The explicit assertion that intellectual capacity and the right to pursue ideas are universal, not privileges granted by institutions or inherited status.
Sor Juana's famous Response letter defended not just her specific theological arguments but the principle that women possessed intellect equal to men's and thus the right to pursue knowledge. She established thinking itself as a right, not earned privilege. For first-generation students, this concept addresses internalized narratives of intellectual inadequacy. When families lack education, when schools underfund your neighborhood, when standardized tests suggest you're 'not college material'—these systems tell you thinking is something you're unfit for. Sor Juana's radical assertion was that thinking is your birthright. This concept invites first-generation learners to reject the notion that institutional gatekeepers grant intellectual legitimacy. Your right to question, analyze, theorize, and contribute ideas exists prior to credentials, acceptance letters, or institutional recognition. Claiming this right means reclaiming thinking from the institutions that gatekeep it, returning it to your inherent human capacity.
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