The ethical obligation of educated and knowledgeable people to voice truth publicly, even when silence is safer.
Sor Juana understood her education not as personal privilege but as responsibility to contribute to public discourse. She wrote extensively on theology, philosophy, poetry, and women's capacities—all matters of public consequence. She refused the comfortable path of silent scholarship. This concept establishes that civil disobedience often emerges from educated classes who possess both knowledge and platform. The Sophos tradition insists that intellectual authority creates moral obligation: those who understand injustice must articulate it. Across movements, from whistleblowers exposing institutional corruption to academics challenging dogma, this principle appears: individuals with expertise and access choosing visibility over security. Sor Juana's willingness to respond publicly to ecclesiastical critics, to write about theological matters typically reserved for male clerics, to advocate for women's education—these acts demonstrated that speaking truth is not arrogance but duty. Civil disobedience thus becomes not mere protest but the fulfillment of scholarly conscience.
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