Recognition that ethnic heritage contains multiple overlapping knowledge systems—religious, practical, artistic, philosophical—that cannot be reduced to single categories.
Sor Juana's work embodied multiple knowledge traditions simultaneously: theological, scientific, literary, indigenous Mexican, European, African. She refused compartmentalization, weaving together different ways of knowing into coherent intellectual practice. Ethnic heritage similarly contains intersecting knowledge systems—spiritual practices alongside scientific understanding, oral traditions alongside written records, artistic expressions alongside practical crafts. This concept rejects the false choice between "traditional" and "modern" knowledge. Indigenous communities often maintain sophisticated epistemologies that Western categorization obscures. By recognizing intersectional knowledge systems, we validate the complexity of ethnic identity: individuals inherit and practice multiple traditions that enrich rather than contradict each other. This framework honors how heritage actually functions in lived experience.
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