoring intellectual debts and enabling future generations.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's extensive citations and references reveal her deep gratitude to those whose work enabled hers: classical philosophers, theological authorities, scientists she studied. She understood intellectual fairness as a chain of inheritance. Her acknowledgment of these debts taught that fairness requires honoring those upon whose shoulders we stand. Every wisdom tradition emphasizes this: Confucian filial piety extends to intellectual ancestors; Islamic scholarship explicitly chains to previous scholars; African oral traditions hold griots who maintain collective memory. Sor Juana practiced this as sacred: fairness means crediting sources, acknowledging influences, creating space for those who come after. This concept directly challenges individual genius narratives that obscure how all knowledge is collective. Practically, intellectual fairness means attributing ideas correctly, ensuring credit flows to those whose work you build upon, especially when those people were systematically erased. It means institutions protecting the commons of knowledge rather than privatizing it. It means mentors enabling the next generation's work. Sor Juana understood that intellectual fairness is reciprocal: we receive from those before us, and we hold sacred responsibility to those after. This transforms how we view knowledge-work: not as individual achievement but as intergenerational justice.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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