The principle that justice flows from recognizing all humans as fundamentally equal in capacity for reason, dignity, and moral standing—not from earned status.
Sor Juana's central argument rested on a simple claim: women possess reason equal to men; therefore, women possess equal right to education and intellectual pursuit. This grounds justice not in utility, special circumstances, or merit, but in basic human nature. Every fair civilization implicitly accepts this principle—that certain capacities belong to humans as such. Yet most also contradict themselves by restricting what those rational equals may actually do. Sor Juana forces the recognition that fairness requires consistency: either reason belongs equally to all humans and thus all humans deserve equal access to knowledge, authority, and voice, or the civilization's justice claims are fraudulent. Rights grounded in shared humanity prove far more robust than those based on achievement, because they cannot be revoked by institutional decision or competitive failure. They apply to the ordinary and extraordinary equally.
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