| Image | Voter | Winner | Loser | Reason |
|---|
 | Claude Shannon | Galileo Galilei | Pythagoras | Galileo's experimental approach and telescope inventions laid the foundation for modern science, dude. |
 | Larry Page | Benjamin Franklin | Pythagoras | Benjamin Franklin's practical inventions and diplomatic skills had a direct and lasting impact on modern society. |
 | Antoine Lavoisier | Isaac Newton | Pythagoras | Newton revolutionized physics with his laws of motion and universal gravitation, giving us a clearer understanding of the universe's mechanics. |
 | Pliny the Elder | Blaise Pascal | Pythagoras | Pascal rocks with his crazy breadth—from math to philosophy to inventions like the calculator, he was a Renaissance man before it was cool. |
 | Professor Farnsworth | Aristotle | Pythagoras | Good news, everyone! Aristotle's comprehensive contributions to philosophy and science make him the more influential thinker overall. |
 | George Washington Carver | Isaac Newton | Pythagoras | Isaac Newton's groundbreaking laws of motion and universal gravitation revolutionized science, much like how my love for peanuts transformed agriculture, so I've gotta give him the edge. |
 | Belle | Pythagoras | Benjamin Franklin | Pythagoras laid down the math foundations with triangles, and I'm all about that nerd life with numbers! |
 | Grace Hopper | Isaac Newton | Pythagoras | With all due respect to Pythagoras and his triangles, Newton's laws of motion and universal gravitation laid the groundwork for the modern world. |
 | Charles Babbage | Hildegard of Bingen | Pythagoras | Hildegard of Bingen's diverse genius spanned music, medicine, and mysticism, offering a richer cultural tapestry than Pythagoras's mathematical focus. |
 | Richard P Feynman | Benjamin Franklin | Pythagoras | While both dudes were brilliant, Franklin's diverse contributions to science, politics, and society make him a more well-rounded genius. |
 | The Brain | Pythagoras | Thomas Jefferson | Without Pythagoras, we wouldn't have the foundational math that makes all this tech stuff possible, dude! |
 | Guglielmo Marconi | Pythagoras | Thomas Jefferson | I'm all about the waves and signals, so I'm picking Pythagoras 'cause his math laid the groundwork for everything from radio waves to quantum mechanics. |
 | Copernicus | Aristotle | Pythagoras | Aristotle's comprehensive work across multiple disciplines, including logic, ethics, and science, makes him a more versatile and influential thinker in the long run. |
 | Leonardo da Vinci | Galileo Galilei | Pythagoras | Galileo's telescopic discoveries and advocacy for the heliocentric model revolutionized our understanding of the cosmos, which aligns with my own spirit of scientific inquiry. |
 | Belle | Isaac Newton | Pythagoras | Newton's got the whole gravity and calculus thing going on, and that's just too monumental to beat. |
 | Copernicus | Blaise Pascal | Pythagoras | Pascal's a brainiac with his math chops and inventions like the calculator, while Pythagoras was mostly about triangles. |
 | Charles Darwin | Blaise Pascal | Pythagoras | Pascal's work laid the groundwork for probability theory and computing, fields that have reshaped modern science and daily life far beyond the reach of the Pythagorean theorem. |
 | Ada Lovelace | Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz | Pythagoras | Leibniz not only laid the groundwork for calculus but also foresaw the digital age with his binary system, making him a true visionary in my nerdy book! |
 | Cicero | Benjamin Franklin | Pythagoras | Franklin's got that mad multi-talented hustle, from founding a country to flying kites with electricity, while Pythagoras is pretty much just the triangle dude. |
 | Carl Sagan | Pythagoras | Benjamin Franklin | In the grand cosmic dance, Pythagoras' mystical blend of mathematics and philosophy offered a profound understanding of the universe that still resonates through the ages. |