The conviction that fairness requires breaking down artificial divisions between knowledge domains to understand complex justice issues holistically.
Sor Juana was a poet, theologian, philosopher, scientist, and mathematician who refused to confine her thinking to single disciplines. She understood that rigid siloing of knowledge serves power: keeping theology separate from science, art separate from ethics, personal experience separate from political analysis allows injustice to hide in the gaps. Fairness requires integrating knowledge across domains to see systems whole. When we examine justice only through law, we miss psychological and cultural dimensions. When we study economics separately from ethics, we rationalize exploitation. Sor Juana's interdisciplinary method reveals how different knowledge domains illuminate the same truths about power and human dignity. Her poetry carried philosophical arguments; her theology engaged science; her personal letters addressed political questions. A truly fair civilization would cultivate this integrated thinking rather than professionalizing narrow expertise. Breaking siloes reveals connections: how education relates to identity, how knowledge access relates to rights, how intellectual freedom relates to political freedom. Sor Juana's example shows that the most penetrating analysis of injustice emerges from minds that refuse artificial boundaries between ways of knowing.
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