The practice of generating personal meaning and identity through artistic, intellectual, and creative work rather than inherited doctrine.
Sor Juana's prolific output as a poet, playwright, and thinker demonstrates how creative work becomes a vehicle for constructing meaning in a secular framework. She didn't accept ready-made answers but forged her own understanding through writing—exploring identity, gender, knowledge, and justice across multiple literary forms. For atheist and secular individuals seeking alternatives to religious meaning-making, this concept offers a concrete practice: creation as world-building. Whether through writing, art, science, teaching, or intellectual work, the act of making something new generates purpose and identity. This isn't about art for art's sake but about recognizing that secular meaning emerges not from cosmic assignment but from active engagement with ideas and expression. The secular individual becomes an author of their own significance, not discovering pre-written purpose but generating it through disciplined creative work. Sor Juana's example suggests that meaning-making through creation is both personally sustaining and contributes to collective human knowledge and culture.
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