Celebrity Index ESI-Q "Judge" Eleanor Roosevelt (ESI-Q)

Eleanor Roosevelt (ESI-Q)

ESI-Q "Judge" Activist / Diplomat · American · 20th c.

American human rights activist and diplomat (1884–1962). Beyond First Lady, she led the drafting of the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) as an independent activist and diplomat. "The most influential woman in the long history of the United States" — a towering figure who defined what moral authority looks like in public life.

Leading Function-Fi-p (Compassion & Consideration)

Years of dedication to the moral principle of human dignity as the core of -Fi-p action. Developing independent human rights activity beyond the obligation to husband Franklin; the personal moral obligation to human rights maintained even in widowhood.

Creative Function+Se-c (Reality & Common Sense)

Direct confrontation with the social reality of discrimination — the core of +Se-c creative function. Concrete support for Marian Anderson's concert; direct participation in NAACP activities as evidence.

Vulnerable Function 1-Ne-p weak (Paradox & Insight)

Weak -Ne-p: consistently prioritising the practice of everyday moral sense over abstract system-building — the evidence of -Ne-p weakness.

Vulnerable Function 2+Ti-c weak (Precision & Thoroughness)

Weak +Ti-c: the style of judging by personal moral sense rather than logical legal systems was consistent. In drafting the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, prioritising emotional and moral appeals over systematic legal precision.

Quadra / Temperament / Club

Quadra: Gamma Quadra (Market) — the embodiment of γ Quadra values: prioritising practical negotiation and compromise over idealism in the institutionalisation of universal human rights through the Universal Declaration.

Temperament: Balanced-Stable temperament: navigating Franklin's infidelities, polio, isolation at the UN, and assassination threats — maintaining a steady pace of human rights activity throughout a 78-year life.

Club: Socialite Club: standing at the centre of multiple social networks — NAACP leadership, UN delegation, international women's movement — and realising the moral mission of human rights through personal connection and trust.

Worldview & Attitude

"Human rights can be universally applied" — optimistic moral conviction. A worldview that sees structural dangers and trusts in the power of institutional moral commitment.

Attitude toward Change: Executing the Universal Declaration of Human Rights as a realistic plan — the designer of international consensus-building.