Anonymous wrote:I'd associate MIT and Chicago with especially intellectual student bodies. Maybe also Swarthmore and Carleton on the SLAC side.
Anonymous wrote:I'm most impressed with MIT. They don't do legacy. They don't do athletic recruits. They don't care if you're rich or famous. You'll notice that none of the offspring of the American elite go to MIT. They require test scores. They don't care much about race. They do strive to have gender balance, but that's a good thing. Anyone going to MIT has earned their spot. It's obviously a STEM school, but they have an outstanding creative writing department. Also great at economics.
As for a more humanities oriented school, that's a tough one. Humanities have been really decimated over the past thirty years. Lack of student interest and faculties that are lost in stupid ideological battles that no one outside academia cares about. Thirty years ago Yale was probably the place to go. But back then the Ivies were generally meritocracies. That's no longer the case. And Yale in particular is very heavy into the DEI stuff. You need to watch what you say at that school. I think these days, Chicago is probably the best for humanities majors.
Anonymous wrote:IQ is strong correlated with genetics for late teens and adults.
So legacy could be a factor along with high GPA, test scores, extracurriculars, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Who cares about genius level intelligence? It’s what you do with your life that matters. A lot of non-geniuses make a lot of money and are happier. Studies show over and over that EQ is a bigger driver of workplace success than IQ is. Lawyers, bankers, consulting, venture capital, private equity, lobbyists, any sort of management role, are all driven much more by soft skills, not raw intellect. So unless you want to write code all day, almost everyone else is better off being more generalized in their pursuits. Humans’ only sustained advantage over machines is our ability to make intuitive connections across disciplines.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
MIT and CalTech
What is the liberal arts equivalent? Chicago?
Anonymous wrote:
“It is more interesting what they do after college.”
U of Delaware, followed by Syracuse Law.
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