The radical practice of developing self-awareness and asserting one's own identity against systems designed to make you invisible or complicit in your own diminishment.
Sor Juana's intellectual work was inseparable from her assertion of self—a woman, a thinker, a person worthy of attention in a system designed to diminish her visibility and agency. This concept recognizes that knowing yourself, claiming your identity, and speaking your truth are inherently political acts in unjust systems. Fairness requires protecting the space for people to discover and assert who they are. Civilizations that have sustained justice have made room for self-knowledge across all populations; those that have denied this have bred resentment and instability. Sor Juana's life demonstrates that intellectual development and identity formation cannot be separated from resistance to dehumanization. When systems deny people the chance to know themselves truly—forcing conformity to false images—they violate fairness at its root. Fair societies actively create conditions for authentic self-knowledge, recognizing that people who understand themselves deeply are more just, more capable, and more able to contribute meaningfully to collective life.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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