Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Legacy as Argument for Justice

Using one's enduring impact and influence as evidence that constraints were unjust; history vindicating those the powerful tried to silence.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana died in 1695, largely silenced, her library dispersed, her authority questioned. Yet today she is recognized as one of the greatest minds of her era, her writing studied in universities, her arguments vindicated by history itself. Her very legacy—the fact that she mattered, that she still matters—becomes a kind of argument for justice. She was right to insist on her right to think. Fair civilizations use this retroactive vindication as a check on present injustice: if history proves that silenced people were right, then present silencing is probably also unjust. Yet this test is incomplete—it works only for those lucky enough to be proven right by time. The principles of fairness can't wait for posterity's judgment. Nonetheless, Sor Juana's enduring influence teaches that attempts to suppress great minds ultimately fail, and the suppressors are remembered as tyrants. Fair societies learn this lesson: the people you try to silence may be the ones history celebrates. The safest course—the only just course—is to protect all thinkers, all voices, all intellectual labor, and let their actual merit determine their influence.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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