Examining the specific circumstances, histories, and relationships that shape harm rather than applying universal punishments divorced from context.
Sor Juana insisted on understanding ideas within their full context—historical, intellectual, personal. She rejected abstract dogmatism that ignored lived reality. Punitive systems rely on abstract rules: sentencing guidelines, categorical crimes, standardized punishments applied regardless of circumstance. Restorative justice, informed by Sor Juana's epistemology, prioritizes contextual understanding. Why did harm occur in this specific relationship, with these histories of power imbalance, in this community's economic situation? What colonial legacies shape this family's patterns? What institutional failures enabled this individual act? Contextual understanding reveals that harm is rarely simply the choice of a bad person but emerges from systems, relationships, and constraints. This doesn't eliminate accountability—rather, it makes accountability meaningful because it addresses root causes. A person harmed by poverty-driven crime understands the context differently than abstract justice does. A community harmed by institutional racism needs restoration that addresses systemic context, not just individual punishment. Sor Juana's insistence on particularity over abstraction transforms how we understand and respond to harm.
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