The wisdom practice of deepening your knowledge while remaining uncertain, questioning your conclusions, and respecting what remains unknowable.
Despite her extraordinary learning, Sor Juana expressed consistent intellectual humility—acknowledging the limits of human understanding and the vastness of what remains hidden. Her letters and poems repeatedly assert that true wisdom begins with recognizing ignorance. This is not paralyzing doubt but productive doubt: the recognition that complexity requires ongoing learning rather than settled certainty. For authenticity across traditions, learned humility prevents both arrogant appropriation of foreign wisdom and defensive clinging to single inheritance. It creates space to learn from traditions not your own while maintaining critical judgment. Sor Juana's example shows that the deepest scholars are often the most aware of knowledge's boundaries. Productive doubt becomes a bridge-building tool: it opens dialogue, invites correction, and acknowledges that truth emerges through conversation rather than pronouncement.
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