Private intellectual space—books, notes, study—as a refuge and expression of freedom that institutions cannot legitimately violate.
Sor Juana's famous library of 4,000 volumes was both her wealth and her sanctuary. It represented not mere consumption but the physical embodiment of her freedom to acquire, preserve, and dwell in knowledge. Libraries—personal, private, protected—are spaces where thought exists beyond institutional surveillance and control. For libertarian justice, the personal library is property that must be inviolable: your books, papers, digital libraries, and notes are yours to keep private. They represent the freedom to learn what you choose without reporting, justification, or fear of seizure. This connects property rights to epistemic privacy and freedom of conscience. A just order protects the right to possess and use books, to maintain personal intellectual archives, and to create private spaces of study. Attempts to monitor, restrict, or confiscate personal libraries—whether by state, church, or algorithm—are violations of both property and freedom that Sor Juana's example resists.
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