Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Refuge of Intellectual Space

Children need protected spaces—physical, mental, and institutional—where they can think freely, question authority, and develop their own ideas safely.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana entered the convent partly as intellectual refuge, a space where she could pursue knowledge away from marriage expectations and patriarchal control. This concept recognizes that children, too, need sanctuaries for intellectual exploration—libraries, classrooms, mentorships, creative spaces—where curiosity is encouraged and intellectual risk-taking is safe. Without such refuge, children internalize the message that thinking for themselves is dangerous or unwelcome. Institutional spaces protecting children's intellectual development must be free from surveillance that stifles original thought, from punishment for asking difficult questions, and from pressure to conform passively. This applies to schools, homes, and community organizations. The refuge need not be physical isolation but rather relational safety: trusted adults who affirm a child's emerging intellect, who welcome challenging questions, and who model intellectual integrity. By protecting intellectual space, societies affirm that children's minds matter, that their ideas have worth, and that their development into independent thinkers is a priority equal to physical safety.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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