The systematic practice of making marginalized people doubt their own perceptions, competence, and right to participate, and how fairness must resist this pattern.
Sor Juana's intellectual work was consistently minimized: her achievements attributed to male mentors, her learning dismissed as feminine affectation, her arguments reframed as presumption. Institutions—church, state, academy—worked in concert to make her question whether her insights were valid, whether her voice belonged in serious discourse. This institutional gaslighting is a tool every unjust system employs to suppress dissent and maintain hierarchies. Fairness requires recognizing and stopping this practice. When institutions consistently delegitimize certain people's experiences, knowledge, and perspectives, they silence crucial voices and entrench false hierarchies. This manifests in salary gaps despite equal work, dismissal of marginalized experts, attributing achievements to systemic privilege rather than merit, and demanding that oppressed people prove their worth repeatedly. Societies advancing toward fairness must audit their institutions for these patterns and create accountability. They must actively amplify marginalized voices, defend the legitimacy of diverse expertise, and refuse the false humility imposed on those seeking basic recognition. Sor Juana's refusal to internalize delegitimation offers a model of intellectual self-defense.
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