Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Right to Question Authority Itself

The principle that legitimate authority requires the freedom to scrutinize it—a cornerstone of Sor Juana's challenge to religious and patriarchal institutions.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's letters and writings demonstrate that true obedience cannot exist where questioning is forbidden. She insisted on the right to examine theological claims, ecclesiastical decisions, and male-centered doctrines—not from arrogance but from intellectual honesty. This concept asserts that systems claiming legitimacy must permit critical examination; when they suppress inquiry, they delegitimize themselves. Civil disobedience rooted in this principle targets not authority per se but the demand for unquestioning compliance. Across traditions, this appears in Socrates' refusal to abandon philosophy, in Reformation challenges to papal infallibility, and in modern freedom-of-conscience movements. The act of questioning becomes itself a form of dissent—one that precedes and often necessitates more visible resistance. For Sor Juana, writing and argument were acts of civil disobedience.

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