|
|
|
|
|
by kuang_eleven
1594 days ago
|
|
Interestingly, I think I am as close to an example of your last point as you are going to get. I was a Physics major, and nearly all of my classes were focused only on the strongly theoretical part of physics. When I then joined a research team in experimental cosmology, I did lament that I never got any real instruction on research methodology, relevant statistics, etc. It's surprisingly how little actual fundamental, theoretical Physics you need to know to do Physics! I'm not saying it's not important, the point of being a Physics major is not only to train you to be a researcher, but for the sake of the knowledge itself. It's very similar to CS in that regard; almost none of formal CS is useful when doing software engineering, and when it is useful, the skills are in knowing to recognize a problem and how to research it, just like Physics! |
|