The psychological and practical weight of researching products and supply chains, and the ethics of systems that place this burden on individual consumers.
Sor Juana pursued knowledge relentlessly despite institutional barriers and personal costs; she understood that intellectual work demands energy, time, and resources. Applied to ethical consumption, this concept names the real burden placed on individuals to research, verify, and navigate complex supply chains. Truly ethical consumption requires knowledge—but modern systems deliberately obscure this information, forcing consumers into exhausting detective work. This concept challenges both consumers and systems: consumers should not bear sole responsibility for corporate transparency, yet the knowledge burden is real and falls heaviest on those with least time and resources. Sor Juana's legacy suggests that seeking knowledge is valuable but that systems should not weaponize ignorance or require extraordinary effort for basic ethical choices. Rather than guilt-driven individual research, ethical consumption should demand corporate accountability and regulatory transparency that makes informed choice accessible to everyone.
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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