The understanding that justice fundamentally requires recognizing the full humanity, dignity, and rights of all people—a recognition that must be defended and renewed across generations.
At the heart of Sor Juana's struggle was a claim about personhood: I am a full human being deserving respect, autonomy, and the right to develop my capacities. This was radical in a context that tried to reduce her to her gender, her station, her utility. Intergenerational justice begins with the same claim extended universally and perpetually: every person born deserves full recognition as a rights-bearing, dignity-possessing human. This is not a one-time achievement but an ongoing obligation. Each generation must actively reaffirm and expand recognition of personhood against forces that would diminish it. We must ask: who do we fail to fully recognize? Whose humanity is we still treating as contingent or partial? Justice to the future requires that we pass forward not just legal rights but a cultural understanding that all people deserve respect, freedom, and the chance to flourish. Sor Juana's example shows that this recognition must be claimed, defended, and renewed continuously.
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