The possibility that those who cause harm can change through understanding impact and reconnecting with their own humanity, rather than through punishment and social exclusion.
Punitive systems assume that inflicting suffering on those who caused harm will produce accountability; often it produces only resentment and recidivism. Sor Juana's approach, evident in her intellectually generous but firm engagement with institutional authorities, suggests that transformation requires helping the harmer understand the impact of their actions and their own capacity for justice. Restorative justice creates conditions where those responsible for harm can encounter the humanity and impact of those they harmed—often a transformative moment. A person who caused harm may have acted from ignorance, fear, or dehumanizing ideology; facing the human reality of impact can shift consciousness. This concept does not require forgiveness or excuse-making; it recognizes that genuine accountability includes the harmer's own moral development and change. Practically, this might involve offender participation in victim impact panels, dialogue processes where they hear directly about consequences, or community service where they contribute to rebuilding. The goal is not to make them suffer as retribution but to engage their conscience and capacity for change. Sor Juana's intellectual framework models how this works: by refusing to dehumanize those who opposed her and instead engaging their reasoning, she created possibility for shifted understanding and grew the scope of what the community could imagine.
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