Knowledge and intellectual work are not personal pursuits but obligations to one's community and role, as exemplified by Sor Juana's defense of women's right to study.
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz understood that intellectual engagement was inseparable from social responsibility. Within Confucian role identity, this concept reframes the scholar or knowledge-worker not as an isolated thinker but as someone fulfilling a duty to elevate collective understanding. Sor Juana's life demonstrated that pursuing knowledge—despite institutional barriers—was an act of justice and role fulfillment. Her "Response to Sor Filotea" argues that denying women education denies society their intellectual gifts. For those navigating Confucian role expectations today, this means recognizing that mastering your domain of knowledge is not selfish ambition but a contribution to family, community, and social order. The intellectual role carries weight and purpose beyond personal achievement.
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