Framing women's access to education and knowledge as a right foundational to human dignity, not a concession or special privilege to be grateful for.
Sor Juana argued implicitly and explicitly that learning was not a luxury for women but a necessity—for fulfilling one's potential, for understanding the divine, for exercising reason. This concept shifts framing from women's education as benevolent allowance to women's learning as fundamental right. The distinction matters: rights are inalienable; privileges can be revoked. Charity requires gratitude; rights require accountability. For cisgender identity examined through this lens, the concept invites reflection on where one has been taught to feel grateful for access that should be presumed—education, professional opportunity, intellectual respect. It asks: which knowledge or spaces have I felt privileged to access rather than entitled to claim? Where have I been conditioned to be grateful rather than demanding? The framework repositions women's intellectual pursuit not as deviation from nature but as expression of it. It supports moving from apologetic, cautious engagement with knowledge toward claiming learning as foundational to human flourishing and dignity.
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