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by ThrowawayR2
2246 days ago
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They'd be better off hiring people with engineering degrees (non-software). That's applied critical thinking and creative problem solving all in one. I really don't know why there's this insistence that humanities has a monopoly on teaching critical thinking. |
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Someone that's good at critically analyzing software doesn't make them good at being able to understand why users might be drawn to a product. Nor does it make them able to design UI that won't frustrate the average user.
Humanities doesn't have a monopoly on critical thinking, but you'd be a fool to believe that it doesn't aid critical thinking. The best software engineers I've worked with were those that came from other professions whom could apply other ways of approaching a problem compared to others.
To put it bluntly, if you hire a bunch of engineers they will design a lightbulb that no one can figure out how to screw in.