Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Econ is not a humanities major.
Econ is considered humanities at MIT for the purpose of fulfilling graduation requirements, although it's basically math.
Anonymous wrote:Econ is not a humanities major.
Anonymous wrote:I think the closest thing to humanities that MIT is known for is philosophy, but their philosophy program emphasizes logic, and ties in to computer science.
Anonymous wrote:What about women’s studies?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, economics at MIT is really quantitative economics. There's also Course 15 (Sloan management), not "humanities" but arguably a bit less intense than some other majors.
While undergrads at MIT have to take at least 8 HASS courses, there's not a lot of pure humanities majors. More commonly MIT students with deep interests in humanities might pursue 21E or 21S ("joint" degrees), or some of the interdisciplinary tracks in Course 21.
Check out the Concourse program for First Years. Or MIT's Burchard Scholars program (selective) for sophomores/juniors. There's plenty of fantastic humanities classes and programs at MIT, but at the core an MIT education is steeped in science, math and engineering.
Do MIT students with an interest in the humanities ever cross-enroll at Harvard, Tufts or Wellesley?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Econ is not a humanities major.
And so should close the thread.
The post said ‘or otherwise’. MIT also offers degrees in political science, philosophy, history
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Econ is not a humanities major.
And so should close the thread.
The post said ‘or otherwise’. MIT also offers degrees in political science, philosophy, history
Yes, but soooo many DCUM posts conflate “humanities” with “non-STEM”. Econ, PoliSci, Psych, Government/International Relations, Business, Finance, Accounting are all popular majors that are typically neither humanities nor STEM. Though you can get STEM-y versions. Quantitative Econ, FinTech, etc.
Humanities are typically arts, languages, philosophy.