BoberFett
Lifer
- Oct 9, 1999
- 37,562
- 9
- 81
But, tell me oh wise one, what is this level of excessive wealth?
To a bleeding heart, excessive wealth is always anything more than what they have.
But, tell me oh wise one, what is this level of excessive wealth?
To a bleeding heart, excessive wealth is always anything more than what they have.
Maybe I am misunderstanding your statement, but saying that the core curriculum of an engineering major, for example, is similar to the core curriculum of a philosophy major, for example, is a bit of a stretch.
To a bleeding heart, excessive wealth is always anything more than what they have.
Actually I can speak from experience, and the answer is yes. I spent 4 years as an electrical engineering program before illness forced me out of school for two years. I decided to totally change career paths, and finished a BA in Psychology. Working on a MS in Counseling now.
The first two years of college, regardless of your major, are remarkably similar. Most schools emphasize a "liberal arts" background before you begin specialization. For engineering, I did take a few more math/science classes than someone in say philosophy, but the net total was that I took 2-3 more math and science classes in total (and 2-3 less liberal arts). During my engineering coursework I also completed courses in psychology, philosophy, art, criminology, history, and writing. As a psychology major I completed courses in biology, humanities, and art (keep in mind a lot of stuff transferred, I didn't need to redo all the math/science).
Once you enter your junior and senior years the coursework obviously diverges significantly. I suppose basic coursework would have been a better term than core curriculum, but I tend to think of the core as the foundation from which your specialized knowledge is built.
Where in G-d's name did you take electrical engineering? I had maybe six electives in four years, never more than one per semester, and in 18 to 22 hours everything else was mandatory science, math and engineering. In a typical semester I would have five engineering core courses or five engineering core courses and one elective, and even then I had to make decisions as to which of two electrical engineering courses to take. And that's at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, which is not exactly MIT. Philosophy, liberal arts and sociology majors (to name a few) to no science other than perhaps biology and chemistry, no physics or higher math at all.
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Besides, everyone talks hate on bankers and shit and yet they all devote 5%+ company match into their 401k's and roth IRA's. Who do you think manages all that? Janitors?
OP, whats the secret to quitting the cigarettes? I tried Pming you.
"Ausm has chosen not to receive private messages or may not be allowed to receive private messages. Therefore you may not send your message to him/her."
Where in G-d's name did you take electrical engineering? I had maybe six electives in four years, never more than one per semester, and in 18 to 22 hours everything else was mandatory science, math and engineering. In a typical semester I would have five engineering core courses or five engineering core courses and one elective, and even then I had to make decisions as to which of two electrical engineering courses to take. And that's at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, which is not exactly MIT. Philosophy, liberal arts and sociology majors (to name a few) to no science other than perhaps biology and chemistry, no physics or higher math at all.
put it in an index fund. Go to sleep.
So I guess an 8th grader.
I'm an engineering major and we are required to learn communications. So far I've already taken classes on technical writing and report writing. Next semester I take a class about giving presentations and public speaking.This is off topic but I do value the place of liberal arts in our society. I simply think that there are too many people choose them just because they want to get a degree in something easy. Make education comprehensive. Force students (maybe in HS) to take at least calc1 before they graduate. Force engineering majors to learn how to write and communicate better, etc.
It's because nothing happens when you screw people over. Nobody goes to jail, or if they do, it's not for a long period of time. Maybe people would think twice if the punishment for hardcore fraud was a minimum of 30 years in jail with no chance for parole.Getting back on topic. I wonder if some of the bankers who participated in the crisis thought "oh wait, maybe this will screw ordinary people over" or they're only acting upon the premise that this will benefit their bottom line. I can't bring myself to do something immoral to screw someone over for my own benefit, but I do know that a lot of people wouldn't think twice. Maybe it's a breakdown in morality that causes all these problems.
OP, whats the secret to quitting the cigarettes? I tried Pming you.
"Ausm has chosen not to receive private messages or may not be allowed to receive private messages. Therefore you may not send your message to him/her."
put it in an index fund. Go to sleep.
So I guess an 8th grader.
Actually I can speak from experience, and the answer is yes. I spent 4 years as an electrical engineering program before illness forced me out of school for two years. I decided to totally change career paths, and finished a BA in Psychology. Working on a MS in Counseling now.
The first two years of college, regardless of your major, are remarkably similar. Most schools emphasize a "liberal arts" background before you begin specialization. For engineering, I did take a few more math/science classes than someone in say philosophy, but the net total was that I took 2-3 more math and science classes in total (and 2-3 less liberal arts). During my engineering coursework I also completed courses in psychology, philosophy, art, criminology, history, and writing. As a psychology major I completed courses in biology, humanities, and art (keep in mind a lot of stuff transferred, I didn't need to redo all the math/science).
Once you enter your junior and senior years the coursework obviously diverges significantly. I suppose basic coursework would have been a better term than core curriculum, but I tend to think of the core as the foundation from which your specialized knowledge is built.
*Edit* At the end of the day, it matters what you do with your degree and the knowledge you gained in college. The actual major points you in a direction, but I don't think it rules out doing something totally unrelated.
Where in G-d's name did you take electrical engineering? I had maybe six electives in four years, never more than one per semester, and in 18 to 22 hours everything else was mandatory science, math and engineering. In a typical semester I would have five engineering core courses or five engineering core courses and one elective, and even then I had to make decisions as to which of two electrical engineering courses to take. And that's at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, which is not exactly MIT. Philosophy, liberal arts and sociology majors (to name a few) to no science other than perhaps biology and chemistry, no physics or higher math at all.
To a bleeding heart, excessive wealth is always anything more than what they have.
It's subjective but I'd be happy if these bankers & CEOs who get most of their pay via long options a thus taxed @ 15% were taxed as much as you or any other working stiff.
To answer a few questions:
I went to the Rochester Institute of Technology. I believe I was required to take six courses in liberal arts, my foreign language requirement was waved. From what I remember, I did Calc I-IV, Engineering Math, Diff EQ, Complex Variables. On the science side I did Physics I-III, Chemistry, and a shitload of engineering stuff. Sadly I remember basically none of it. Obviously programs will differ somewhat.
I was about a year from finishing my degree when I got sick. Honestly, I don't really miss it. I suppose I would make more money, but I didn't like engineering. I worked some co-ops and after I got sick decided it wasn't for me. As I said earlier, what matters is what you do with your degree. There is nothing wrong with earning a degree in sociology, provided you can apply the knowledge you gained. My undergrad is in Psychology, which isn't to useful on its own. However, I did well enough to earn a $60,000 scholarship to earn a free Master's and I currently get paid pretty well (around 20 an hour). The engineering school at my graduate university hires a counseling student to work in the engineering building (since engineering students are special people. I'm debating applying for it, since I've got a bit of experience on what its like.
As for the study I mentioned, here is the story link. Not sure where it was actually published:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/psychotherapycanboosthappinessmorethanmoneystudy
Frankly, it's not surprising to me. I'm not sure the ratio is accurate, but I'd venture solid mental health is worth a great deal more in terms of happiness than simply having more money.