The fairness principle that individuals and groups have the right to define themselves rather than be defined by oppressive institutions.
Sor Juana claimed her identity as a scholar, poet, and thinker despite colonial Mexico's insistence that women be confined to domesticity or religious life. She refused externally imposed definitions of what women could be or know. This concept asserts that fairness fundamentally includes the power to construct one's own identity and have it recognized. Societies that silence or pathologize self-determined identity create profound injustice. Every advanced civilization learned that forcing people into narrow identity boxes generates resentment, waste of human potential, and social conflict. Applied today, this means respecting chosen identities, protecting people from forced categorization, and ensuring institutional recognition of how people understand themselves.
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