The ethical principle that one's mind and pursuit of knowledge must remain uncorrupted by external pressures, social conformity, or institutional coercion.
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz risked her career and freedom to defend her right to study, write, and think independently despite institutional and ecclesiastical opposition. Intellectual integrity means refusing to compromise your authentic thoughts, questions, and conclusions to satisfy others' expectations or power structures. This concept recognizes that personal ethics fundamentally depend on the freedom to examine beliefs honestly, to change your mind based on evidence, and to pursue truth even when it challenges authority. For Sor Juana, integrity was inseparable from her defense of women's intellectual capacity and her refusal to be silenced. Applied to modern life, intellectual integrity demands that you examine your own biases, resist groupthink, and remain truthful in your reasoning—even when social or professional consequences feel severe. Your ethical foundation strengthens when your inner convictions align with your outward expressions.
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