| >>Would participation in athletics or math competitions fulfill your requirements for early hard work and adversity? Yes, but in School and a little higher- math is about learning heuristics and ready made procedures to solve problems in algebra and plugging numbers in formulas to get answers. And that is one of the biggest reasons why Nerds go onto to do things like projects to bail from the what is largely a useless academic exercise that gives you nothing real at the end. Sports has a binary distribution, you either make the big league money or you don't. >>I'm just saying that it shouldn't be a given that engineers who got into the field late are automatically less able. They won't be treated as such. They will be evaluated on the same grounds as the long slog people. And that is precisely the problem. Somethings come only with time. >>Entering a field at the age of 18 or 20 isn't actually late. Its isn't late in absolute terms. But everything in the world is comparative. The world is essentially a stack ranking system. You can do anything at any age you want. But there are costs associated with starting late, and they are in comparison with people who are long there. |