The obligation to develop and share knowledge as a fundamental responsibility that balances the right to education and intellectual freedom.
Sor Juana's relentless pursuit of learning despite institutional barriers revealed that intellectual work is not merely a personal privilege but a social responsibility. She demonstrated that claiming the right to think demands the corresponding duty to think rigorously, to challenge injustice, and to make knowledge available to others. In the context of Responsibilities—the other side of rights, this concept frames education not as a commodity to hoard but as a debt owed to community. When we exercise our right to learn, we simultaneously incur responsibility to question, to write, to teach, and to resist ignorance in ourselves and others. Sor Juana's life exemplifies how intellectual freedom without intellectual accountability becomes mere self-indulgence, while responsibility without rights becomes servitude.
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