Cultivating intellectual humility—acknowledging limits of knowledge and fallibility—as essential to fair and restorative processes.
Despite her extraordinary intellect, Sor Juana maintained intellectual humility, explicitly acknowledging the limits of human knowledge and the possibility of error. This humility is crucial for justice systems. Punitive approaches often demand certainty: definitive guilt, proportional punishment, closure. But real situations are complex; judgments can be wrong; harm is rarely one-directional. Restorative processes grounded in humility admit uncertainty and create space for revision. They recognize that initial stories may be incomplete, that all parties have blind spots, and that repair is ongoing rather than final. This humility creates conditions for genuine dialogue: people are more willing to listen and speak honestly when they know they won't be destroyed by a single judgment. Sor Juana's example shows that intellectual rigor and humility are compatible—in fact, true thinking requires acknowledging what we don't and can't fully know, which opens space for authentic engagement with others.
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