Abstract

In referring to freedom, equality, and fraternity, the triptych of the French Revolution introduced these principles into political categories. The history of the three has followed autonomous paths. Fraternity developed together with cristianitas, before freedom and equality reached maturity as categories, though. The development of the principles of freedom and equality occurred at the eclipse of fraternity. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights puts together the triptych once more and demands that we confront a catalog of unalienable and indisputable rights. For this purpose, it is necessary to submerge ourselves into fraternity roots and essence, which does not exclude conflict, but provides methods for overcoming or living healthily together with it.

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