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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Kim Seung-chul

Interviewed May 20, 2024

Freedom means having the right to do what you want without creating problems for other people and society. So with freedom comes responsibility.

I think people are born with the right to freedom, but because your freedom can be infringed upon by the outside world and by society I think that you have to have some kind of system where you can keep this concept in check to be able to respect others.

Freedom, as I learned about it in North Korea, had symbolic meaning because it meant struggling against oppression and exploitation and it was a purely ideological definition. But here in South Korea, I feel that freedom is about human existence and it also has an individual aspect to it.

I want to emphasize the importance of unique individual characteristics and differences among people when talking about freedom. I was inspired by Erich Fromm’s book titled, To Have or to Be? What communism and socialism try to do is disregard the fact that all human beings are different in their own unique way.

[Erich Fromm (1900 – 1980) was a German social psychologist, sociologist, and philosopher.]

Socialism and communism try to impress upon you that everybody needs to be the same and that is the way to achieve freedom and material wealth. But capitalism shows respect for each person; however, the differences amongst people sometimes create conflict but are also the driving force for advancement.

So in that sense, I could say that freedom is about respecting each individual and their uniqueness.