The intellectual and personal right to maintain complexity, ambiguity, and unresolved questions rather than adopting convenient categorical clarity.
Sor Juana's writings deliberately resist easy resolution. She posed questions, engaged in philosophical debate, and cultivated intellectual humility—the refusal to settle into dogmatic certainty. This stance became itself a form of freedom and integrity. Applied to Pacific gender diversity, the right to refuse simple answers means individuals need not declare themselves according to existing categories or provide clear explanation that satisfies external observers. Gender diversity often involves genuine complexity: people may experience their gender as fluid, context-dependent, spiritual, communal, or beyond contemporary terminology. This concept protects the intellectual and emotional space for uncertainty, for saying "I don't know yet" or "it cannot be fully captured in words." Sor Juana's legacy teaches that this refusal is not evasion but intellectual honesty and personal dignity—a recognition that some truths about identity cannot be simplified without loss.
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