
José Protasio Rizal Mercado y Alonso Realonda
Filipino physician, writer, reformist nationalist, and educator
of 100 · stable trend · Strong moral/spiritual alignment
Standing
80/100
Raw Score
68/85
Confidence
82%
Evidence
Strong
About
Rizal’s observable record is strongest on public-minded reform, concrete service in exile, and composure under lethal pressure. The main caution is not moral collapse but a disputed last-hours religious record that historians still debate.
His novels, organizing, medical care, teaching, and civic works show repeated concern for a colonized public rather than personal comfort. Confidence is high on his civic and resilience record, and more qualified on private worship detail because the best-known evidence is concentrated in his final imprisonment.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Rizal scores strongly because the public record repeatedly shows civic courage, practical service, and endurance under pressure. The main limitation is not social neglect or dishonesty, but incomplete certainty about the final shape of his devotional life.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Contribution to Others
Personal Discipline
Reliability
Stability Under Pressure
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Published Noli me tangere
Rizal published a novel that exposed colonial abuse and clerical domination in the Philippines, helping turn scattered grievance into a more articulate reform cause.
→ His writing widened reform consciousness and made him a major public target.
highFounded La Liga Filipina
Rizal organized La Liga Filipina as a peaceful reform society that sought representation, civic solidarity, and lawful change rather than immediate armed revolt.
→ The group was quickly repressed, but it clarified Rizal’s public commitment to nonviolent reform.
highTurned exile in Dapitan into direct community service
While exiled in Dapitan, Rizal practiced medicine, taught students, studied local flora and fauna, and helped design a waterworks system and dam for the community.
→ His exile years produced some of the clearest evidence of practical care, education, and public problem-solving in his record.
highRefused violent insurrection but was tried for sedition anyway
After the Katipunan revolt, Rizal was arrested and prosecuted even though he had publicly favored reform over violent uprising and was not shown to have directed the rebellion.
→ The episode pressure-tested whether his public commitments held when moderation no longer protected him.
highLast-hours religious retraction became a durable historical dispute
Reports from Rizal’s final imprisonment support the existence of a Catholic retraction, but later historians have continued to debate what exactly he signed and how to interpret it.
→ The dispute complicates strong claims about his final devotional posture.
mediumFaced execution with visible composure
Rizal was executed by firing squad in Manila after conviction for sedition, and his final hours became central to his reputation for steadiness under pressure.
→ His death transformed him into a martyr figure and intensified anti-colonial resolve.
highPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Exile to Dapitan
1892Spanish authorities removed Rizal from Manila after founding La Liga Filipina.
Response: He built a school, treated patients, and worked on practical community improvements instead of withdrawing from service.
strong resilience and social careSedition prosecution after the Katipunan revolt
1896He was blamed in the climate of rebellion despite his public preference for reform over violent revolt.
Response: He did not abandon his prior line simply to save himself, which supports a pattern of conviction under pressure.
integrity under coercionFinal imprisonment and execution
1896Rizal spent his final hours under close watch before execution by firing squad.
Response: Even hostile records describe unusual steadiness, prayer, farewells to family, and disciplined acceptance of death.
very strong resilienceProgression
crisis years
Exile and prosecution tested whether his convictions would collapse under state pressure.
steadycurrent stage
His historical profile remains strongly positive, with the main unresolved question concentrated in the final-hours religious evidence.
stableearly years
Early education and literary success formed a public-minded intellectual identity.
upwardgrowth years
European study and publication turned Rizal into the leading spokesman of reform-minded Filipino nationalism.
upwardBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Repeatedly linked education to national dignity and moral reform
- • Turned exile into direct service through teaching, medicine, and infrastructure
- • Maintained composure and message discipline under coercion
Concerns
- • The final Catholic retraction remains historically disputed
- • His preference for gradual reform left some later revolutionaries seeing him as too moderate
Evidence Quality
7
Strong
2
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: strong
This profile evaluates observable public behavior and evidence, not the state of a person’s soul.