The assertion that women have equal right to study, reason, and pursue knowledge as a spiritual and intellectual practice.
Sor Juana wrote her famous 'Response to Sor Filotea,' defending her right to study theology, science, and philosophy against criticism that such pursuits were unfeminine or heretical. She argued that intellect itself is a form of devotion. For women navigating religious identity—whether as believers, doubters, or those departing—this concept is liberating. Religious institutions have historically used gender to restrict women's access to interpretive authority, education, and decision-making power over their own beliefs. Sor Juana's defense reclaims women's right to think, question, and choose independently. A woman's religious identity cannot be authentic if it is mediated entirely through male clergy or patriarchal doctrine. Her intellectual life is not separate from her spiritual journey; it is central to it. This concept validates women's authority over their own spiritual paths.
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