Education and intellectual development as pathways to freedom from exploitation, manipulation, and domination in children's lives.
Sor Juana understood literacy and learning as tools for independence—knowledge enabled her to argue, question, and resist authorities that would control her. For children, education represents access to truth, understanding of systems that affect them, and capacity for self-determination. Children without knowledge are vulnerable to exploitation by those who control information. This concept positions learning not as rote compliance or credentialing but as genuine empowerment. A child who understands her rights, recognizes manipulation, and can articulate her needs possesses real power. Sor Juana's intellectual life, though constrained institutionally, provided freedom of mind that no external authority could fully control. Applied to children's rights, this means prioritizing critical thinking over memorization, supporting children's understanding of social systems, and recognizing education as liberation. It advocates for curricula that expose how power operates, encourage skepticism of authority, and equip children to question injustice. Knowledge frees children from dependence on interpreters of reality and enables genuine agency.
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