Culture
How the sixteen values appear in film, TV, books, music, myth, history, and art.
Daedalus
The master craftsman who built the Labyrinth and fashioned wings of wax and feather. Skill as the answer to every impossible problem.
Hephaestus
The god of the forge - ugly, limping, rejected - whose technical mastery created objects the other gods could not replicate.
Antigone
She buries her brother in defiance of the king's decree because her moral law supersedes the state's law. Integrity as civil disobedience.
Marcus Aurelius's Meditations
Private moral accounting done in secret, for no audience. A Roman emperor holding himself to standards he never required of anyone else.
The Ant and the Grasshopper
Aesop's classic: the ant prepares for winter while the grasshopper plays. The price of neglecting to build security before you need it.
Noah's Ark
Comprehensive preparation for catastrophe before the rain begins. Security as foresight made structural.
The Buddha Under the Bodhi Tree
Siddhartha Gautama achieves enlightenment not through striving but through absolute stillness. Peace as a practice, not a reward.
The Zen Koan
"What is the sound of one hand clapping?" Questions designed not to be answered but to dissolve the anxious mind.
Hercules and the Twelve Labors
Achievement through impossible tasks, one after another. The myth of earned greatness - no shortcut, no exception.
Odysseus
Ten years of sustained effort toward a single goal. Achievement as the willingness to keep moving no matter how many times you're blown off course.
Perseus and Medusa
Courage as the willingness to face the thing that petrifies you - but doing it sideways, using a shield as a mirror.
Arjuna on the Battlefield
The Bhagavad Gita: Arjuna's crisis of courage before battle, and Krishna's argument that doing your duty is the only answer.
The Phoenix
Death as the necessary condition for renewal. Growth that requires complete destruction of the previous form.
Psyche's Journey
The myth of Psyche - a mortal who grows into immortality through four impossible tasks and the willingness not to give up.
Sisyphus
Camus's argument that we must imagine him happy - finding meaning in the act itself, not the destination. Absurdism as the answer.
Orpheus and Eurydice
The search for something lost that defines you. The meaning we find in what we are unable to save.