Valuing contemplation, learning, artistic expression, and philosophical exploration as essential aspects of healthy childhood development.
Sor Juana's life centered on intellectual pursuits: reading, writing, debating, creating. She understood that the intellectual life—thinking deeply, making meaning, exploring ideas—is intrinsically human and essential to wellbeing. Children's rights typically focus on protection from harm, but they must also protect the positive right to an intellectual life. This means children need access to libraries, art, music, philosophy, science, and time for contemplation—not just as enrichment for privileged children, but as fundamental needs. It means protecting space for children to wonder, ask questions, and engage in creative thinking without immediate pressure toward productivity or utility. Many children face environments where their intellectual curiosity is treated as troublesome, where asking questions is disobedience, where books and art are luxuries. Sor Juana's example shows that intellectual life is not separate from justice; it is central to it. Children's rights frameworks should guarantee that every child has access to knowledge, creative expression, and time for thinking—recognizing these as essential to human development and dignity.
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