The concept that achieving and maintaining fairness requires individual and collective courage to resist normalized injustice.
Sor Juana's path was not passive acceptance but active, courageous resistance: she defended her right to study forbidden subjects, she critiqued church authorities, she refused to be silenced even when threatened with exile or punishment. This concept emphasizes that fairness is not automatic or costless—it requires people to act courageously against powerful interests invested in injustice. The systems protecting unfairness are often defended by tradition, authority, and the comfortable habits of privileged groups. Societies that achieved justice had people willing to pay costs—social rejection, economic loss, physical danger—to resist. This is not merely individual virtue; it reflects the structural reality that injustice fights back. Applied today, supporting fairness requires recognizing and protecting those brave enough to challenge injustice, creating communities that sustain courage, and building institutions that don't demand individual heroes to prevent cruelty.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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