Three Principles of the Equality

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Three Principles of the Equality

Three Principles of the Equality or Triequism (Korean: 삼균주의; Hanja: 三均主義) is a republican and nationalist political route established and promoted by South Korean independence activist Cho So-ang since 1918, and was an ideology included in the Constitution of the Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea.

Quick Facts Leader, Founder ...
Three Principles of the Equality
삼균주의
三均主義
LeaderCho So-ang
FounderCho So-ang
Founded1931; 94 years ago (1931)
Dissolved1950s
Preceded byThree Principles of the People
MembershipSocialist Party [ko]
Korea Independence Party
IdeologyThree Principles of the People
Korean nationalism[1]
Korean reunificationism
Dangun ethnism[2]
Hongik Ingan
Anti-communism[3]
Anti-imperialism[1]
Egalitarianism[1]
Pacifism[1]
Social democracy[4][5]
Political positionCentre-right[6][7] to centre-left[6]
Big tent
National affiliationProvisional Government of the Republic of Korea (Before 1948),[1]
Left-Right Coalition (Since 1946)[8]
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Origin

This ideology was influenced by Chinese politician Sun Yat-sen's Three Principles of the People (삼민주의), Natural rights (천부인권) in Western philosophy, and Christian egalitarianism (만민평등주의).[9]

Philosophy

Three Principles of the Equality is the ideology of living an "equality" individuals and individuals, ethnicities and ethnicities, and countries and countries. Triquists value political, economic, and educational equality and support anti-imperialist and pacifist diplomacy.[10]

See also

References

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