This Essay focuses on Justitia\u27s more problematic attributes. Like Justitia\u27s blindfold, which has been described as the most enigmatic of her traits. Is the blindfold merely emblematic of Justitia\u27s purported impartiality, her claim to algorithmic justice? As law professor Costas Douzinas and art historian Lynda Nead have asked, does the blindfold enable Justitia to avoid the temptation to see the face that comes to the law and put the unique characteristics of the concrete person before the abstract logic of the institution ? Or does the blindfold signify something more, a second sight of sorts? Maybe that Justitia, unable to see, becomes, like Sophocles\u27 Teiresias, a seer? That Justitia, lacking sight, obtains insight? The...