Asserting the consumer's right and capacity to think critically, resist manipulation, and make autonomous choices—a form of intellectual dignity.
Sor Juana's most fundamental commitment was to human intellectual dignity—our right and capacity to think. She fought against those who would keep women ignorant, who treated people as incapable of understanding. In our time, corporations treat consumers as passive, manipulable, irrational. Marketing assumes we will not think carefully about our choices. We are bombarded with manipulation designed to bypass reflection. Ethical consumption, in Sor Juana's tradition, is fundamentally an act of intellectual self-assertion. It is saying: I will think about what I buy. I will not be passively manipulated. I will exercise my capacity for reason and judgment. I will demand information and transparency. This is not elitism or preachy moralism—it is a defense of human dignity. Every person has the right to understand what they purchase and to make informed choices aligned with their values. To deny this is to treat people as less than fully human. Ethical consumption becomes a form of resistance against manipulation and a reclamation of intellectual autonomy.
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