Access to historical lineages of thought and culture; recognizing who gets to claim inheritance and who must invent from scratch.
Sor Juana inherited centuries of scholastic and theological tradition, which she both mastered and critiqued. This inheritance shaped her mind and gave her a foundation. This concept explores how privilege includes access to intellectual traditions—the ability to stand on the shoulders of giants and claim that heritage as one's own. Many people, excluded from formal education or dominant culture, must construct their own intellectual lineages or discover traditions later. Acknowledging this privilege means sharing your inheritance generously, introducing others to the traditions that shaped you, and actively seeking to learn traditions you weren't born into. It means recognizing that some people are still building what others take for granted. For Periagoge practitioners, this becomes a commitment to cultural generosity: teaching what you know, learning what you don't, and actively dismantling the gatekeeping that restricts tradition to the already privileged.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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