Anonymous wrote:What do you do after earning a humanities degree from an Ivy League school? Simple…you either live off the income from your trust fund or become a very skilled barista at Starbucks before you break down and apply to law school.
Anonymous wrote:Daniela Amodei, president of Anthropic, was an English literature major.
So to answer your question (and to follow up on many other answers here): a humanities major can do ANYTHING
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Supervise stembots.
Nope, those are the jobs tech companies are slashing. "Managers" need to also be technical and will be expected to contribute, not just manage.
Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong recently declared there would no longer be "pure managers" at the company, while Block's Jack Dorsey and Snap's Evan Spiegel are pushing toward leaner, AI-powered teams where managers are expected to contribute directly
https://www.linkedin.com/news/story/pure-managers-are-increasingly-at-risk-in-the-age-of-ai-8818234/
Anonymous wrote:Daniela Amodei, president of Anthropic, was an English literature major.
So to answer your question (and to follow up on many other answers here): a humanities major can do ANYTHING
Anonymous wrote:Humanities teaches you to think and question and review material.
I now run my own business, it has helped me every day in making decisions.
Anonymous wrote:The people who graduated from an Ivy with a humanities degree were still in rarefied air. Now education and AI has opened fields to students with every background. It's tough to say that the medieval studies major from Yale will still be in demand in a few years.
Anonymous wrote:Supervise stembots.
Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong recently declared there would no longer be "pure managers" at the company, while Block's Jack Dorsey and Snap's Evan Spiegel are pushing toward leaner, AI-powered teams where managers are expected to contribute directly