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Heh. I just realized that, in a way, I'm embarrassed to be reading all this stuff about architecture and engineering because it feels, in comparison to stuff on social theory and urban policy, like 'fluff.' Shouldn't I be reading things that help me make a difference instead of just satisfying my own curiosity?
I dunno. How does one exist as a part of this broken society at this point? Why is life so complicated?
I dunno. How does one exist as a part of this broken society at this point? Why is life so complicated?
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The far right hates people with knowledge!
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But I agree with
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"I feel like humanties are much less concrete (no pun intended) and require a lot more creativity than practical (as opposed to theoretical) STEM stuff. Even more importantly, an understanding, or lack thereof, of humanities concepts fundamentally shapes the application of STEM skills in ways that quite readily fuck us all over.
A lack of understanding of politics and related humanities concepts and how our perception of the world is shaped by those who have that understanding harms and kills millions of people every day all over the world.
(I want to add that practical STEM endeavors can absolutely *benefit* from creativity, but I do not believe they require it.)"
If people see social sciences as fluff (and I realize a lot of them do), they are completely failing to understand their nature.
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When I was little, I wanted to be a scientist. To me, that meant someone like the characters in Real Genius or people like Nikola Tesla. As I went through undergrad and into grad school, I realized that I could be a scientist after all; just of a different kind. (Of course, that didn't work out for me either...)
I feel that degree of softness in this sense correlates strongly to applicability of qualitative methods. Humanities requires a lot of quantitative work, but must be combined with qualitative work. I think a lot of people don't think about or know much about the rigor , value, and necessity of qualitative research, while at the same time not realizing how much quantitative work is involved in the humanities, and devalue it in comparison to 'hard' stuff. It's a shame.
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I worked hard at learning as much about science as I could when I was a child. It wasn't until I started college, and declared my major as physics, that I discovered that I was incapable of learning calculus, or any of the other advanced forms of mathematics that would be required for heavy-duty science. My brain just isn't wired for it. I'm a good technician, and I might have done okay as an engineer, but I was not scientist material at all.
I wound up with a BA in English, plus a lot of experience at the college radio station, which brought out my abilities as a technician (my father had taught me the basic mind-set). But there's precious little quantitative work involved in comparing the poetry of Emily Dickinson with that of Walt Whitman.