Sor Juana argued knowledge itself is a moral necessity; we must know the truth of animal sentience to act ethically toward them.
Sor Juana faced institutional resistance to her learning but insisted that ignorance is not innocence—it is a failure of conscience. Applied to animal ethics, this means we cannot claim innocence about practices we refuse to understand. True knowledge of industrial farming, animal testing, or habitat destruction reveals uncomfortable truths. Yet this knowledge, though difficult, is necessary for genuine moral agency. Sor Juana's tradition suggests that ethical people must develop what might be called uncomfortable knowledge—understanding the systems in which we participate, the consequences of our choices, the reality of animal suffering. This is not knowledge for its own sake but knowledge as the foundation of responsibility. We cannot claim to respect animal rights while remaining deliberately ignorant of how animals are treated. The paradox is that moral awareness requires confronting information we'd prefer to avoid. Yet Sor Juana teaches that this intellectual courage is the only path to authentic justice.
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