Understanding climate action as fulfilling obligation to future generations' intellectual and material flourishing, ensuring they inherit both a habitable planet and the freedom to think.
Sor Juana's intellectual legacy persists across centuries precisely because she insisted on her right to knowledge and created work of enduring value. Climate justice involves similar intergenerational responsibility: decisions made today determine whether future humans inherit a livable planet with intact ecosystems, stable climate, and access to flourishing. Yet climate destruction and intellectual suppression often travel together—as fossil fuel industries fund disinformation campaigns, suppress climate science, and attack Indigenous knowledge systems. True climate legacy-building requires bequeathing both ecological stability and intellectual freedom: planetary systems capable of sustaining diverse life, and social structures that permit future generations to think freely, ask questions, and build knowledge collectively. Current generations bear responsibility to limit warming, preserve biodiversity, and protect freshwater systems so future beings can survive. But also to resist authoritarianism, support free inquiry, and maintain spaces where future thinkers can question, imagine alternatives, and create. Sor Juana's example reminds us that the right to intellectual life and the right to inhabit a stable planet are inseparable legacies we must defend and pass forward together.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.