Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Intellectual Humility in Accountability

Holding people accountable while acknowledging limitations in knowledge and perspective creates space for genuine change rather than rigid condemnation.

Juana
Why It Matters

Despite her vast learning, Sor Juana practiced intellectual humility, acknowledging the limits of her own understanding and the validity of other perspectives. This stance differs markedly from punitive justice's certainty: the court pronounces guilt, assigns punishment, and declares the matter settled. Restorative accountability, following Sor Juana's model, involves a harmer acknowledging harm while maintaining openness to learning. It means saying: "I caused harm, I take responsibility, and I recognize I may not fully understand the impact of my actions." This intellectual honesty creates conditions for transformation. A person rigidly defending their actions or accepting punishment without genuine understanding remains unchanged. But someone who approaches accountability with humility—willing to listen, to revise their self-understanding, to learn from those they harmed—can actually become different. Sor Juana's life demonstrates that intellectual growth requires vulnerability and openness. Accountability that demands such growth restores relationships more effectively than punishment that demands only compliance.

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Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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