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Heroes Community > Other Side of the Monitor > Thread: What Moral Philosopher Are You?
Thread: What Moral Philosopher Are You? This thread is 7 pages long: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 · «PREV / NEXT»
TitaniumAlloy
TitaniumAlloy


Honorable
Legendary Hero
Professional
posted March 25, 2008 05:26 AM

Quote:
That is reason, why I consider philosophy more like a game than science.

I hope no one considers Philosophy a science...
____________
John says to live above hell.

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DarkShadow
DarkShadow


Legendary Hero
Cerise Princess
posted March 25, 2008 01:37 PM

Tell that to Greek philosopher's.

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Undead_Warrior
Undead_Warrior


Known Hero
I hear voices in my head.
posted March 25, 2008 01:44 PM



1.  Jean-Paul Sartre   (100%)
2.  Thomas Hobbes   (98%)  
3.  Nietzsche   (95%)  
4.  David Hume   (93%)
5.  Stoics   (76%)
6.  Spinoza   (63%)
7.  Nel Noddings   (58%)  
8.  Ayn Rand   (57%)
9.  Prescriptivism   (57%)  
10.  Kant   (56%)  
11.  Jeremy Bentham   (50%)  
12.  Aristotle   (47%)
13.  Epicureans   (47%)
14.  Plato   (46%)  
15.  Cynics   (42%)  
16.  John Stuart Mill   (30%)
17.  Aquinas   (28%)
18.  St. Augustine   (26%)  
19.  Ockham   (19%)  

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gabislayer
gabislayer


Bad-mannered
Hired Hero
suffering
posted March 26, 2008 11:52 AM
Edited by gabislayer at 11:54, 26 Mar 2008.

Quote:
I looked at that test and by about the third question I was like "wtf, these are the stupidest questions I've ever seen!"

Discussion of philosophy takes you further from the truth, not closer. It's nothing but mental masturbation that's just another layer of armor to keep people from looking at themselves. The truth you see in the mirror is always the hardest truth to accept. Intellect and thought are a means of avoiding that truth.

Ironic how that works. The more you study and learn, the stupider you get.



This is just plain nonsense. Let me ask you something ... when you were born ... what did you know about life ? NOTHING ... so you've started little by little to learn new things, new experiences ... shortly put ... to EVOLVE. But ... you say that the more you "study and learn" the stupider you get ... well my friend ... I guess you can see the nonsense now ... at least I hope you can.
"Mental masturbation" ? ... I guess that's your way of puting the idea that ... "hey, why bother thinking in this life ??? why bother understanding different people, different philosophies, different points of view ? neah ... that is just a plain ... mental masturbation".
How can you tell what the truth is when you don't know how to analyze the facts first ? And how do you analyze them .... by thinking, by having an open mind, yes ... by doing a ... "mental masturbation" like you've so elegantly put it.

So ... my conclusion is that I am ok with your type of judgement, but it's never too late to enlarge your views a little.
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Keksimaton
Keksimaton


Promising
Supreme Hero
Talk to the hand
posted March 26, 2008 03:47 PM
Edited by Keksimaton at 15:48, 26 Mar 2008.

1.  Ayn Rand   (100%)  
2.  Kant   (89%)  
3.  Stoics   (83%)  
4.  Spinoza   (82%)  
5.  Nietzsche   (80%)  
6.  Plato   (70%)  
7.  Jean-Paul Sartre   (67%)  
8.  John Stuart Mill   (67%)  
9.  St. Augustine   (62%)  
10.  David Hume   (61%)  
11.  Aquinas   (61%)  
12.  Aristotle   (61%)  
13.  Jeremy Bentham   (60%)  
14.  Epicureans   (54%)  
15.  Cynics   (43%)  
16.  Prescriptivism   (41%)  
17.  Thomas Hobbes   (41%)  
18.  Ockham   (18%)  
19.  Nel Noddings   (12%)

Sorry, can't think of anything to comment about the results or the discussion.
____________
Noone shall pass, but no one besides him shall pass.

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TitaniumAlloy
TitaniumAlloy


Honorable
Legendary Hero
Professional
posted March 28, 2008 08:43 AM

Quote:
Discussion of philosophy takes you further from the truth, not closer. It's nothing but mental masturbation that's just another layer of armor to keep people from looking at themselves. The truth you see in the mirror is always the hardest truth to accept. Intellect and thought are a means of avoiding that truth.


While this statement certainly sounds cool and, apparently without irony, philosophical, I doubt it holds much weight...

Philosophy and intellect, and certainly thought itself, do not necessarily have anything to do with "looking at yourself".

To know oneself you must not think?

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Azagal
Azagal


Honorable
Undefeatable Hero
Smooth Snake
posted March 28, 2008 11:13 AM

Quote:
The point of philosophy isn't to find a concrete answer.

If it were it would have been over a long time ago.

Well actually I think the point is finding a concrete answer. The thing is the answer is not concrete as "can be complied to every situation" but "can be aplied only to the situation at hand which is defined as xyz"? I mean philosophers have been looking for patterns/explanations since philosophy started and I think they've succeded in explaining/answering the patterns/the questions of their time. Of course not everything philosophers have found out is still valid today and vice versa (if that would be possibly). But depending on the situation you'll find that people have already thought about them and found answers (of course that doesn't mean that they have to work for you as I tried to explain).
____________
"All I can see is what's in front of me. And all I can do is keep moving forward" - The Heir Wielder of Names, Seeker of Thrones, King of Swords, Breaker of Infinities, Wheel Smashing Lord

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Lexxan
Lexxan


Honorable
Undefeatable Hero
Unimpressed by your logic
posted March 30, 2008 09:09 PM
Edited by Lexxan at 21:09, 30 Mar 2008.

Mine are:

1.  Jean-Paul Sartre   (100%)  
2.  Ayn Rand   (85%)  
3.  John Stuart Mill   (82%)  
4.  Kant   (80%)  
5.  Epicureans  (77%)  
6.  Jeremy Bentham  (69%)  
7.  Nietzsche   (67%)  
8.  David Hume   (66%)
9.  Cynics   (62%)  
10.  Thomas Hobbes   (60%)  
11.  Prescriptivism   (50%)  
12.  Aquinas   (50%)
13.  Stoics   (50%)
14.  St. Augustine   (47%)  
15.  Spinoza   (45%)  
16.  Plato   (43%)  
17.  Ockham   (39%)
18.  Aristotle   (38%)
19.  Nel Noddings   (13%)  

____________
Coincidence? I think not!!!!

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popular_feeds
popular_feeds


Adventuring Hero
posted June 13, 2008 06:48 AM

My (Unsurprising) Results:

1.  St. Augustine   (100%)
2.  Aquinas   (91%)
3.  Ockham   (73%)
4.  Plato   (69%)
5.  John Stuart Mill   (59%)
6.  Spinoza   (52%)
7.  Aristotle   (50%)
8.  Kant   (47%)
9.  Jeremy Bentham   (41%)
10. Prescriptivism   (38%)
11. Jean-Paul Sartre   (35%)
12. Nel Noddings   (35%)
13. Ayn Rand   (33%)
14. Epicureans   (24%)
15. David Hume   (22%)
16. Cynics   (14%)
17. Stoics   (14%)
18. Nietzsche   (6%)
19. Thomas Hobbes   (0%)
____________

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antipaladin
antipaladin


Promising
Legendary Hero
of Ooohs and Aaahs
posted June 14, 2008 12:32 AM


1. John Stuart Mill   (100%)  Information link
2. Epicureans   (96%)  Information link
3. Jeremy Bentham   (90%)  Information link
4. Aquinas   (87%)  Information link
5. Aristotle   (86%)  Information link
6. Kant   (80%)  Information link
7. Ayn Rand   (75%)  Information link
8. Spinoza   (68%)  Information link
9. Jean-Paul Sartre   (64%)  Information link
10. St. Augustine   (57%)  Information link
11. Ockham   (53%)  Information link
12. Nietzsche   (51%)  Information link
13. Stoics   (49%)  Information link
14. Cynics   (47%)  Information link
15. Prescriptivism   (40%)  Information link
16. David Hume   (36%)  Information link
17. Plato   (32%)  Information link
18. Thomas Hobbes   (26%)  Information link
19. Nel Noddings   (
____________
types in obscure english

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OmegaDestroyer
OmegaDestroyer

Hero of Order
Fox or Chicken?
posted June 14, 2008 01:43 AM

1.  Jean-Paul Sartre   (100%)  Information link
2.  Aquinas   (86%)  Information link
3.  Nel Noddings   (86%)  Information link
4.  John Stuart Mill   (85%)  Information link
5.  David Hume   (79%)  Information link
6.  Kant   (76%)  Information link
7.  Prescriptivism   (73%)  Information link
8.  Aristotle   (69%)  Information link
9.  Epicureans   (69%)  Information link
10.  Nietzsche   (69%)  Information link
11.  Spinoza   (60%)  Information link
12.  Jeremy Bentham   (58%)  Information link
13.  St. Augustine   (50%)  Information link
14.  Ockham   (49%)  Information link
15.  Thomas Hobbes   (46%)  Information link
16.  Ayn Rand   (45%)  Information link
17.  Stoics   (44%)  Information link
18.  Plato   (43%)  Information link
19.  Cynics   (5%)  Information link
____________
The giant has awakened
You drink my blood and drown
Wrath and raving I will not stop
You'll never take me down

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kookastar
kookastar


Honorable
Legendary Hero
posted June 14, 2008 02:14 AM

There's some interesting questions.

I got:

1.  Jean-Paul Sartre   (100%)  
2.  Nel Noddings   (93%)  
3.  Kant   (79%)  
4.  Nietzsche   (77%)  
5.  David Hume   (76%)  
6.  Cynics   (67%)  
7.  John Stuart Mill   (66%)  
8.  Spinoza   (66%)  
9.  Jeremy Bentham   (64%)  
10.  Stoics   (62%)  
11.  Thomas Hobbes   (61%)  
12.  Ayn Rand   (59%)  
13.  Epicureans   (59%)  
14.  Aquinas   (57%)  
15.  Prescriptivism   (54%)  
16.  St. Augustine   (54%)  
17.  Aristotle   (40%)  
18.  Plato   (32%)  
19.  Ockham   (30%)  


____________
uhuh

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mvassilev
mvassilev


Responsible
Undefeatable Hero
posted August 27, 2008 07:09 PM
Edited by mvassilev at 19:10, 27 Aug 2008.

Interesting, how my philosophy slowly changes. Ironic that Sartre, who is well-known for his left-wing thought, is at the top. And Thomas Hobbes, who favored authoritarianism, is second. Strange.

1.  Jean-Paul Sartre   (100%)  Information link
2.  Thomas Hobbes   (99%)  Information link
3.  Epicureans   (97%)  Information link
4.  Ayn Rand   (95%)  Information link
5.  John Stuart Mill   (92%)  Information link
6.  Nietzsche   (82%)  Information link
7.  Cynics   (78%)  Information link
8.  Jeremy Bentham   (77%)  Information link
9.  David Hume   (75%)  Information link
10.  Nel Noddings   (65%)  Information link
11.  Kant   (64%)  Information link
12.  Stoics   (61%)  Information link
13.  Aquinas   (53%)  Information link
14.  Spinoza   (52%)  Information link
15.  Aristotle   (45%)  Information link
16.  Prescriptivism   (42%)  Information link
17.  Plato   (32%)  Information link
18.  St. Augustine   (26%)  Information link
19.  Ockham   (21%)  Information link
____________
Eccentric Opinion

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JoonasTo
JoonasTo


Responsible
Undefeatable Hero
What if Elvin was female?
posted August 27, 2008 07:16 PM
Edited by JoonasTo at 19:17, 27 Aug 2008.

So maybe all those quote wars have been doing something good to you afterall.

But seriously. Left-authoritan means a society like Platon's utopia. Techically it's the best kind of society, at least imo.

At least you're starting to stray farther from Ayn-Rand, slowly but surely.
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DON'T BE A NOOB, JOIN A.D.V.E.N.T.U.R.E.

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TheDeath
TheDeath


Responsible
Undefeatable Hero
with serious business
posted August 27, 2008 07:20 PM

Quote:
So maybe all those quote wars have been doing something good to you afterall.
Indeed it seems.

Quote:
But seriously. Left-authoritan means a society like Platon's utopia. Techically it's the best kind of society, at least imo.
Left-authoritarian or Left-liberal?

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Asheera
Asheera


Honorable
Undefeatable Hero
Elite Assassin
posted August 27, 2008 07:23 PM

I don't know, this may be flawed, but...

Jean-Paul Sartre(100%)
Nietzsche       (96%)
David Hume      (90%)
Epicureans      (90%)
Thomas Hobbes   (84%)
Aristotle       (83%)
Aquinas         (80%)
Plato           (75%)
Spinoza         (74%)
John Stuart Mill(59%)
Ayn Rand        (57%)
Jeremy Bentham  (50%)
Nel Noddings    (50%)
Stoics          (49%)
St. Augustine   (48%)
Kant            (39%)
Cynics          (36%)
Ockham          (36%)
Prescriptivism  (24%)

____________

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TheDeath
TheDeath


Responsible
Undefeatable Hero
with serious business
posted August 27, 2008 07:25 PM

Quote:
Nietzsche       (96%)


for you Ash?

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Asheera
Asheera


Honorable
Undefeatable Hero
Elite Assassin
posted August 27, 2008 07:26 PM

Quote:
for you Ash?
What? I'm not against religion, like him, but I don't remember many questions about God or a higher power
____________

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JoonasTo
JoonasTo


Responsible
Undefeatable Hero
What if Elvin was female?
posted August 27, 2008 07:31 PM

Left-authoritan. Ever read the book death?

Lol, Ash! I've always known you hated women somewhere deep inside, ironic, but "all we do we do to have sex" ? That was new.
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DON'T BE A NOOB, JOIN A.D.V.E.N.T.U.R.E.

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Doomforge
Doomforge


Admirable
Undefeatable Hero
Retired Hero
posted August 27, 2008 07:31 PM

The God questions weren't of high significance here, so theism or atheism doesn't matter.

1. Jean-Paul Sartre   (100%)  Information link
2. Nietzsche   (88%)  Information link
3. Epicureans   (87%)  Information link
4. Spinoza   (84%)  Information link
5. Thomas Hobbes   (82%)  Information link
6. David Hume   (73%)  Information link
7. Kant   (69%)  Information link
8. Jeremy Bentham   (64%)  Information link
9. John Stuart Mill   (64%)  Information link
10. Stoics   (63%)  Information link
11. Nel Noddings   (60%)  Information link
12. Aristotle   (51%)  Information link
13. Cynics   (50%)  Information link
14. Prescriptivism   (48%)  Information link
15. Aquinas   (42%)  Information link
16. St. Augustine   (42%)  Information link
17. Plato   (36%)  Information link
18. Ockham   (35%)  Information link
19. Ayn Rand   (34%)  Information link

looks like I'm pretty similar to Ash

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