The distinction that true fairness requires changing systems and institutions, not relying on individual kindness from the powerful.
Sor Juana survived partly through the protection of a sympathetic patron, but this personal kindness did not constitute justice—it merely delayed institutional injustice. Her ultimate silencing came when even kind individuals could not protect her against institutional authority. This concept distinguishes fairness from charity: fairness requires changing the rules themselves, not hoping powerful individuals will be generous. A society where women's education depends on a patron's goodwill is not fair, even if many patrons are kind. Every civilization that achieved stable justice recognized that relying on individual benevolence perpetuates structural unfairness and leaves vulnerable people dependent on the whims of those in power. Applied today, pursuing fairness means demanding institutional change—legal protections, policy reform, structural redistribution—rather than settling for individual kindness or merit-based exceptions that leave unjust systems intact.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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