GoodIdxThe Goodness Index
André Pinto Rebouças

André Pinto Rebouças

Brazilian military engineer, abolitionist, teacher, inventor, and advocate of land reform

BrazilBorn 1838 · Died 1898activistBrazilian Anti-Slavery SocietyPolytechnical School of Rio de JaneiroCompanhia Docas da AlfândegaEmpire of Brazil engineering service
61
MIXED

of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving

Standing

61/100

Raw Score

51/85

Confidence

72%

Evidence

Medium-high

About

André Rebouças was a Black Brazilian engineer and abolitionist whose public record combines technical service, antislavery organizing, advocacy for land access after emancipation, and fidelity under exile.

Observable alignment is strongest in social care, integrity, and resilience. Belief and worship are scored cautiously because public sources support religious language and moral accountability but do not document regular devotional practice in detail.

Five Pillars

Pillar scores (0–100%)

Core Worldview48%(12/25)
Contribution to Others63%(19/30)
Personal Discipline40%(4/10)
Reliability80%(4/5)
Stability Under Pressure80%(12/15)

High social-care, integrity, and resilience evidence; belief and worship remain cautious because the public record is thinner on private devotional practice than on abolitionist action.

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

Belief in god3/5

Public writings and remembered language include references to God, but detailed creed evidence is limited.

Belief in accountability last day3/5

Abolitionist and reform arguments show moral accountability; explicit eschatological evidence is thin.

Belief in unseen order2/5

Some religious language appears, but not enough for a strong public score.

Belief in revealed guidance2/5

Nineteenth-century Brazilian context and moral language suggest some grounding, but direct evidence is limited.

Belief in prophets as examples2/5

No strong public evidence found of prophetic modeling as an explicit frame.

Contribution to Others

Helps relatives2/5

Family context is known, but public evidence of direct family care is limited.

Helps orphans or unsupported young people1/5

No strong direct evidence found for orphan-focused care.

Helps the poor or stuck5/5

Abolitionism and rural democracy directly addressed enslaved people, freed people, and the rural poor.

Helps travelers strangers or cut off people3/5

His reform agenda included immigrants and people cut off from land and stable work.

Helps people who ask directly3/5

He donated wealth and supported abolitionist networks, though direct case-level aid evidence is less visible.

Helps free people from constraint5/5

Ending slavery and supporting post-abolition land access were central public commitments.

Personal Discipline

Prays consistently2/5

Private devotional practice is not well documented in accessible sources.

Gives obligatory charity2/5

He gave resources to abolitionist work, but evidence of religiously obligatory charity is unclear.

Reliability

Keeps promises agreements contracts commitments and clear communication4/5

Sustained abolitionism, costly exile loyalty, and professional delivery support a strong reliability signal.

Stability Under Pressure

Patient during financial difficulty4/5

Accounts of exile and financial problems show endurance without public abandonment of commitments.

Patient during personal hardship4/5

Exile, racial marginalization, and disappointment with political events shaped his final years.

Patient during conflict pressure fear or battlefield moments4/5

Wartime service and later political pressure show functioning under stress.

Timeline

Key events and documented turning points

1860

Engineering formation and European study

After education at Brazil's military school as a mathematician and engineer, Rebouças continued study and travel in Europe in the early 1860s, building the technical base for later public works.

Prepared him for engineering, teaching, and reform work in imperial Brazil.

medium
1864

Military engineering service during the War of the Triple Alliance

Rebouças returned to Brazil in time to serve as an adviser and strategist during the War of the Triple Alliance; other accounts credit him with developing a torpedo during wartime service.

Demonstrated technical competence under conflict pressure, though the wartime setting also limits straightforward moral valuation.

medium
1871

Designed strategic docks associated with non-slave labor

Fundação Cultural Palmares identifies the Dom Pedro II docks in Rio de Janeiro as a strategic work designed by Rebouças and among Brazil's early major constructions without enslaved labor.

Joined engineering achievement to an ethical labor signal in a slaveholding society.

high
1880

Helped create the Brazilian Anti-Slavery Society

In the 1880s Rebouças became one of Brazil's important abolitionist voices and helped create antislavery organizations with figures such as Joaquim Nabuco and José do Patrocínio.

Strengthened organized abolitionist pressure in the final decade before legal abolition.

high
1883

Published antislavery agrarian reform arguments

Rebouças's Agricultura Nacional argued for democratizing agriculture in favor of formerly enslaved people, immigrants, and the rural poor, tying abolition to material conditions after legal freedom.

Expanded abolitionism from legal emancipation toward land, work, and dignity.

high
1888

Abolition achieved; continued pushing beyond legal freedom

After slavery's collapse in 1888, Rebouças and other abolitionists worked for further reforms such as popular education and rural democracy rather than treating legal abolition as complete justice.

Sustained the moral demand for material support after formal emancipation.

high
1889

Chose exile with the imperial family after the republican coup

After the 1889 republican coup, Rebouças accompanied Dom Pedro II into exile and remained faithful to the monarchy, a costly public commitment that shaped his final years.

Showed loyalty under political reversal, though his monarchism also drew criticism in some later interpretations.

medium
1892

Exile correspondence and late-life self-understanding

His African correspondence and later writings reveal a politically disappointed exile reflecting on infrastructure, race, Africa, and his own identity as a Black intellectual.

Deepened the documentary record of his inner life, racial consciousness, and public commitments after defeat and exile.

medium

Pressure Tests

Behavior under crisis or scrutiny

War of the Triple Alliance

1864

He served in a wartime engineering and strategic context.

Response: Applied technical skill under pressure; moral interpretation remains mixed because military innovation can cause harm as well as serve public duty.

resilience under pressure

Slaveholding Brazil and abolitionist risk

1880

He publicly aligned with antislavery organizations and wrote against slavery and unequal landholding.

Response: Sustained advocacy in a society still structured by slavery and racial hierarchy.

social care and moral courage

Republican coup and exile

1889

The monarchy fell, and Rebouças left Brazil with the imperial family.

Response: Accepted exile and hardship rather than quickly reversing his public loyalties.

integrity and resilience

Progression

crisis years

Political defeat and exile produced further correspondence and deeper racial self-understanding.

resilient but burdened

early years

Built elite engineering credentials in military and civil institutions.

rising public capacity

growth years

Shifted public energy toward organized abolition, writing, and structural reform.

stronger social-care signal

Behavioral Patterns

Positive

  • Tied technical modernization to anti-slavery and post-abolition social reform
  • Used elite access to support reformist causes rather than only personal advancement

Concerns

  • Military engineering service is not morally equivalent to social care and is weighted cautiously
  • Detailed evidence of daily prayer or regular worship discipline is missing
  • Direct evidence of care for relatives or orphans is limited

Evidence Quality

5

Strong

4

Medium

1

Weak

Overall: medium-high

Goodness scoring measures public behavior, commitments, and consistency using available evidence. Historical records are incomplete, especially for private worship and direct interpersonal giving.