The use of logic, evidence, and well-constructed argument as a method for exposing corruption and advancing justice.
Sor Juana's intellectual method was argumentation—the careful construction of logical claims supported by evidence, appealing to reason rather than authority. This approach proved powerful in her fight for intellectual rights and justice. Applied to corruption, rigorous argumentation becomes a weapon: corrupt systems often rest on poor logic, false equivalences, and emotional appeals rather than evidence. By insisting on clear reasoning, demanding definitions, testing claims against facts, and exposing logical fallacies, anticorruption advocates can dismantle corrupt narratives. This is not abstract philosophy but practical work: investigative journalism uses rigorous argument to expose wrongdoing; legal systems rely on evidence and logic; audit processes demand clear justification for expenditures. Sor Juana's model suggests that corruption loses power when subjected to careful analysis. She showed that systematic argument—asking difficult questions, demanding consistency, following logic to uncomfortable conclusions—can challenge entrenched power. In modern contexts, this means supporting investigative work, teaching critical thinking, and insisting that public claims meet evidentiary standards.
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