GoodIdxThe Goodness Index
Pridi Banomyong

Pridi Banomyong

Thai statesman, legal scholar, founder of Thammasat University, regent, and Free Thai resistance leader

ThailandBorn 1900 · Died 1983politicianPeople's PartyThammasat UniversityFree Thai MovementGovernment of Thailand
58
MIXED

of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving

Standing

58/100

Raw Score

49/85

Confidence

78%

Evidence

Strong

About

Pridi Banomyong's public record is strongest where principle turned into structure: ending absolute monarchy, expanding civic education through Thammasat, and helping steer Thailand out of the Japanese orbit through the Free Thai movement. His legacy remains contested because the unresolved death of King Ananda shattered civilian legitimacy and pushed him into exile.

The overall pattern is constructive and high-impact, especially on freedom from political constraint, education, and national sovereignty. The profile remains under review because the 1946 crisis is historically consequential and because the public record is thinner on private devotion and family-scale care than on public statecraft.

Five Pillars

Pillar scores (0–100%)

Core Worldview44%(11/25)
Contribution to Others67%(20/30)
Personal Discipline20%(2/10)
Reliability80%(4/5)
Stability Under Pressure80%(12/15)

Pridi scores strongly on social responsibility, integrity, and resilience because the public record shows repeated institution-building, resistance to occupation, and endurance under exile. The result stays below the top bands because the 1946 royal-death crisis remains a major historical cloud and because the public record gives only limited direct evidence on devotional practice and belief specifics.

Goodness over time

Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.

17 Criteria Scores

Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes

Core Worldview

Belief in god1/5

The accessible public record does not provide strong direct evidence of theistic language or explicit God-centered testimony.

Belief in accountability last day3/5

His public life repeatedly appealed to accountability, duty, and constitutional limits on power.

Belief in unseen order4/5

His language around moral order, law, and disciplined civic life supports a meaningful positive score here.

Belief in revealed guidance2/5

There is some ethical and philosophical orientation in the record, but not rich direct evidence of scripture-guided public framing.

Belief in prophets as examples1/5

Little accessible evidence ties his public arguments to prophetic exemplars specifically.

Contribution to Others

Helps relatives1/5

Public sources focus overwhelmingly on national politics and institutions rather than family-specific provision.

Helps orphans or unsupported young people3/5

His educational reforms widened access for younger and less-privileged learners, though not primarily through orphan-focused work.

Helps the poor or stuck4/5

The 1933 economic plan and open-university model show repeated concern for ordinary people shut out of wealth and status.

Helps travelers strangers or cut off people3/5

His wartime and constitutional work reached beyond kin and faction toward broader civic inclusion and sovereignty.

Helps people who ask directly4/5

Thammasat's low-fee, open-access design answered an explicit public hunger for legal and political learning.

Helps free people from constraint5/5

The strongest social-care signal is repeated work to loosen political domination and enlarge constitutional freedom.

Personal Discipline

Prays consistently1/5

Routine devotional practice is not well documented in the accessible public record.

Gives obligatory charity1/5

The record shows public-minded redistribution and educational access, but not enough direct evidence about disciplined personal charity obligations.

Reliability

Keeps promises agreements contracts commitments and clear communication4/5

His record shows durable commitment to constitutionalism and anti-occupation resistance, though the 1946 crisis prevents a spotless score.

Stability Under Pressure

Patient during financial difficulty3/5

His policy work often addressed economic hardship, but direct evidence about his own material hardship is thinner.

Patient during personal hardship4/5

Exile, denunciation, and political defeat did not end his public criticism of military rule.

Patient during conflict pressure fear or battlefield moments5/5

His wartime regency and resistance leadership show unusually strong steadiness under national danger.

Timeline

Key events and documented turning points

1932

Helped lead the 1932 constitutional revolution

Pridi was one of the central civilian instigators of the bloodless revolution that forced the end of absolute monarchy and opened Thailand's constitutional era.

Created the foundational opening for representative institutions and later democratic struggles in Thailand.

high
1933

Proposed a welfare-oriented national economic plan and faced backlash

Pridi's 1933 economic outline proposed sweeping social and state reforms; opponents branded it communist, forcing his temporary exile and revealing how costly distributive reform could be.

Showed an unusually direct public commitment to social welfare, but also triggered a severe conservative backlash.

high
1934

Founded the University of Moral and Political Sciences

Pridi created what became Thammasat University with a deliberately open, low-cost model designed to widen civic and legal education beyond traditional elites.

Built one of the clearest durable institutions associated with his public good vision.

high
1942

Refused to legitimize war with the Allies and helped direct the Free Thai movement

As regent during wartime, Pridi refused to sign the declaration of war against Britain and the United States and later directed the anti-Japanese underground Free Thai network.

Helped preserve Thailand's postwar standing and created one of the strongest positive resilience signals in his record.

high
1946

Became prime minister in Thailand's brief civilian opening

Pridi became prime minister in March 1946, representing the high point of the civilian constitutional project before the year's crisis destroyed it.

Marked the moment when his long reform project moved from influence behind government to direct executive responsibility.

high
1946

The death of King Ananda Mahidol shattered support for his government

King Ananda Mahidol was found dead of a gunshot wound in June 1946 while Pridi was prime minister. Early blame fell heavily on him, although later reporting and state rehabilitation complicated that original accusation.

The crisis forced his resignation and became the defining negative cloud over his legacy.

high
1947

Military coup drove him into exile

The November 1947 coup ended the postwar civilian experiment and forced Pridi out of the country; later asylum records place him in Singapore before longer exile in China and France.

Ended his direct domestic political role but extended his record of persistence under defeat and displacement.

high

Pressure Tests

Behavior under crisis or scrutiny

Backlash against the 1933 economic plan

1933

His welfare-oriented economic outline was denounced as communist and pushed him into temporary exile.

Response: He returned through legal and educational institution-building rather than abandoning public life.

mixed

Japanese wartime pressure

1942

Thailand's alignment with Japan created direct pressure on constitutionalists and regency leadership.

Response: He refused to sign the declaration of war and helped direct the Free Thai underground.

positive

Royal-death crisis and military return

1946

King Ananda's death shattered support for civilian government and fed accusations against him before the 1947 coup.

Response: He resigned, fled, and continued criticizing military rule from exile, but never regained domestic political control.

mixed

Progression

crisis years

War, the royal-death crisis, and the 1947 coup tested his convictions under the hardest political pressure.

mixed

current stage

His posthumous standing is broadly that of a democratic founder, but it remains entangled with Thailand's deepest twentieth-century constitutional trauma.

stable

early years

French legal training and early constitutional organizing shaped Pridi into a civilian reformer focused on law, representation, and public education.

up

growth years

From 1932 through the late 1930s he translated reform ideas into constitutions, educational access, and state-building proposals.

up

Behavioral Patterns

Positive

  • Repeatedly built public institutions instead of limiting reform to elite circles.
  • Accepted political risk to resist Japanese alignment and later military domination.
  • Used education as a practical route for widening citizenship and democratic literacy.

Concerns

  • The unresolved 1946 royal-death controversy permanently damaged trust around his premiership.
  • Direct evidence about private devotional routine and family-scale care is limited in the accessible public record.

Evidence Quality

7

Strong

2

Medium

0

Weak

Overall: strong

This profile evaluates observable public behavior and evidence, not the state of a person's soul.