Spaces—physical and conceptual—where animals can develop their own capacities and cultures free from human instrumentalization.
Sor Juana carved out intellectual sanctuary through her convent cell, a space where she could think freely despite external pressures to conform. This concept applies to animal protection: creating genuine sanctuaries where animals can engage in natural behaviors, develop social bonds, and exercise their cognitive capacities without human control or extraction. Beyond mere 'welfare' improvements in captivity, this means recognizing animals' need for autonomy—spaces where their own knowledge systems, cultures, and ways of being can flourish. Sor Juana's correspondence and writing show how intellectual freedom requires both protection from external coercion and positive space for development. Similarly, animal rights must include not just freedom from cruelty but active protection of animals' ability to be fully themselves: wolves in wild packs, elephants in family herds, birds in flight. This reframes conservation and sanctuary work as defending intellectual and cultural freedom.
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