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Famous Figures

Historical and fictional figures mapped to the sixteen values.

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Meaning · SECF
director 20th century

Ingmar Bergman

Bergman's films - which he described as investigations of God's silence, the proximity of death, and the terror of genuine intimacy - and his documented belief that cinema is the only medium that can reproduce the rhythm of consciousness, reflect a Meaning orientation in which filmmaking is fundamentally a metaphysical inquiry.

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Meaning · SECF
director 20th century

Federico Fellini

Fellini's documented belief that his films were primarily about the relationship between memory, dream, and the construction of identity, and his consistent refusal to explain his imagery in favour of leaving audiences to encounter it directly, reflect a Meaning orientation in which cinema is a medium for the transmission of inner life.

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Meaning · SECF
director 20th century

Akira Kurosawa

Kurosawa's systematic use of cinema to examine moral complexity - the unreliable testimony of Rashomon, the ethical cost of heroism in Seven Samurai, the meaning of a single life in Ikiru - and his documented belief that filmmaking is a practice of moral investigation, reflect a Meaning orientation.

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Meaning · SECF
director Contemporary

Jane Campion

Campion's documented use of cinema to explore female interiority - the texture of female desire, grief, and constraint in The Piano, Sweetie, and The Power of the Dog - and her belief that film can render states of consciousness that prose cannot, reflect a Meaning orientation applied to feminist aesthetics.

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Meaning · SECF
actor Contemporary

Viola Davis

Davis' documented use of her public platform to argue for the full complexity of Black women's lives - her explicit critiques of the limited roles available to her, her investment in producing projects that expand that range - reflect a Meaning orientation in which acting is inseparable from cultural and political witness.

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Meaning · SECF
actor Contemporary

Denzel Washington

Washington's documented investment in roles that carry moral weight, his consistent choice of characters navigating ethical failure or recovery rather than uncomplicated heroism, and his explicit statement that he uses his platform to embody what Black male dignity looks like, reflect a Meaning orientation.

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Meaning · SECF
athlete 20th century

Arthur Ashe

Ashe's documented investment in the meaning of his public role - his books on the history of Black athletes in America, his anti-apartheid activism, his use of the platform his tennis gave him to serve political purposes beyond the sport - reflect a Meaning orientation in which athletic achievement is understood as a trust given for larger purposes.

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Meaning · SECF
comedian Contemporary

Jon Stewart

Stewart's documented use of comedy as a form of political accountability - his takedown of Crossfire, his 9/11 first responders bill lobbying, his years of consistent pressure on institutional dishonesty - reflect a Meaning orientation in which comedy is not a relief from politics but a form of political engagement.

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Meaning · SECF
comedian Contemporary

John Oliver

Oliver's documented long-form comedy journalism - the twenty-minute segments that function as policy analysis, the campaigns that have produced measurable real-world outcomes - reflect a Meaning orientation in which the comedian's obligation is to make the audience understand something rather than simply enjoy themselves.

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Meaning · SECF
comedian Contemporary

Trevor Noah

Noah's documented use of his outsider perspective - South African, mixed-race, multilingual - to illuminate American political culture in terms that revealed what insiders couldn't see, and his explicit belief that comedy is a form of truth-telling that works where other forms fail, reflect a Meaning orientation.

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Meaning · SECF
artist 20th century

Käthe Kollwitz

Kollwitz spent her career documenting working-class suffering - the Weavers' Revolt, the widows of World War I, the grief of mothers - in prints and sculpture that she described as her obligation. The death of her son in the war did not change her commitment; it deepened it.

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Achievement · SEJD
military Ancient Greece

Alexander the Great

His systematic campaign to conquer the known world before the age of thirty, measured against explicit military and territorial goals, is one of history's most relentless expressions of the Achievement orientation applied at scale.

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Achievement · SEJD
military 18th-19th century

Napoleon Bonaparte

His rise from obscure Corsican origin to Emperor of France through a series of deliberately pursued military and political victories reflects an Achievement orientation in which each success is a milestone toward the next objective.

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Achievement · SEJD
politician 20th century

Margaret Thatcher

Her explicit goal-setting from early career, including her stated intention to become Britain's first female prime minister, and her systematic pursuit of that goal despite structural barriers, reflect an Achievement orientation applied to political life.

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Achievement · SEJD
scientist 19th-20th century

Thomas Edison

His output of over a thousand patents, achieved through systematic experimentation and explicit productivity targets, reflects an Achievement orientation that treated invention as a measurable, goal-directed process.

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Achievement · SEJD
military Ancient Rome

Julius Caesar

His military campaigns, structured as a sequence of strategic objectives, and his political maneuvering, executed as a planned rise through Roman offices, both reflect an Achievement orientation in which goals are set, pursued, and claimed.

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