Examining how fairness must account for choices made within unequal systems where true alternatives do not exist.
Sor Juana chose convent life, yet that choice occurred within a context where a woman of her station had few alternatives for intellectual freedom or independence. This concept asks: what does fairness mean when all available choices are constrained by prior injustice? A truly fair system cannot simply accept individuals' choices as proof of justice; it must examine whether genuine alternatives existed. Sor Juana's decision to enter the convent, while preserving her access to books and solitude, was rational—but it was rational within unfair circumstances. Every civilization that has progressed toward justice has learned that consent extracted under constraint is not genuine consent. Fairness requires not just accepting people's decisions but transforming the conditions that limit their options. This framework prevents societies from congratulating themselves for allowing oppressed groups limited agency within fundamentally unjust structures.
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