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by stcredzero 2960 days ago
That's why PhDs are favored because with their experience having to write grants to get funding for their research they're exactly the type of people that can take a naive problem, work it to a result, and then sit in front of a board room of non-technical people and explain why their result was worth the money that was given to them.

My wife has a PhD in comparative lit, but she now works in banking. Her PhD gave her a superpower: Reading. She can quickly absorb large amounts of text with abstruse, complex, and subtle distinctions and tell you very nitpicky things about it. She thinks financial/banking regulations are light reading in comparison to the stuff she waded through to get her PhD. (It's also quite surprising: the number of C-level people in banking who have little patience for reading. She's won a number of boardroom battles because she has actually read things.)

1 comments

I think training in literary analysis is a secret superpower for life. It gives people tools to make reliable inferences from text about motivations, assumptions, biases, etc., and to spot attempts to use phrasing to hide or obscure things. Great for reading emails, contracts, reports, etc.--and for editing your own writing for clarity (or not, if that's what you're going for...).
> I think training in literary analysis is a secret superpower for life

what exactly do you mean by literary analysis here? i have (in my opinion) extremely good reading comprehension skills, in that i can read and understand the literal meaning of almost any text (provided i understand the context), and i got an 800 on the critical reading section of the SAT. on the other hand, i can't for the life of me read a book and pick out any of the major themes without having them spoon-fed to me. i was always terrified when i was expected to have my own opinion about a text to use as the topic for a paper.