Examining how systems constrain ethical choice: Sor Juana consumed within institutional limits while maintaining integrity, teaching us to practice virtue within imperfect systems.
Sor Juana lived in a convent, a system that limited her freedom while providing her intellectual sanctuary. She could not simply opt out; she worked within constraints to preserve her autonomy and integrity. This paradox illuminates modern ethical consumption: we cannot perfectly opt out of systems built on exploitation. We exist within supply chains, economies, and infrastructures we didn't create. Rather than pursuing impossible purity, Sor Juana's example teaches strategic compromise: make the most ethical choice available within your constraints, question continuously, advocate for systemic change, and maintain intellectual integrity even when circumstances force imperfection. Ethical consumption isn't about individual purity—it's about conscious negotiation with imperfect reality. Like Sor Juana, we can refuse complicity in the worst harms while acknowledging we cannot transcend the systems we inhabit. This reduces paralyzing guilt and enables practical justice.
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