Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Hidden Costs of Convenient Ignorance

An examination of how willful ignorance about consumption impacts—labor, environment, justice—perpetuates harm and carries moral weight.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana repeatedly exposed how ignorance serves power: those in control benefit when others remain uninformed. Applied to ethical consumption, this reveals that convenience often masks deliberate avoidance of uncomfortable truths. We choose not to know where clothes come from, what chemicals contaminate our food, which corporations exploit vulnerable workers. This unknowing isn't innocent; it's strategically useful to systems profiting from exploitation. Sor Juana would recognize this as a form of complicity. The concept names ignorance itself as consequential: not knowing doesn't absolve responsibility but rather enables harm through willful blindness. Hidden costs—human suffering, environmental destruction, systemic injustice—persist partly because consumers actively avoid seeing them. This concept proposes that ethical consumption begins with rejecting the comfort of ignorance. Yes, learning true costs of production is uncomfortable. Yes, awareness creates moral obligation. But remaining deliberately ignorant carries its own moral weight: the weight of chosen complicity. Sor Juana's legacy insists that knowledge, however difficult, is prerequisite to ethical action.

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Identity & Justice
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