Ethical Philosophy Selector Quiz
1. Stoics (100%)
2. Aristotle (98%)
3. Jean-Paul Sartre (94%)
4. Kant (93%)
5. Aquinas (92%)
6. Ayn Rand (88%)
7. Spinoza (86%)
8. John Stuart Mill (83%)
9. Jeremy Bentham (74%)
10. Nietzsche (65%)
11. Nel Noddings (65%)
12. Epicureans (61%)
13. Prescriptivism (61%)
14. David Hume (55%)
15. Plato (51%)
16. Thomas Hobbes (41%)
17. Ockham (37%)
18. St. Augustine (35%)
19. Cynics (20%)
I confess their "Question 10: (LIBERTY) Would it be ideal to maximize pleasure for all people even at the cost of liberty for some?" struck me as impossible.
I mean, taking someone's liberty would mean they were not experiencing maximum pleasure, yes? Thus it would, in fact, not be maximizing pleasure for all, now would it?
Unless, perhaps, the people who were loosing their liberty were doing so voluntarily because it meant they got to be the 24/7 Slaves of someone they adored.
In which case, it might kinda work. :-)
Anyway. Lots of random. :-)
I've spent most of today lounging (and being sleepy) and reading Going Postal. However, I need to do a quick review of Introduction to Thealogy before Monday night's Goddess Salon.
To do tomorrow:
- Finish my call-and-cast script for Tuesday.
(Yes, I'm scripting. I'm not too keen on leaving this up to spontenaity, in case I don't get any or start stumbling. ;-)
- Send a message to OPPG about the Around the Goddess co-ed ritual for Beltaine.
- Make peach frozen yoghurt. :-)
Off to hunt up my book.
- TTFN,
- Amazon. :-)
1. Stoics (100%)
2. Aristotle (98%)
3. Jean-Paul Sartre (94%)
4. Kant (93%)
5. Aquinas (92%)
6. Ayn Rand (88%)
7. Spinoza (86%)
8. John Stuart Mill (83%)
9. Jeremy Bentham (74%)
10. Nietzsche (65%)
11. Nel Noddings (65%)
12. Epicureans (61%)
13. Prescriptivism (61%)
14. David Hume (55%)
15. Plato (51%)
16. Thomas Hobbes (41%)
17. Ockham (37%)
18. St. Augustine (35%)
19. Cynics (20%)
I confess their "Question 10: (LIBERTY) Would it be ideal to maximize pleasure for all people even at the cost of liberty for some?" struck me as impossible.
I mean, taking someone's liberty would mean they were not experiencing maximum pleasure, yes? Thus it would, in fact, not be maximizing pleasure for all, now would it?
Unless, perhaps, the people who were loosing their liberty were doing so voluntarily because it meant they got to be the 24/7 Slaves of someone they adored.
In which case, it might kinda work. :-)
Anyway. Lots of random. :-)
I've spent most of today lounging (and being sleepy) and reading Going Postal. However, I need to do a quick review of Introduction to Thealogy before Monday night's Goddess Salon.
To do tomorrow:
- Finish my call-and-cast script for Tuesday.
(Yes, I'm scripting. I'm not too keen on leaving this up to spontenaity, in case I don't get any or start stumbling. ;-)
- Send a message to OPPG about the Around the Goddess co-ed ritual for Beltaine.
- Make peach frozen yoghurt. :-)
Off to hunt up my book.
- TTFN,
- Amazon. :-)
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