The principle that ensuring people can access knowledge, ask questions, and participate in intellectual life is itself a fundamental justice issue central to authentic identity.
Sor Juana's struggle for education rights reveals that justice is not merely about material distribution but about who gets to know, who gets to ask, and whose knowledge counts. Denying women access to libraries, universities, and intellectual discourse is a form of injustice that damages both individuals and societies. This concept frames epistemological access—the right to participate in knowledge production and truth-seeking—as inseparable from human dignity and authenticity. When traditions systematically exclude certain people from intellectual life, those traditions undermine both justice and the authentic development of excluded persons. For authenticity across traditions, this means interrogating which voices each tradition has silenced and actively creating space for previously marginalized knowers. It recognizes that authentic engagement with traditions requires hearing their internal critics and alternative perspectives. Justice in epistemology means ensuring that authentic identity development isn't reserved for privileged groups but available to all who seek it, regardless of gender, origin, or social position.
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