Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Cost of Justice-Seeking

The honest recognition that pursuing fairness often requires personal sacrifice, loss, and accepting that vindication may come only posthumously.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's final years involved surrendering her library, ceasing intellectual work, and dying young during a plague following her forced renunciation of scholarship. Her sacrifice wasn't noble redemption but institutional violence. Yet her example endured—centuries later, she's recognized as a genius and symbol of resistance. Fairness doesn't reward individual justice-seekers with comfort or safety. Whistleblowers lose careers; activists face imprisonment; reformers die before seeing change. This harsh truth distinguishes genuine commitment to fairness from performative justice-talk. Every civilization's moral advances cost someone—those who challenged slavery, colonialism, patriarchy, exploitation rarely lived to enjoy societies they helped transform. Acknowledging this cost honestly prevents false consciousness: the belief that doing the right thing guarantees personal reward. Periagoge teaches that fairness-seeking is often tragic, requiring courage not because victory is assured but because justice demands it regardless. Understanding this cost deepens respect for those who pursued fairness despite personal devastation, and clarifies that fairness is owed to future generations, not earned by present sacrifice.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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