The right to think, question, and express ideas freely is the bedrock of fair societies, as Sor Juana demonstrated through her own struggle for intellectual autonomy.
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz lived in a world that punished women for intellectual ambition, yet she insisted that the pursuit of knowledge was a fundamental human right. Her life and writings argue that fairness cannot exist without intellectual liberty—the freedom to ask questions, challenge authority, and develop one's mind. Every civilization that achieved lasting justice recognized this principle, whether explicitly or through the protection of scholars, philosophers, and thinkers. When societies suppress intellectual freedom, they create hierarchies built on ignorance rather than merit. Sor Juana's defiance of ecclesiastical censorship shows that true fairness requires protecting not just physical safety but mental autonomy. Her commitment to knowledge as a path to personal dignity and social understanding remains central to any system that claims to be just.
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