The principle that justice requires equal access to knowledge, education, and the right to contribute to understanding, regardless of religious status or authority.
Sor Juana fought for epistemic equity—the right of women and the colonized to be recognized as knowers and contributors to knowledge. She challenged systems that hoarded education and declared some minds unfit for learning. For secular identity, epistemic equity means recognizing that knowledge production is a justice issue: who gets to know, who gets believed, whose questions matter. Secular justice refuses to accept hierarchies of truth-telling based on religious credentials. It demands that scientific literacy, historical accuracy, and moral philosophy be available to all, not gatekept by clergy or institutions claiming divine authority. Applied practice includes advocating for secular education, supporting science literacy, questioning whose expertise is centered in public discourse, and ensuring that secular voices—especially from marginalized communities—contribute to knowledge and policy-making on equal terms with religious perspectives.
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