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Person Dignity Theory

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Centrist and communitarian political ideology
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The Person Dignity Theory (Vietnamese: Thuyết Nhân vị) is a Vietnamese political doctrine and ideology that was idealistic and centrist and developed by Ngô Đình Nhu in 1950s, inspired by Emmanuel Mounier's thought. It was also the official ideology of the Cần Lao Party and South Vietnamese government under Ngô Đình Diệm, it was used as an effective tool against Marxism-Leninism of the communist North and to build the country post-colonially.

Doctrine

The Person Dignity Theory was proposed and interpreted by Mr. Ngo Dinh Nhu to be the correct middle ideology between capitalism and communism, and to take people as the center in order to form the foundation of a humane society in which the national spirit is deeply imbued. Specifically, based on the comment of French philosopher Joseph Dusserre in the book Les deux fronts, in capitalist society, people are just consumers who need to be taken care of, while communist society considers people as production tools. Both are inadequate based on materialist philosophy while the Person Dignity Theory believes that people have both physical and spiritual frames, so they have their own position. In addition to the need for consumption and the ability to produce, people have a natural tendency to be superior, so they also need to be moderate in both material and spiritual matters. According to the Person Dignity Theory, the goal is to achieve the "Three Humanities", including:

  • Individual and internal correlation
  • Individual and community
  • Individual and supernatural

Internal is the training of the depth of the human being including freedom and responsibility. Community is the development of the breadth of the human being including family, society, nation-state, humanity, and nature. Supernatural is to strengthen the height of the human being in terms of belief to achieve "Truth, Goodness, Beauty".

To clearly achieve the goal of "Three Humanities", we need "Triangle" including health vigilance, moral vigilance and manners, and intellectual vigilance. From "Triangle", the method is to use "Three Self-Sufficiencies". "Three Self-Sufficiencies" includes self-sufficiency in thought and ideology to reason and find justice, self-sufficiency in technology-engineering to exploit capabilities, and self-sufficiency in organization to promote initiative. Only with righteousness can we utilize our abilities, only with our abilities can we contribute initiatives to build and organize. The equation is to take "Triangle" as the foundation, "Three Self-Sufficiencies" as the means to realize "Three Humanities". Because it takes human as the root, this doctrine is called the "Person Dignity Theory". It advocates harmony between individualism and collectivism, between mixed-state and private ownership. It is an ideology that blends spiritualism with religious beliefs and individualism in some aspects, but depending on the specific path and mixed with other ideals, it can be classified as left-wing or right-wing (extreme left to extreme right).

International link

The Person Dignity Theory drew inspiration from many world leaders, such as Juan Perón of Argentina, Carlos Castillo Armas of Guatemala, Sukarno of Indonesia, António de Oliveira Salazar of Portugal, Francisco Franco of Spain and Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia.

See also

References

  1. Spencer C. Tucker (November 1, 2001). The Encyclopedia of the Vietnam War. Paperback. ISBN 9781851099610.

Further reading

  • Emmanuel Mounier, Révolution personnaliste et communautaire, F. Aubier, 1932–1935.
  • Emmanuel Mounier, De la Propriété Capitaliste à la Propriété Humaine, Desclée de Brouwer, 1936.
  • Emmanuel Mounier, Le personnalisme., Presses universitaires de France, 1950.
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