The fundamental demand that oppressed people be recognized as complete human beings with intellectual, spiritual, and creative capacities, not reduced to economic or social utility.
Sor Juana asserted her right to intellectual life, creative expression, and spiritual inquiry despite her gender and position in colonial Mexico. She refused to be confined to narrow domestic roles or to suppress her gifts. This represents a radical claim: that human beings have the right to develop all their capacities, not just those deemed useful by dominant groups. MLK extended this principle in his vision of the Beloved Community, where all people have the right to develop their potential and participate fully in society. Civil disobedience philosophically depends on this premise—that laws enforcing partial humanity are inherently unjust. For contemporary movements, this concept challenges systems that economize people's lives, reduce them to labor categories, or deny them spiritual and creative expression. The right to exist fully encompasses education, artistic freedom, intellectual development, spiritual practice, and self-determination. Nonviolent resistance fights for this holistic human dignity.
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