The understanding that rights—to learn, think, speak, develop oneself—are not privileges granted by institutions but inherent to human dignity and therefore inalienable.
Sor Juana argued that her right to study, to think, and to write emerged not from her position in the Church or society but from her fundamental human dignity. She did not ask permission for her intellectual development; she claimed it as inherent to who she was. This concept shifts authenticity from being something that requires external approval to something rooted in human dignity itself. When you understand your rights—intellectual, creative, developmental, spiritual—as inherent rather than granted, you ground your authenticity in something deeper than institutional recognition or social permission. For those navigating multiple traditions, this framework proves liberating: your right to integrate traditions, to question inherited beliefs, to develop your distinctive perspective does not depend on whether your family approves, your religion permits, or your society celebrates it. Those rights belong to you as a human being. This does not eliminate the need for wisdom about how you exercise those rights, but it establishes that authenticity is your birthright, not a luxury requiring justification.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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