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by anamax
5313 days ago
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> I think the key there is the plural. I don't think that that's the intent of the claim, but I'll play along. > It's not that individual liberal arts majors are more well rounded, it's that having a well-rounded collective of citizens is important. But, how much do liberal arts majors contribute to said "well-rounded collective" and at what cost? For example, it might be more cost-effective to add a bit more "rounded" to STEM majors. And, that's ignoring the benefit of having this "rounded" within individuals instead of across groups. |
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> But, how much do liberal arts majors contribute to said "well-rounded collective" and at what cost?
Are you asking how they contribute to well-roundedness, or are you asking to value their individual contributions to society while ignoring contributions to well-roundedness as a valuable asset? How they contribute to well-roundedness is handled with the whole Subset A vs Subset B thing, I think. In regards to value -- I'm pretty sure that Hunter Thompson guy was good to have around. I dunno.
As to the cost: I guess that depends on whether you view liberal arts majors as a detriment to society, or at least intrinsically inferior to STEM majors. If they're equal then they're no additional cost, because their education costs exactly the same dollar amount.
> And, that's ignoring the benefit of having this "rounded" within individuals instead of across groups.
Certainly well-rounded individuals are important. But unless everyone is forced to be dual-degree, there will inevitably end up being biases towards the main major -- and I say this as a well-rounded STEM grad.
And doesn't requiring the well-roundedness to be at the individual level ignore the benefit of having some number of single-focus specialists within a society? It's not like Salman Rushdie spends his spare time proving P=NP, or Dijkstra's out writing papers on critical race theory.