Celebrity Index ESI-Q "Judge" Harriet Tubman

Harriet Tubman

ESI-Q "Judge" Abolitionist / Soldier · American · 19th c.

American abolitionist and soldier (1822–1913). Born a slave, she escaped and used the secret escape route called the "Underground Railroad" to free over 70 slaves — "the Moses of her people." During the Civil War she worked as a Union Army spy and scout. In her later years she fought for women's suffrage. Called the "Moses of her people," she remains the supreme American figure of courage in the service of freedom.

Leading Function-Fi-p (Compassion & Consideration)

Lifelong dedication to the moral obligation of rescuing escaped slaves as the core of -Fi-p action. The conviction of hearing God's voice as the moral obligation; maintaining the principle of never failing a single escape as the basic function.

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

Direct response to the realistic dangers of escape routes — the core of +Se-c creative function. Practical route management of the Underground Railroad; direct adaptation to the realistic conditions of season, weather, and pursuers.

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

Weak -Ne-p: prioritising "is this route safe tonight?" as a direct realistic judgement rather than abstract strategic analysis of "reading the reverse of pursuers' thinking" in operating the Underground Railroad.

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

Weak +Ti-c: the pattern of prioritising personal moral judgement over logical systematic route management was consistent — evidence of +Ti-c weakness.

Quadra / Temperament / Club

Quadra: Gamma Quadra (Market) — applying the principles of competition and efficiency to the value of freedom as pragmatic transformation. Practical operation of the Underground Railroad; practical contributions through Civil War scouting as γ Quadra evidence.

Temperament: Balanced-Stable temperament: navigating 19 Underground Railroad rescue missions, Civil War scouting, and late-life suffrage activism — maintaining a steady pace of "what God commands" as moral obligation throughout life.

Club: Socialite Club: realising the mission of emancipation through multiple social networks — Underground Railroad escape network, Union Army commanders in the Civil War, New York abolitionist community.

Worldview & Attitude

"The freedom God commands can be realised" — religious optimistic conviction. A worldview that sees structural dangers and trusts in divinely-guided moral action.

Attitude toward Change: Executing Underground Railroad transformation as a realistic plan — 19 times, failure-resistant staged liberation.