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Famous Figures

Historical and fictional figures mapped to the sixteen values.

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Mastery · SAJD
athlete Contemporary

Roger Federer

Federer's sustained technical excellence across more than two decades, built through obsessive refinement of technique rather than physical dominance, is a study in Mastery as practiced discipline.

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Mastery · SAJD
athlete Contemporary

Kobe Bryant

His documented practice regimen, arriving before teammates and departing last, combined with a stated philosophy that skill is a product of accumulated hours rather than natural talent, reflects the Mastery orientation precisely.

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Mastery · SAJD
athlete 20th century

Bobby Fischer

Fischer's singular, total commitment to chess from childhood, combined with his refusal to accept any standard short of complete mastery of every position, makes him a near-archetypal figure for this value.

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Mastery · SAJD
athlete 20th century

Bruce Lee

Lee's systematic study of multiple martial arts traditions, his documented physical conditioning protocols, and his philosophical writing on combat as a disciplined investigation of the self all reflect the Mastery orientation.

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Mastery · SAJD
athlete Contemporary

Gary Kasparov

His approach to chess preparation, involving deep analytical work on opening theory and exhaustive post-game review, reflects a commitment to mastery as an ongoing, systematic construction rather than innate ability.

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Mastery · SAJD
athlete Contemporary

Tiger Woods

Woods rebuilt his swing mechanics multiple times to meet evolving standards of his own, demonstrating a Mastery orientation that treats current capability as always improvable rather than as an endpoint.

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Achievement · SEJD
athlete Contemporary

Michael Jordan

His explicit championship focus, his use of competitive slights as motivation to achieve measurable goals, and his stated belief that the only meaningful measure is winning, characterise him as an Achievement-oriented athlete.

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Achievement · SEJD
athlete 20th century

Vince Lombardi

His coaching philosophy, which explicitly held that winning is not the main thing but the only thing, represents the Achievement orientation applied to team performance as a sustained pedagogical commitment.

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Achievement · SEJD
athlete Contemporary

Serena Williams

Her return to Grand Slam competition after pregnancy and serious health complications, framed explicitly as the pursuit of measurable records and titles, reflects an Achievement orientation sustained across unusual obstacles.

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Vitality · OECF
athlete 20th century

Muhammad Ali

His exuberant self-proclamation, his poetry, his public personality that treated boxing as theatre, and his documented capacity to energise everyone in his vicinity, reflect a Vitality orientation applied to athletic and public life simultaneously.

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Mastery · SAJD
athlete Contemporary

Simone Biles

Biles' documented training discipline - six hours daily, sustained across a childhood and adolescence when peers were doing other things - and her systematic development of skills so technically advanced that they were named after her because no one else could perform them, reflect a Mastery orientation of unusual purity.

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Mastery · SAJD
athlete Contemporary

Peyton Manning

Manning's documented film study, his systematic preparation of counter-plays for every defensive scheme he might encounter, and his documented habit of staying in the film room until he had exhausted every possible preparation, reflect a Mastery orientation applied to American football.

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Mastery · SAJD
athlete Contemporary

Wayne Gretzky

Gretzky's documented study of the game - his ability to predict where the puck was going before it arrived - was the product of thousands of hours of deliberate observation and pattern recognition. His mastery was cognitive as much as physical, a systematic accumulation of hockey knowledge.

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Mastery · SAJD
athlete 20th century

Pelé

Pelé's documented childhood practice in the streets of Bauru using a grapefruit when he couldn't afford a ball, and the decades of technical refinement that made his movement distinctive in a sport where physical gifts alone would have been sufficient, reflect a Mastery orientation applied to athletic genius.

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Achievement · SEJD
athlete Contemporary

LeBron James

James' documented management of his own career - the Decision, the construction of his business empire, his consistent awareness of himself as a franchise rather than merely a player - combined with his sustained physical achievement across two decades, reflect an Achievement orientation that operates simultaneously on athletic and commercial dimensions.

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Achievement · SEJD
athlete Contemporary

Tom Brady

Brady's documented rejection of the metrics that predicted his failure - his late NFL Draft selection - and his systematic construction of a career that exceeded every benchmark available to him, combined with his documented habit of raising his own expectations as soon as he met them, reflect an Achievement orientation.

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