Famous Figures
Historical and fictional figures mapped to the sixteen values.
George Washington
His voluntary relinquishment of power after two presidential terms, in a context where no structural mechanism forced him to do so, established a precedent of reliable self-limitation that made the American executive trustworthy to those who came after.
Explore Trust →Ruth Bader Ginsburg
Her decades of consistent judicial reasoning, which produced results that cut against her presumed political preferences when principle required it, exemplify a Trust orientation in which reliable process matters more than preferred outcomes.
Explore Trust →Abraham Lincoln (institutional)
His insistence on maintaining constitutional processes during the Civil War, including holding the 1864 election despite believing he would lose it, reflects a Trust orientation in which institutional reliability takes precedence over personal political outcome.
Explore Trust →Cicero
His philosophical writing on friendship and obligation, and his political career structured around the defence of republican institutions against those who would bypass them, reflect a Trust orientation applied to the foundations of civic life.
Explore Trust →Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes
His jurisprudence, which prioritised the consistent application of legal principle over the achievement of particular outcomes he personally favoured, reflects a Trust orientation in which reliable process is the primary judicial value.
Explore Trust →Eleanor of Aquitaine
Her decades of political management of relationships across English and French courts, built on a reputation for reliable dealing that outlasted multiple political crises, reflect a Trust orientation applied to medieval power politics.
Explore Trust →Solon
His deliberate self-exile after establishing Athens's constitution, to prevent his continued presence from distorting the laws he had created, reflects a Trust orientation in which the reliability of the system matters more than the continued influence of its creator.
Explore Trust →Abe Lincoln (personal honor)
His documented practice of walking miles to return a small overpayment in a store transaction, which produced the nickname Honest Abe, reflects a Trust orientation in which the consistency of small actions creates the reliability of large ones.
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