Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Dialectic of Obedience and Conscience

The tension between institutional demands for compliance and individual moral obligation, resolved through prioritizing conscience when obedience enables injustice.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana navigated the dialectical conflict between obedience to religious and social authority and fidelity to her conscience and intellectual calling. This is not a simple choice but a genuine tension—institutions do provide structure, meaning, and community, yet they often demand compliance with corruption. The dialectic of obedience and conscience asks: when do we obey? When do we resist? Sor Juana's answer was nuanced: she remained engaged with institutions but refused to silence her conscience. In fighting corruption, this dialectic becomes crucial. Employees, officials, and citizens face pressures to 'go along,' to not rock the boat, to preserve their position by complying with corrupt directives. Yet conscience—the internalized voice of justice, integrity, and humanity—calls otherwise. The practice Sor Juana models is finding the space between these poles: maintaining engagement while refusing complicity, asking difficult questions while respecting legitimate authority, seeking reform while acknowledging institutional goods. This framework helps individuals navigate corruption without either naive obedience or self-destructive rebellion.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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