The framework that positions shared research, community investigation, and collaborative learning as essential to informed ethical consumption decisions.
Though Sor Juana worked largely alone, her writings celebrate knowledge as fundamentally relational and communal. This concept applies that insight to ethical consumption: no individual can investigate every supply chain, verify every claim, or understand all complex systems alone. Ethical consumption requires collective intelligence—communities investigating together, sharing research, building databases of information, holding companies accountable through organized scrutiny. This might mean book clubs that research ethical brands, neighborhood groups pooling resources to buy directly from producers, or online communities curating vetted options. Sor Juana believed knowledge advanced through dialogue and exchange; ethical consumption advances similarly through shared investigation. This framework resists both individual guilt (expecting each consumer to be expert) and corporate greenwashing (relying on company claims). By pooling knowledge collectively, communities become epistemically powerful enough to demand real transparency and create genuine alternatives. Ethical consumption becomes not individual burden but collective practice grounded in shared truth-seeking.
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