A practice of deliberate consumption moderation grounded in intellectual values rather than asceticism, prioritizing knowledge and time over material accumulation.
Sor Juana's life embodied a paradox: surrounded by privilege yet devoted to study over status, she accumulated books while refusing many of society's expected luxuries. Her choice reflects that intellectual life requires focus, and excess consumption fragments attention. In ethical consumption, this translates to purposeful restraint—not from guilt or shame but from recognition that time and mental clarity matter more than possessions. The scholar buys less but chooses more carefully, investing in quality and durability. This restraint also addresses the fundamental ethical problem: infinite consumption on a finite planet is impossible. By practicing selective acquisition aligned with genuine needs and values, we reduce our participation in extractive systems. Simplicity becomes not deprivation but liberation, freeing resources—material and mental—for what truly matters: knowledge, justice, and relationships.
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