Maintaining ethical positions even when they isolate you or invite criticism from peers and authority figures.
Sor Juana's intellectual positions—her defense of women's education, her theological questions, her literary ambitions—were costly. She faced criticism from church authorities, social ridicule, and eventual pressure that contributed to her tragic final years. Yet she continued speaking and writing according to her conscience. The courage of unpopular conviction means holding to your ethical commitments even when they're misunderstood, mocked, or punished. In personal integrity, this requires distinguishing between legitimate feedback and mere social pressure. Sor Juana's tradition teaches that ethical maturity includes willingness to stand alone when your principles demand it, while remaining humble enough to distinguish principled courage from stubborn pride. This virtue prevents integrity from collapsing into mere conformity.
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