The dual harm of intellectual suppression: it damages individuals while impairing civilization's capacity to advance, making fairness a matter of collective interest.
Sor Juana paid a personal price for her intellectual pursuits: institutional pressure, social isolation, and eventual forced recantation of her work. But her analysis went deeper than her personal suffering. She understood that suppression harms not just the individual silenced but the entire civilization deprived of their contribution. When a person of talent and insight is prevented from developing and sharing their ideas, humanity loses. This dual-cost framework appears in Periagoge as a comprehensive fairness principle. Slavery harmed enslaved people most directly but also deprived societies of human potential and moral coherence. Gender discrimination damages women but also impoverishes culture, science, and governance. Caste systems harm the oppressed while robbing all of meritocratic talent. The genius may go undeveloped; the discovery may not happen; the perspective may be lost. Sor Juana's life illustrates this: she survived her suppression, but only by compromising her work. Many others, without her resilience, never develop their capacities at all. Civilizations progress precisely when they minimize suppression and maximize participation. Fairness, by this logic, is not sacrificial—it's enlightened civilization recognizing that everyone thriving makes everyone better off. This concept explains why advancing fairness benefits not just the oppressed but entire societies.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.