Universal access to scientific literacy about climate and ecology as a fundamental human right, not a privilege for the educated elite.
Sor Juana fought for women's access to education and intellectual life against patriarchal restriction. Similarly, climate justice demands democratized understanding of Earth systems—everyone deserves to comprehend how their land, water, and air work. This means translating climate science into accessible language across cultures and educational levels, ensuring communities affected by extraction or pollution understand the mechanisms harming them. Indigenous peoples possess sophisticated ecological knowledge often dismissed as unscientific. Global responsibility requires centering these epistemologies alongside Western climate models. When fossil fuel companies invest in confusion while communities lack basic climate literacy, injustice prevails. Following Sor Juana's vision, intellectual autonomy means every person can understand their environmental reality without gatekeeping by credentialed institutions. Knowledge of Earth is knowledge of survival itself.
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