The principle that information, intellectual tradition, and learning must be treated as shared resources accessible to all, not gatekept by privileged classes.
Sor Juana lived in a colonial system where formal education was restricted to wealthy men, yet she taught herself theology, philosophy, mathematics, and languages through sheer determination and borrowed access to libraries. She believed knowledge should circulate freely because intellectual development is essential to human dignity. Fairness systems fail when they create scarcity around ideas—when only priests can read scripture, only aristocrats can study law, only men can engage with philosophy. Sor Juana's own prolific writing became her way of democratizing knowledge, making complex ideas available to broader audiences. Every civilization that moved toward justice expanded access to education and information. Digital platforms now make this principle urgent again: fairness demands that critical knowledge not be locked behind paywalls or controlled by monopolies. True fairness means everyone has genuine opportunity to develop their intellect, participate in cultural conversation, and contribute to human understanding. Knowledge commons create the conditions for collective progress toward actual justice.
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