Acknowledging the incompleteness of our knowledge and the necessity of living within ecological and social boundaries despite uncertainty.
Sor Juana exemplified intellectual humility—her works reveal a thinker constantly questioning, revising, and acknowledging gaps in understanding. This virtue applies powerfully to ethical consumption: we can never fully know the complete impact of every purchase, yet this uncertainty must not paralyze us into complicity. Instead, humble consumption means accepting our limits while acting responsibly within them. We may not know every supply chain detail, but we can research, ask questions, and support transparency efforts. Intellectual humility also means recognizing that consumption itself—even ethical consumption—has costs and contradictions we cannot fully escape. Rather than seeking impossible purity, humble ethical consumption means doing our considered best, remaining open to new information, and adjusting our practices. This approach honors Sor Juana's model of continuous intellectual growth while respecting both ecological limits and human dignity, refusing both naïve innocence and paralyzing perfectionism.
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