The recognition that enforced silence—whether through censorship, social prohibition, or self-suppression—represents a loss of knowledge and a distortion of truth itself.
Sor Juana was eventually pressured to recant her intellectual pursuits and largely ceased her prolific writing. This silencing is not a footnote to her life but central to understanding her concept of knowledge. Her enforced quiet was not peaceful contemplation but a violence—a theft of her voice and the wisdom she might have developed. This concept reframes silence not as peaceful or spiritual but as epistemic harm when it is imposed. Many traditions valorize silence, but authenticity across traditions requires distinguishing between chosen contemplative silence and silencing through coercion. When we accept imposed silence—whether from external pressure or internalized fear—we do not preserve wisdom but damage it. We lose not only what might be spoken but the internal process of thought itself, which develops through dialogue, articulation, and challenge. In navigating authenticity across traditions, this means recognizing that some traditions carry within them silences that are wounds, not features. Healing requires not just speaking but creating conditions where silenced voices can recover their capacity to think and be heard. Silence as incomplete knowledge insists that authenticity includes vocality.
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