Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Justice of Intellectual Inheritance

The right to access humanity's accumulated knowledge and build upon it, which Sor Juana claimed transcended gender and status, essential to civilizational fairness.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana understood that knowledge is cumulative: each generation stands on the shoulders of previous thinkers. She claimed access to the intellectual inheritance of humanity—ancient philosophy, theology, science, literature—as a right, not a privilege granted to men or the nobility. She read everything available to her, learning languages and mastering fields, and insisted this was her birthright as a human being. In Periagoge terms, intellectual inheritance is a fairness issue because it determines whether each person can develop their full potential. When societies restrict who may access libraries, education, and the conversation of ideas, they rob some people of their share in humanity's intellectual commons. Every civilization advancing toward fairness has expanded this access: public libraries, universal education, and open knowledge systems represent the practical realization of this principle. Sor Juana's example shows that fairness requires not just formal rights but actual access to the tools of thought. Today this concept extends to digital divides, copyright restrictions, and questions of who gets to participate in shaping knowledge and culture.

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