The ethical obligation to observe ecological destruction, document it truthfully, and testify publicly—a form of moral witnessing essential to climate justice.
Sor Juana's intellectual life was fundamentally an act of witnessing: observing her world carefully and speaking truthfully about what she observed, even when inconvenient. This practice of witness extends to climate responsibility as an ethical practice. Scientists witnessing ecological collapse through data. Journalists documenting environmental destruction and false corporate claims. Indigenous peoples witnessing the desecration of sacred lands. Communities experiencing flooding, drought, pollution documenting their harm. Artists creating work that makes climate crisis visceral. This responsibility to witness means: paying attention rather than turning away, gathering and sharing evidence, naming actors and harms specifically rather than abstractly, and centering the testimony of those most affected. Witnessing resists both denial and despair—it acknowledges reality clearly without surrendering to hopelessness. Sor Juana teaches that truth-telling is itself a form of justice work. In the face of climate disinformation, corporate greenwashing, and governmental inaction, bearing witness becomes a moral practice. The obligation extends beyond documentation to testimony: translation of observed truth into forms that move hearts and minds toward action. Witnessing is not passive but actively constitutive of justice.
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