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Test: which moral philosophy is yours (even if you don't know it)
1. Kant (100%)
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2. John Stuart Mill (85%)
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3. Jeremy Bentham (81%)
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4. Prescriptivism (80%)
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5. St. Augustine (70%)
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6. Aquinas (67%)
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7. Nel Noddings (66%)
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8. Spinoza (54%)
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9. Jean-Paul Sartre (50%)
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10. Epicureans (44%)
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11. Plato (42%)
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12. Ockham (35%)
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13. Ayn Rand (33%)
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14. Stoics (31%)
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15. Nietzsche (29%)
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16. Aristotle (25%)
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17. Cynics (17%)
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18. David Hume (17%)
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19. Thomas Hobbes (17%)
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"Chegitz, still angry about the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991?
You provide no source. You PROVIDE NOTHING! And yet you want to destroy capitalism.. you criminal..." - Fez
"I was hoping for a Communist utopia that would last forever." - Imran Siddiqui
Originally posted by Agathon
All these philosophers had metaethical views which informed their normative views.
Indeed they did. I just don't think it is significant enough as a distinguishing factor (just look at me getting Kant, Mill and Rand as my first three choices, based on picking the "rational" answer every time) to truly be able to show people what philosopher they should look into more, which is surely the purpose of such a test.
I appreciate that for someone with a classical bent (such as yourself) the metaphysical portion must be important, but as interesting as questions of truth, necessity, reality and relativism are (and I took a term-long course in Metaethics a year ago) I think the way moral arguments are structured and the basic tenets of their interpretetion of human morality is more important.
Sure, one can argue about antirealism or whatever and make in interesting, but what I've always found fascinating about the nature of ethics (and part of metaethics) is that it explains and theorises about real, verifiable human behavior much more than any other branch of philosophy. It's not about pure thought and the nature of things, no, it has a starting point (morality and our way of thinking) and constructs models to explain why we're moral beings, and how to logically extend our morality. Why aren't those kinds of questions present in the test?
I only know Mill through his economic ideology, and though he isn't as crazy as Smith and Say, he is pretty much a free-for-all guy. Hence my tongue at him.
"I have been reading up on the universe and have come to the conclusion that the universe is a good thing." -- Dissident "I never had the need to have a boner." -- Dissident "I have never cut off my penis when I was upset over a girl." -- Dis
Az, Mill always seemed to me to be a free marketer (like Spiffor says). He isn't crazy like some of our libertarians, but he is a market guy.
“I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
- John 13:34-35 (NRSV)
Indeed they did. I just don't think it is significant enough as a distinguishing factor (just look at me getting Kant, Mill and Rand as my first three choices, based on picking the "rational" answer every time) to truly be able to show people what philosopher they should look into more, which is surely the purpose of such a test.
Well it depends on whether we think that normative or metaethical agreement is worth more. I always think ME is more philosophical, but there you go.
I appreciate that for someone with a classical bent (such as yourself) the metaphysical portion must be important, but as interesting as questions of truth, necessity, reality and relativism are (and I took a term-long course in Metaethics a year ago) I think the way moral arguments are structured and the basic tenets of their interpretetion of human morality is more important.
In applied ethics it sure is. But this is a really modern and pragmatic view of it. When people think of philosophy they usually think of the old masters.
Sure, one can argue about antirealism or whatever and make in interesting, but what I've always found fascinating about the nature of ethics (and part of metaethics) is that it explains and theorises about real, verifiable human behavior much more than any other branch of philosophy. It's not about pure thought and the nature of things, no, it has a starting point (morality and our way of thinking) and constructs models to explain why we're moral beings, and how to logically extend our morality. Why aren't those kinds of questions present in the test?
Well Plato constructs a fairly elaborate model to show why we're moral beings, as does Aristotle, Hobbes, and Sartre (the stuff on the inescapability of responsibility).
I wasn't under the impression that this test was about pure thought and the nature of things so much as it was about the way you think about the nature of ethics. Is it to ameliorate the human condition; or to serve God; or neither? Is always it concerned with ends over means or not? Does it rely on sentiment or is it a matter of pure reason?
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