I don't know of any reputable ones, but found these two:
http://www.okcupid.com/tests/the-basic- ... ology-test
http://www.proprofs.com/quiz-school/sto ... gy-and-you
Interested in having a go and letting me know what you got?
For the first, I got The Hegelian, which states:
"You have, in general, an excellent understanding of how nature and society work, except that you then stick God (in some form) on top of it. You place ideas first in importance, yet, in spite of that, you seek to understand the laws the govern development and change. You probably believe in evolution, yet see a creator as behind it all. Your understanding of the world is an interesting mix of the insightful and the utterly bizarre. If you start beginning with matter, and see ideas (including the idea of God) as flowing from material conditions instead of the other way around, you will have a solid grounding in reality.
- You scored 42% on Materialism, higher than 28% of your peers.
- You scored 92% on Objectivity, higher than 97% of your peers.
- You scored 57% on Dialectics, higher than 70% of your peers."
I found it funny that it "subtly berated" me for having a belief in God.
![Happy :)](./images/smilies/smile.gif)
For the second, I got the Post-Positivist:
"Post-positivism is a wholesale rejection of the central tenets of positivism. A post-positivist might begin by recognizing that the way scientists think and work and the way we think in our everyday life are not distinctly different. Scientific reasoning and common sense reasoning are essentially the same process. There is no difference in kind between the two, only a difference in degree. Scientists, for example, follow specific procedures to assure that observations are verifiable, accurate and consistent. In everyday reasoning, we don't always proceed so carefully (although, if you think about it, when the stakes are high, even in everyday life we become much more cautious about measurement. Think of the way most responsible parents keep continuous watch over their infants, noticing details that non-parents would never detect).
One of the most common forms of post-positivism is a philosophy called critical realism. A critical realist believes that there is a reality independent of our thinking about it that science can study."