You have played your allowed number of guest games. Please create a free account to continue playing
unlimited games, save your scores, and track your learning.
You have displayed all the skill of an overworked student!
Cast a Spell
Use a magic spell to help you on your quest!
You have 3 spells left for today.
Scryer's Sight
Eliminate incorrect choices.
Temporal Twist
Add 15 seconds to the timer.
Oracle's Hint
Receive a small hint.
About This Challenge
In “The Nature of Love” game, players will explore the concept of love through a timeline game where they place events in their correct chronological order.
Players will learn about different historical events and cultural practices related to love.
They will test their knowledge and understanding of the evolution of love over time.
Need a Hint? View the Facts
385-370 BCE: Plato's Symposium is written, discussing different forms of love
4th century BCE: Aristotle writes about the different types of love in his works
397-398 CE: St. Augustine writes about the nature of love in his Confessions
13th century: Medieval philosophers like Thomas Aquinas discuss the nature of love as a theological virtue
15th century: Renaissance philosophers like Marsilio Ficino write about love as a driving force in human life
18th century: Jean-Jacques Rousseau writes about the nature of love in his works
late 18th century: Immanuel Kant discusses the nature of love in his works on ethics
19th century: Arthur Schopenhauer writes about love as a fundamental human desire
19th century: Friedrich Nietzsche critiques traditional notions of love in his works
late 19th-early 20th century: Sigmund Freud explores the psychology of love in his theories
20th century: Martin Heidegger discusses love as a mode of being in his existential philosophy
20th century: Simone de Beauvoir writes about love and freedom in her feminist philosophy
20th century: Jean-Paul Sartre explores the nature of love in his existentialist works
20th century: Maurice Merleau-Ponty writes about love as a bodily experience in his phenomenology
20th century: Gabriel Marcel discusses love as a transcendent experience in his philosophy
20th century: Emmanuel Levinas writes about love and ethics in his works
20th century: Judith Butler critiques traditional ideas of love and gender in her feminist philosophy
20th century: Alain Badiou explores love as an event in his philosophy
20th century: Martha Nussbaum discusses love as a virtue in her ethics
20th-21st century: Slavoj Žižek critiques contemporary ideas of love in his works