Asserting that access to education and intellectual pursuit constitute fundamental rights that justify resistance to restrictive power.
Sor Juana's entire life was an act of disobedience: she taught herself mathematics, theology, and philosophy in an era when women were denied formal education. Her assertion of the right to learn and think independently challenged patriarchal and colonial structures without explicit political rebellion. She argued that the pursuit of knowledge is a form of self-determination and spiritual autonomy. This concept reframes civil disobedience as not merely opposition to specific unjust laws but affirmation of human rights to develop one's intellectual and spiritual capacities. Across traditions—from Enlightenment thinkers to liberation theologians—this principle appears: that denying education is a form of oppression that justifies resistance. For modern contexts, this concept legitimizes educational activism, intellectual freedom movements, and resistance to censorship as core elements of civil disobedience.
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