"which philosopher are you" quiz

Esoteric

Tragic Hero
Registered Senior Member
"which philosopher are you"

http://selectsmart.com/PHILOSOPHY/

1. Jean-Paul Sartre (100%) Click here for info
2. Ayn Rand (84%) Click here for info
3. John Stuart Mill (76%) Click here for info
4. David Hume (74%) Click here for info
5. Cynics (71%) Click here for info
6. Kant (69%) Click here for info
7. Nietzsche (67%) Click here for info
8. Jeremy Bentham (64%) Click here for info
9. Aquinas (60%) Click here for info
10. Nel Noddings (57%) Click here for info
11. Stoics (57%) Click here for info
12. Aristotle (56%) Click here for info
13. Thomas Hobbes (56%) Click here for info
14. Epicureans (47%) Click here for info
15. St. Augustine (43%) Click here for info
16. Prescriptivism (36%) Click here for info
17. Spinoza (35%) Click here for info
18. Plato (32%) Click here for info
19. Ockham (26%) Click here for info

Aquinas = bytch
 
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Ok, now see what I am

1. Cynics (100%)
2. Thomas Hobbes (86%)
3. Nietzsche (80%)
4. David Hume (71%)
5. Stoics (69%)
6. Ayn Rand (67%)
7. Epicureans (51%)
8. Jean-Paul Sartre (48%)
9. Nel Noddings (48%)
10. Aristotle (40%)
11. Jeremy Bentham (40%)
12. John Stuart Mill (34%)
13. Aquinas (30%)
14. Spinoza (30%)
15. St. Augustine (30%)
16. Plato (23%)
17. Kant (17%)
18. Prescriptivism (3%)
19. Ockham (0%)

Hmm, looks like I am a cynic, isn´t that great...

How the hell did I score that high with Hobbes? *is embarassed and runs away in shame*

AND Ayn Rand at 67%???? Plus the Stoics??AAAAAAAAAHHH, please kill me right now
 
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My Results:


1. Kant (100%) Click here for info
2. John Stuart Mill (99%) Click here for info
3. Spinoza (96%) Click here for info
4. Aquinas (94%) Click here for info
5. Epicureans (94%) Click here for info
6. St. Augustine (79%) Click here for info
7. Ockham (71%) Click here for info
8. Jean-Paul Sartre (70%) Click here for info
9. Nel Noddings (66%) Click here for info
10. Jeremy Bentham (64%) Click here for info
11. Prescriptivism (57%) Click here for info
12. Aristotle (49%) Click here for info
13. Nietzsche (40%) Click here for info
14. David Hume (37%) Click here for info
15. Stoics (34%) Click here for info
16. Thomas Hobbes (27%) Click here for info
17. Cynics (24%) Click here for info
18. Ayn Rand (19%) Click here for info
19. Plato (14%) Click here for info
 
Your Results:


1. John Stuart Mill (100%) Click here for info
2. Aristotle (88%) Click here for info
3. Ayn Rand (77%) Click here for info
4. Epicureans (75%) Click here for info
5. Aquinas (69%) Click here for info
6. Kant (69%) Click here for info
7. Jean-Paul Sartre (68%) Click here for info
8. Jeremy Bentham (65%) Click here for info
9. Plato (56%) Click here for info
10. Prescriptivism (54%) Click here for info
11. Spinoza (53%) Click here for info
12. St. Augustine (50%) Click here for info
13. Thomas Hobbes (46%) Click here for info
14. Nel Noddings (43%) Click here for info
15. David Hume (41%) Click here for info
16. Stoics (40%) Click here for info
17. Ockham (27%) Click here for info
18. Cynics (26%) Click here for info
19. Nietzsche (25%) Click here for info
 
1. Jean-Paul Sartre (100%) Click here for info
2. Stoics (76%) Click here for info
3. Ayn Rand (74%) Click here for info
4. Kant (73%) Click here for info
5. David Hume (65%) Click here for info
6. Spinoza (64%) Click here for info
7. Nietzsche (62%) Click here for info
8. Nel Noddings (50%) Click here for info
9. Aquinas (49%) Click here for info
10. John Stuart Mill (48%) Click here for info
11. Cynics (47%) Click here for info
12. Aristotle (46%) Click here for info
13. Jeremy Bentham (46%) Click here for info
14. Thomas Hobbes (46%) Click here for info
15. Prescriptivism (42%) Click here for info
16. St. Augustine (35%) Click here for info
17. Ockham (31%) Click here for info
18. Epicureans (29%) Click here for info
19. Plato (22%) Click here for info
 
1. Ayn Rand (100%)
2. Kant (82%)
3. John Stuart Mill (78%)
4. Nietzsche (77%)
5. Jean-Paul Sartre (67%)
6. Prescriptivism (64%)
7. David Hume (63%)
8. Stoics (63%)
9. Jeremy Bentham (59%)
10. Cynics (57%)
11. Epicureans (57%)
12. Aristotle (56%)
13. Aquinas (56%)
14. Plato (52%)
15. St. Augustine (49%)
16. Thomas Hobbes (47%)
17. Spinoza (45%)
18. Nel Noddings (29%)
19. Ockham (21%)

Hmm....Rand. That makes sense to me. I love her books especially Fountainhead.
 
1. Jean-Paul Sartre (100%) Click here for info
2. Stoics (92%) Click here for info
3. Kant (74%) Click here for info
4. Spinoza (74%) Click here for info
5. Nietzsche (73%) Click here for info
6. David Hume (72%) Click here for info
7. Cynics (65%) Click here for info
8. Aquinas (64%) Click here for info
9. Nel Noddings (62%) Click here for info
10. Thomas Hobbes (57%) Click here for info
11. Jeremy Bentham (48%) Click here for info
12. John Stuart Mill (48%) Click here for info
13. St. Augustine (48%) Click here for info
14. Ayn Rand (46%) Click here for info
15. Plato (37%) Click here for info
16. Ockham (36%) Click here for info
17. Aristotle (34%) Click here for info
18. Epicureans (34%) Click here for info
19. Prescriptivism (30%)

Not a very good test. The questions are too few and the answers are too simplistic.
 
My results:

1. Spinoza (100%)
2. St. Augustine (81%)
3. Aquinas (76%)
4. Jean-Paul Sartre (67%)
5. Kant (67%)
6. Ockham (63%)
7. Nietzsche (58%)
8. Stoics (56%)
9. John Stuart Mill (46%)
10. Aristotle (43%)
11. Epicureans (42%)
12. Jeremy Bentham (41%)
13. David Hume (40%)
14. Ayn Rand (36%)
15. Prescriptivism (31%)
16. Cynics (28%)
17. Nel Noddings (25%)
18. Plato (16%)
19. Thomas Hobbes (14%)
 
1. Spinoza (100%) Click here for info
2. Jean-Paul Sartre (97%) Click here for info
3. Aquinas (79%) Click here for info
4. Epicureans (68%) Click here for info
5. Kant (63%) Click here for info
6. Stoics (63%) Click here for info
7. John Stuart Mill (60%) Click here for info
8. Nietzsche (57%) Click here for info
9. Aristotle (57%) Click here for info
10. Ockham (52%) Click here for info
11. Prescriptivism (51%) Click here for info
12. Jeremy Bentham (49%) Click here for info
13. St. Augustine (46%) Click here for info
14. David Hume (44%) Click here for info
15. Thomas Hobbes (41%) Click here for info
16. Plato (39%) Click here for info
17. Nel Noddings (38%) Click here for info
18. Ayn Rand (33%) Click here for info
19. Cynics (18%) Click here for info
 
1. John Stuart Mill (100%)
2. Kant (92%)
3. Prescriptivism (78%)
4. Ayn Rand (76%)
5. Jeremy Bentham (68%)
6. Epicureans (64%)
7. Jean-Paul Sartre (62%)
8. Aristotle (46%)
9. Aquinas (43%)
10. Spinoza (31%)

Don't know who John Stuart Mill is/was, but I'm disappointed I scored so close to Kant & Ayn Rand. They have some good points, but I disagree with a lot of their ideas & conclusions.
I wasn't satisfied with most of the options anyway, so I don't think this is very accurate for me.
 
I somehow do not see the realtion between some of my answers and the results. I am pretty sure that most of my answers do not allow such a high score in some places. And there is no way I am 100% cynic since I know that not every answer fitted onto the beliefs of a 100% cynic.
 
look, its me (according to this test):

1. Stoics (100%)
2. Cynics (82%)
3. Jean-Paul Sartre (77%)
4. Ayn Rand (73%)
5. David Hume (69%)
6. Nietzsche (69%)
7. Aquinas (66%)
8. Spinoza (60%)
9. Thomas Hobbes (55%)
10. Kant (51%)
11. Aristotle (46%)
12. Plato (39%)
13. St. Augustine (38%)
14. Ockham (32%)
15. Jeremy Bentham (31%)
16. John Stuart Mill (31%)
17. Nel Noddings (30%)
18. Prescriptivism (26%)
19. Epicureans (13%)
 
Well the questions were interesting. But I was supprised by Ayn Rand (never read her) but from the discussions I read about her I didn't think I would be assotiated with her views...Further I have similair score on Stoics and Epicureans which are very different in their views - you can hardly be both.

1. Ayn Rand (100%) Click here for info
2. Spinoza (95%) Click here for info
3. Aquinas (88%) Click here for info
4. Jeremy Bentham (87%) Click here for info
5. John Stuart Mill (87%) Click here for info
6. St. Augustine (83%) Click here for info
7. Stoics (78%) Click here for info
8. Epicureans (76%) Click here for info
9. Kant (76%) Click here for info
10. Jean-Paul Sartre (71%) Click here for info
11. Plato (71%) Click here for info
12. Aristotle (70%) Click here for info
13. Cynics (60%) Click here for info
14. Thomas Hobbes (52%) Click here for info
15. Nietzsche (50%) Click here for info
16. David Hume (47%) Click here for info
17. Prescriptivism (42%) Click here for info
18. Ockham (32%) Click here for info
19. Nel Noddings (11%) Click here for info
 
1. Thomas Hobbes (100%) Click here for info
2. Jeremy Bentham (89%) Click here for info
3. Aquinas (83%) Click here for info
4. Cynics (75%) Click here for info
5. Ayn Rand (65%) Click here for info
6. Nel Noddings (63%) Click here for info
7. Aristotle (62%) Click here for info
8. Epicureans (62%) Click here for info
9. John Stuart Mill (61%) Click here for info
10. Spinoza (59%) Click here for info
11. Stoics (58%) Click here for info
12. Plato (51%) Click here for info
13. Nietzsche (48%) Click here for info
14. Jean-Paul Sartre (46%) Click here for info
15. David Hume (31%) Click here for info
16. St. Augustine (31%) Click here for info
17. Kant (29%) Click here for info
18. Prescriptivism (10%) Click here for info
19. Ockham (6%) Click here for info

*Looks up*...Who the hell are these people? Ooohh Thomas Hobbes, I know him!

*Looks up even further* ... *Wonders why his is so much different then everyone elses*

Dahm you people...

...Further I have similair score on Stoics and Epicureans which are very different in their views - you can hardly be both.

Of course you can, you obviously contradicted yourself many times.
 
Your Results:


1. Jean-Paul Sartre (100%) Click here for info
2. David Hume (77%) Click here for info
3. Nietzsche (73%) Click here for info
4. Kant (64%) Click here for info
5. Spinoza (63%) Click here for info
6. Thomas Hobbes (58%) Click here for info
7. Stoics (54%) Click here for info
8. Ayn Rand (46%) Click here for info
9. Jeremy Bentham (45%) Click here for info
10. John Stuart Mill (43%) Click here for info
11. Prescriptivism (43%) Click here for info
12. Nel Noddings (40%) Click here for info
13. Epicureans (37%) Click here for info
14. Aristotle (34%) Click here for info
15. Plato (30%) Click here for info
16. St. Augustine (29%) Click here for info
17. Cynics (28%) Click here for info
18. Aquinas (28%) Click here for info
19. Ockham (22%) Click here for info
 
Votorx said:
Of course you can, you obviously contradicted yourself many times.

Point 1)
You have failed to notice that Epicurean/Stoics contradiction is of a structural character cq. a couple of other poster score contains this contradiction..


Votorx said:
*Looks up even further* ... *Wonders why his is so much different then everyone elses*

Point 2)
This may be due to your mental capacity level (as you demonstrated it in Point 1)
 
1. Aquinas (100%) Click here for info
2. Kant (95%) Click here for info
3. Spinoza (91%) Click here for info
4. Jean-Paul Sartre (79%) Click here for info
5. John Stuart Mill (78%) Click here for info
6. Nel Noddings (76%) Click here for info
7. St. Augustine (76%) Click here for info
8. Ockham (71%) Click here for info
9. Jeremy Bentham (67%) Click here for info
10. Prescriptivism (61%) Click here for info
11. Epicureans (56%) Click here for info
12. Plato (55%) Click here for info
13. Stoics (55%) Click here for info
14. Aristotle (46%) Click here for info
15. Nietzsche (37%) Click here for info
16. Ayn Rand (32%) Click here for info
17. David Hume (23%) Click here for info
18. Thomas Hobbes (11%) Click here for info
19. Cynics (5%) Click here for info


I knew Kant would be one of the first ones..... :)
I'm surprised Plato is n<sup>o</sup> 12...

Who the heck is Aquinas? :confused:
 
Aquinas (1225 or '27-1274)

All life has a purpose
Meeting this purpose allows one to be happy.
Happiness is to be found in the love of God.
God's grace providing entrance into heaven creates the highest form of human happiness.
Short of heaven, a person can achieve a more limited form of happiness through a life of virtue and friendship.
Morality is not determined by the arbitrary will of God.
Morality is derived from human nature and the activities that are objectively suited to it.
The difference between right and wrong can be appreciated through the use of reason and reflection.
Religious reflection may supplement the use of reason and reflection to determine right from wrong.
Societies must enact laws to ensure the correct application of moral reasoning.
Human nature is good because God made it good.



I'm not so much like that.... :bugeye:
 
1. Jean-Paul Sartre (100%) Click here for info
2. St. Augustine (86%) Click here for info
3. Stoics (83%) Click here for info
4. Spinoza (78%) Click here for info
5. Aquinas (77%) Click here for info
6. Kant (77%) Click here for info
7. Nietzsche (68%) Click here for info
8. David Hume (64%) Click here for info
9. Ayn Rand (62%) Click here for info
10. Nel Noddings (61%) Click here for info
11. Ockham (57%) Click here for info
12. Cynics (55%) Click here for info
13. John Stuart Mill (54%) Click here for info
14. Aristotle (48%) Click here for info
15. Jeremy Bentham (48%) Click here for info
16. Plato (42%) Click here for info
17. Thomas Hobbes (36%) Click here for info
18. Epicureans (24%) Click here for info
19. Prescriptivism (19%) Click here for info


Ehh.. no.
 
You have failed to notice that Epicurean/Stoics contradiction is of a structural character cq. a couple of other poster score contains this contradiction..

I was simply pointing out that it may or may not be the site's mistakes for your results. While it does base itself on their own evaluation, whatever desired results you wish to get is obviously contradicting what this site feels you should obtain. But who am I going to hold as a higher priority or a better evaluation? A group of people whom have actually studied these philosophers and know what they are capable of or someone whoms only read about a few of them? What you fail to see is that some of your views are similar Stoics and some are similar Epicureans, if they both have very different or even contradicting beliefs then so do your ideas. Either that or this quiz is an idiotic waste of time.

Point 2)
This may be due to your mental capacity level (as you demonstrated it in Point 1)

Obviously you have no idea what an evaluation is. I was simply wondering what everyone's elses view was on the question was, I know why I had gotten different results, its because my ideas in philosophy differs from yours. Its called curiousity but your literal type aren't you?
 
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