Society's obligation to safeguard children who ask difficult questions, challenge authority, or think differently from dominant systems.
Sor Juana faced punishment for her intellectual boldness, demonstrating the real danger faced by children who think critically or question prevailing narratives. The duty to protect vulnerable thinkers means creating safe spaces where children can explore ideas without fear of ridicule, punishment, or social exclusion. In children's rights, this manifests as protecting children from harm when they express unpopular views, protecting neurodivergent or gifted children from forced conformity, and shielding those who challenge injustice. Sor Juana's experience shows that societies often punish intellectual courage in children because it threatens established power structures. A true commitment to children's rights requires defending children's right to think, question, and grow—even when their thinking makes adults uncomfortable or challenges institutional authority.
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