Fair systems grant all people equal credibility when sharing knowledge and experience; Sor Juana's work was discredited for reasons unrelated to its merit or truth.
Epistemic justice refers to the fair treatment of people as knowers—the recognition that their testimony, observations, and reasoning are worth hearing. Sor Juana faced epistemic injustice constantly: her scholarship was dismissed because she was a woman, her insights were attributed to male influences, her authority as a thinker was denied despite her obvious brilliance. Yet her ideas were sound. The injustice lay not in her work but in society's refusal to credit her as a legitimate source of knowledge. Every civilization that has moved toward fairness has had to expand whose voices count as authoritative. Societies that dismiss entire groups—women, the poor, colonized peoples, minorities—as inherently less credible are necessarily unjust, because they lose access to legitimate knowledge and perpetuate false understandings. Sor Juana's writings demonstrate that fairness requires granting people epistemic respect: assuming their ideas are worth considering on their merits, not on their social position. This is both a moral requirement and a practical necessity for any society seeking truth.
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