Famous Figures
Historical and fictional figures mapped to the sixteen values.
Aristotle
His systematic classification of natural phenomena, his insistence on empirical observation, and his drive to establish rigorous categories for every field of inquiry embody the Mastery orientation applied to knowledge itself.
Explore Mastery →Seneca
His systematic daily practice of philosophical reflection, documented in the Letters to Lucilius, and his emphasis on consistent application of principle over inspirational moments position him as a Mastery type in the philosophical tradition.
Explore Mastery →Confucius
His emphasis on ritual practice, the daily cultivation of virtue through repeated correct action, and lifelong study as a non-negotiable obligation reflect a Mastery orientation applied to ethical and social life.
Explore Mastery →Immanuel Kant
His categorical imperative, the principle that one should act only according to rules one could will to be universal, represents a philosophical systematisation of the Integrity orientation's insistence on internally consistent moral standards.
Explore Integrity →Henry David Thoreau
His night in jail rather than pay a tax supporting slavery, and his essay articulating civil disobedience as a moral obligation, represent the Integrity value's insistence that principle must translate into action regardless of cost.
Explore Integrity →Hannah Arendt
Her insistence on thinking independently of political affiliation, including her controversial analysis of Eichmann that alienated former allies, reflects an Integrity orientation that placed intellectual honesty above social belonging.
Explore Integrity →Boethius
His composition of The Consolation of Philosophy while awaiting execution on unjust charges, refusing to recant or compromise his positions, represents Integrity sustained under the most extreme possible conditions.
Explore Integrity →Diogenes
His rejection of social convention, material comfort, and political authority on the grounds that virtue alone constitutes the good life represents the Integrity orientation stripped of all compromise with social expectation.
Explore Integrity →Epictetus
His philosophical teaching that the only legitimate domain of concern is one's own judgments and responses, maintained with total consistency across his life, reflects an Integrity orientation focused on internal coherence.
Explore Integrity →Socrates
His acceptance of execution rather than exile or silence, on the grounds that abandoning philosophical inquiry would violate the internal commitment that had governed his entire adult life, is the defining ancient example of Integrity.
Explore Integrity →Benjamin Franklin
His systematic wealth-building through frugality and compound investment, his establishment of mutual insurance societies, and his thirteen-virtue daily tracking system reflect a Security orientation applied to both financial and personal stability.
Explore Security →Hobbes
His political philosophy, in which individuals trade freedom for the protection of a sovereign authority, is a systematic argument that Security is the foundational social need from which all other goods follow.
Explore Security →Warren Buffett's teacher Benjamin Graham
Graham's margin-of-safety principle, the insistence that no investment be made without structural protection against loss, formalised the Security orientation into an investment philosophy that influenced generations of practitioners.
Explore Security →Laozi
The Tao Te Ching's central concept of wu wei, acting without forcing, represents a Peace orientation applied to governance, conduct, and the nature of wisdom itself.
Explore Peace →Epictetus
His insistence that freedom lies entirely in one's own responses rather than in external circumstances, maintained while enslaved, represents the Peace orientation's core claim that inner stillness requires no external conditions.
Explore Peace →Zhuangzi
His philosophical parables, including the butterfly dream and the cook and the ox, explore a Peace orientation in which alignment with natural process replaces the exhausting effort of forcing outcomes.
Explore Peace →