How multiple forms of exclusion sharpen critical perspective and deepen commitment to secular, evidence-based understanding.
Sor Juana navigated being a woman, a person of mixed race, and a nun in colonial Mexico—each status limiting her authority. Yet her marginality became an epistemological advantage: excluded from formal institutions, she developed rigorous independent scholarship and questioned received wisdom. For those building secular identity, this concept acknowledges that being outside dominant structures (religious, patriarchal, or otherwise) creates both vulnerability and clarity. Marginalized people often cannot afford naive acceptance of official narratives; survival requires reading between lines and trusting observable evidence over comfortable stories. Sor Juana's work shows how secular identity, when inhabited by the already-marginalized, becomes not just intellectual preference but a tool for dignity and self-definition. The concept honors how secular worldviews often emerge from those with least power to enforce conformity and most reason to demand truthfulness.
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