The obligation to use knowledge and reason to challenge corrupt systems, grounded in Sor Juana's defense of women's intellectual authority.
Sor Juana's life exemplified intellectual resistance against institutional authority that sought to silence her voice. She used her education and writing to question power structures that claimed absolute truth. In combating corruption, this concept affirms that citizens have not merely a right but a duty to think critically about authority, expose inconsistencies in official narratives, and refuse intellectual submission to corrupt institutions. Sor Juana's famous letter defending women's capacity for learning becomes a template for how marginalized groups can use knowledge as a weapon against systemic injustice. Her tradition teaches that corruption thrives when people abandon critical thought; therefore, fostering widespread intellectual engagement and protecting spaces for questioning becomes essential anti-corruption work. The right to intellectual resistance acknowledges that fighting corruption requires moral courage to speak truth to power, even at personal cost.
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