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Concept
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The Dignity of Intellectual Labor

Recognition that thinking, writing, researching, and creating are forms of real labor deserving of compensation, protection, and social respect.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's scientific investigations, theological treatises, and literary works were genuine labor—requiring skill, time, and effort—yet she was often expected to provide them gratis, as a service to God or the institution. This reveals how intellectual work is systematically devalued, especially when performed by women or colonized peoples. In Libertarian justice, labor is labor: the effort of the mind deserves the same recognition and compensation as manual work. Intellectual property rights rest on this foundation—the idea that your thoughts, once externalized, are your product and you have the right to sell them, give them away, or keep them private. Without recognizing intellectual labor as real work, there is no basis for claiming property in ideas. Sor Juana's struggle included asserting that her time spent in study and writing was not frivolous or selfish but productive—it generated value. Modern applications include fair compensation for creative work, protection against plagiarism and appropriation, and resistance to the expectation that women, minorities, or the poor should provide unpaid intellectual service. Dignifying intellectual labor means recognizing that thinking is not a luxury; it is work, and workers own their output.

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