Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Secular Courage as Virtue Practice

The cultivation of courage as a specific virtue—the willingness to speak truth, maintain integrity, and act on secular conviction despite social, professional, or personal cost.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's life required repeated acts of courage: defending indigenous peoples, criticizing ecclesiastical authority, claiming her intellectual worth, ultimately accepting silencing rather than recanting her convictions. She models courage not as recklessness but as virtue—practiced, refined, and grounded in principle. For secular and atheist people, courage is essential virtue work. This is not the drama of public declaration but the daily courage to be honest about your beliefs when silence would be easier, to maintain secular ethics when religious justifications would gain advantage, to refuse both aggressive anti-religious crusading and complicit silence. Secular courage means different things in different contexts: for some, it is public; for others, it is the quiet courage of maintaining integrity privately. This framework invites practitioners to examine where you most need courage in living out your secular identity: in family relationships, professional settings, moral stands, or intellectual honesty. Like all virtues, courage develops through practice, through small acts that prepare you for larger ones, through community support and private discipline. Sor Juana's example shows that courage sustained over decades becomes your character—not something you possess but something you become through repeated choice.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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