The recognition that pursuit of truth and understanding can free us from socially-imposed identity constraints, aligning with Buddhist liberation from self-clinging.
Sor Juana was imprisoned by her era's rigid identity categories—woman, nun, colonized subject—yet she leveraged knowledge itself as a tool of liberation. Her intellectual work created spaces where these imposed identities could be questioned and transcended. Buddhist philosophy similarly teaches that ignorance binds us to samsara through attachment to a solid self; wisdom liberates us from that prison. For Sor Juana, studying mathematics, theology, and philosophy was not academic exercise but existential freedom-work. She claimed the right to know, and in doing so, refused the identity her society had assigned her. This concept invites modern seekers to examine how unexamined beliefs about 'who we are' constrain us, and how the pursuit of authentic understanding—particularly about the nature of self—can crack open these constraints, revealing the fluid, constructed nature of identity itself.
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