Understanding how economic systems that suppress voices and knowledge systematically diminish collective wealth and perpetuate injustice.
Sor Juana faced institutional and religious pressure to abandon her intellectual pursuits, a silencing that represented an economic loss to her society. When systems demand that people remain ignorant or unheard to maintain hierarchies, they forfeit the contributions of half or more of their population. Economic justice requires acknowledging that enforced silence has material costs: lost innovations, unmade discoveries, unwritten solutions. The structures that required Sor Juana to defend her right to think were not merely oppressive spiritually—they were economically catastrophic. They concentrated decision-making power in narrow groups, reduced information flow, and prevented optimal resource allocation. True economic justice demands removing barriers to participation and voice, recognizing that diverse perspectives generate more resilient and creative economic systems.
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