A contemplative and observational approach to moral responsibility toward animals, grounded in Sor Juana's meticulous attention to the world around her.
Sor Juana was an acute observer—of nature, behavior, social dynamics, human contradiction. Her poetry and prose reveal someone who paid careful, sustained attention to specific details. This practice of witness is foundational to animal ethics. Moral consideration begins with paying attention: seeing the individual chicken, not just the commodity; noticing the fox's intelligence; observing the grief of elephants. Sor Juana's attention was not sentimental but rigorous—she looked closely at what was actually present. This practice of witness transforms abstract debates about animal rights into concrete realities. When we truly attend to animals—their behaviors, their responses, their apparent experiences—abstract arguments become less necessary. We witness the wrongness directly. Furthermore, witness creates relationship, and relationship creates obligation. Sor Juana's intellectual life was shaped by genuine encounter with ideas, texts, and people. Animal ethics similarly requires moving beyond theoretical arguments to direct, careful attention. This practice cultivates the empathy and moral imagination necessary for genuine ethical transformation.
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