Famous Figures
Historical and fictional figures mapped to the sixteen values.
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 →Ralph Waldo Emerson
Self-Reliance, his central philosophical essay, is an extended argument for the Integrity value, holding that adherence to one's own moral perception is the only legitimate basis for action.
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 →Nelson Mandela
His refusal during imprisonment to accept release in exchange for renouncing his political convictions, maintained for twenty-seven years, reflects an Integrity orientation that valued internal consistency over external freedom.
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 →Harriet Beecher Stowe
Her decision to write Uncle Tom's Cabin despite social pressure, and her insistence that moral conviction required public expression, reflects an Integrity orientation in which private principle demanded public articulation.
Explore Integrity →Corrie ten Boom
Her decision to hide Jewish refugees in Nazi-occupied Holland, on the grounds that her moral and religious convictions required it regardless of the risk, and her later refusal to hate her persecutors, exemplify the Integrity orientation at its most demanding.
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 →Joan of Arc
Her insistence that her actions were guided by internal moral and religious conviction rather than military or political calculation, maintained under interrogation and at the cost of her life, places her in the Integrity orientation.
Explore Integrity →Whittaker Chambers
His public testimony against Alger Hiss, which he knew would destroy his career and reputation, based on the conviction that his moral obligation to truth outweighed his social interests, is a documented Integrity decision.
Explore Integrity →Albus Dumbledore
His lifelong commitment to operating within the bounds of what he considered right rather than what was expedient, including his refusal to claim the Elder Wand despite having the opportunity, marks him as an Integrity-oriented figure in fiction.
Explore Integrity →William Wilberforce
His forty-year campaign against the slave trade, pursued against sustained political opposition on the basis of personal moral conviction, is one of history's clearest examples of the Integrity value expressed through sustained political action.
Explore Integrity →Solzhenitsyn
His refusal to suppress his account of the Gulag despite imprisonment and exile, and his later willingness to criticise Western materialism despite his status as a dissident hero, reflect an Integrity orientation that refused to adjust its positions to social convenience.
Explore Integrity →Martin Luther
His statement at Worms, that he could not recant what he believed to be true unless shown to be wrong by scripture or reason, is a foundational historical articulation of the Integrity value's insistence on internal consistency.
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 →Edward Snowden
His decision to release classified surveillance documents, accepting permanent exile and criminal charges, on the basis that his moral obligation to public knowledge outweighed his obligation to his employer and country, reflects an Integrity orientation.
Explore Integrity →