Recognition that ethical consumption requires sustained intellectual effort—research, critical thinking, and ongoing education about global systems.
Sor Juana dedicated her life to intellectual work, accumulating vast knowledge across disciplines. She understood that knowledge requires effort and that ignorance is often chosen for comfort. Ethical consumption similarly demands intellectual labor. It's not simple or easy. You must research supply chains, understand global economics, learn about environmental impacts, follow labor news, evaluate competing claims. Greenwashing and ethical-washing complicate choices. Supply chains are complex and opaque. Corporations spend millions on marketing deception. Genuine ethical consumption requires you to do intellectual work, to remain skeptical, to keep learning. This is not a burden to resent but rather an opportunity to exercise the human capacity for reasoning and judgment that Sor Juana celebrated. By investing intellectual energy in consumption choices, you honor the tradition of critical thinking. You resist the passivity that consumer culture encourages. You develop expertise about systems and participate consciously in economies. This intellectual engagement transforms consumption from unconscious habit into deliberate practice aligned with your deepest values and commitments to justice.
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