The recognition that animals possess inherent cognitive and emotional capacities deserving moral respect, extending beyond human exceptionalism.
Sor Juana's fierce defense of women's intellectual rights parallels the moral case for animal consideration. She challenged the notion that intelligence and feeling were exclusively human domains, arguing that the capacity to know and suffer warranted dignity. Applied to animals, this framework recognizes that sentience itself—the ability to experience pain, pleasure, and complexity—constitutes a form of intellectual and emotional life deserving moral weight. Sor Juana's battles against dismissal based on identity offer a precedent for questioning systems that deny moral consideration to non-human animals. Her insistence on the right to learn and think provides philosophical grounding for recognizing animal consciousness as morally significant, not mere mechanism or property.
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