Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Moral Cost of Complicity Through Convenience

Examining how we rationalize participation in systems we know are unjust because benefiting from them feels necessary or normal.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's critique extended to how comfortable people accept injustice they benefit from, never seriously questioning systems that serve them. She witnessed how the privileged rationalize oppressive structures as natural or inevitable. This psychological insight applies directly to animal consumption and use: most people benefit from and participate in animal exploitation while avoiding moral reckoning. The concept names the dissonance between stated values and actions—claiming to oppose cruelty while consuming products of systematic harm. Sor Juana's intellectual honesty demanded examining one's own complicity rather than gesturing vaguely toward justice. Her tradition suggests that moral seriousness requires acknowledging the cost of our convenience, recognizing that routine participation in animal exploitation carries ethical weight we often suppress. The framework doesn't demand immediate perfection but insists on honest assessment: recognizing when comfort becomes a substitute for conscience, when we maintain ignorance to avoid changing, when convenience becomes an excuse for inaction against systems we intellectually know are unjust.

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Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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