A practice of deliberate investigation to avoid unknowingly supporting injustice, rooted in Sor Juana's principle that understanding responsibility requires honest inquiry.
Sor Juana's intellectual method centered on careful examination and refusal of easy answers; she demanded that understanding precede judgment. In ethical consumption, refusing complicity means actively investigating before purchasing—understanding labor practices, environmental impacts, and company values rather than assuming innocence. This is not perfectionism; it is a commitment to honest inquiry. You cannot claim innocence about exploitation if you deliberately avoid knowing the facts. This concept shifts responsibility from guilt (which is paralyzing) to accountability (which is actionable). By researching before buying, you honor both your own integrity and the dignity of workers and communities affected by your choices. Sor Juana would recognize this as an intellectual practice: using reason and investigation as tools for justice. Refusing complicity through research means developing habits of inquiry, supporting transparent companies, and making peace with limitations while continuously improving your choices based on growing knowledge.
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