Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Semiotics. Physics and philosophy are the hardest majors - applied math major here.
Applied math is the exact opposite of sophisticated. Smart but not sophisticated.
I did not find philosophy or literature to be hard subject matters. Reading and analysis. Physics, on the other hand = very challenging. And for me personally, not very interesting. What does "sophisticated" mean? Well read? Is this a troll post?
Exactly my question. Is sophisticated even a thing anymore?
Anonymous wrote:Classics makes you seem like a bookish oddball nowadays
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Semiotics. Physics and philosophy are the hardest majors - applied math major here.
Applied math is the exact opposite of sophisticated. Smart but not sophisticated.
I did not find philosophy or literature to be hard subject matters. Reading and analysis. Physics, on the other hand = very challenging. And for me personally, not very interesting. What does "sophisticated" mean? Well read? Is this a troll post?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Art History
No. This screams trust fund
Well, that is the point.
Trust fund babies are sophisticated??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Economics.
I disagree with the other posters on philosophy and art history. I hear someone studied philosophy and think that's dumb. They must not have a future life/career plan and so are unsophisticated. I've read the major philosophers too and have a law degree. I'm just not impressed with "common knowledge of sophisticated people" majors, like philosophy and art history. Smart people have a foundation in those areas regardless of study/major.
LMAO
Is a future career plan the best way to examine your Being and Time? Are you sure you are actualizing Dasein? Hhmmm
Anonymous wrote:Physics. DH has degrees in physics/EE and my DC in physics/finance and I've noticed that people only care about the physics degree even though it was the other degrees that made them employable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Economics.
I disagree with the other posters on philosophy and art history. I hear someone studied philosophy and think that's dumb. They must not have a future life/career plan and so are unsophisticated. I've read the major philosophers too and have a law degree. I'm just not impressed with "common knowledge of sophisticated people" majors, like philosophy and art history. Smart people have a foundation in those areas regardless of study/major.
LMAO
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Art History
No. This screams trust fund
Well, that is the point.
Trust fund babies are sophisticated??
Anonymous wrote:Economics.
I disagree with the other posters on philosophy and art history. I hear someone studied philosophy and think that's dumb. They must not have a future life/career plan and so are unsophisticated. I've read the major philosophers too and have a law degree. I'm just not impressed with "common knowledge of sophisticated people" majors, like philosophy and art history. Smart people have a foundation in those areas regardless of study/major.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Economics.
I disagree with the other posters on philosophy and art history. I hear someone studied philosophy and think that's dumb. They must not have a future life/career plan and so are unsophisticated. I've read the major philosophers too and have a law degree. I'm just not impressed with "common knowledge of sophisticated people" majors, like philosophy and art history. Smart people have a foundation in those areas regardless of study/major.
+100 Economics
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Art History
No. This screams trust fund
Well, that is the point.