Children must develop moral judgment that sometimes requires questioning authority, balancing respect with ethical responsibility.
Sor Juana faced profound pressure to abandon her intellectual pursuits for religious obedience, yet her conscience demanded expression. This concept addresses a critical tension in children's rights: the development of conscience and moral agency within frameworks that demand obedience to parents, teachers, and institutions. Children require guidance and structure, yet they also need space to develop independent ethical judgment. In her tradition, blind obedience that silences conscience is spiritually and intellectually destructive. For children's rights, this means creating safe spaces where children can respectfully question rules, discuss ethics, and develop moral reasoning. It demands that adults listen seriously to children's concerns and perspectives. Protecting children's rights requires honoring both the necessity of appropriate authority and the child's emerging conscience—recognizing that true moral development happens not through unthinking compliance but through thoughtful engagement with questions of right and wrong.
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