Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Civilization as Fairness in Practice

The measure of any civilization's actual justice lies not in stated principles but in which humans it permits to think, speak, create, and contribute fully without penalty.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana lived in a civilization that claimed to value knowledge, justice, and moral order while actively suppressing her intellectual participation. This contradiction reveals that 'civilization' itself means nothing apart from the concrete fairness it extends to all members. No amount of sophisticated philosophy, artistic achievement, or institutional development compensates for systematic denial of voice to entire categories of humans. The test of fairness is not aspirational—what the culture says it believes—but actual: who gets educated, whose ideas receive consideration, who faces punishment for thinking, whose voices shape decisions? Sor Juana's brilliance illuminated her civilization's hypocrisy precisely because she embodied its own stated values while being treated as unfit for intellectual participation. Every civilization confronts this same test: the gap between professed fairness and practiced exclusion. Genuine justice requires closing that gap through concrete action rather than eloquent rhetoric.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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