Understanding and education about animal consciousness liberates both humans and animals from exploitative ignorance, extending Sor Juana's liberatory vision of knowledge.
Sor Juana saw knowledge as fundamentally liberatory—ignorance served oppressive systems. She fought for access to learning as a path to freedom and dignity. This insight applies profoundly to animal ethics: our collective ignorance about animal consciousness, suffering, and complexity enables exploitation. Knowledge liberation means widespread education about what animals are—their cognitive abilities, emotional lives, social structures, and capacity to suffer. When people understand that pigs demonstrate self-awareness, that chickens form friendships, that cows grieve, moral consideration becomes harder to deny. Yet knowledge alone isn't sufficient; it must be paired with critical intellectual engagement, the kind Sor Juana modeled. We must learn not just facts about animals but develop frameworks for interpreting what those facts mean morally. Her tradition insists that true knowledge cannot coexist with willful blindness to suffering. Knowledge becomes liberatory when it empowers individuals to make conscious choices aligned with their values, freeing them from unconscious participation in animal harm.
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