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comment by nowaypablo
nowaypablo  ·  3734 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: Pubski: September 10, 2014

I'm kinda starting to love Physics, is that weird? My physics teacher is a portly little ball of Greek love and sunshine, and my class is burning through our textbook at twice our scheduled speed at the moment. It's fun, it changes perspective a little too. I might major in it, going into finance later on as a career, the demand is there certainly and a degree in physics is highly applicable.

The girl I'm with is becoming more of a girlfriend but I still don't want to call her that, even though she basically kinda really is and has been ummmm i should talk to her about that. She's got a great taste in art and she's encouraging me to hit up galleries and exhibitions instead of the other way around, where I have to drag my friends and watch them groan for hours like they're my toddlers. It's really nice being able to enjoy things with people who enjoy it too, the way you do.

Nice people are nice, and they make you feel nice, which is... neat. I guess that's what's in my life this week. Pubski is nice too, by the way.





am_Unition  ·  3733 days ago  ·  link  ·  

    I might major in it, going into finance later on as a career, the demand is there certainly and a degree in physics is highly applicable.

Not really sure how you're figuring these two overlap, shy of working somewhere bureaucratic like the NSF, and even then it usually takes decades of experience in the field to climb up to the ranks of scientific budgetary oversight.

Unless the climate of science has a drastic turnaround in the near future, you're better off going into finance/business, especially if you're solely motivated by earning power and/or job security. If you're pursuing knowledge, physics is about as "pure" as science gets (biased bachelor's degree of physics checking in here), but statistics say you can expect a lifetime of begging for scarce funding ahead.

I make 55k/year, which is a LOT in Texas, and I'm weighing the utility of obtaining a PhD. Mostly, I'm doing engineering work, including shittons of paperwork that I find myself having a hard time giving two shits about. Still, I have some very exciting tasks sprinkled in. But I don't want to live here anymore, and grad school is a surefire ticket out of the Bible belt. Can't figure out if I'm happy enough with my hobbies and life outside of work to consider settling down here or if I want to "contribute in the most meaningful way to the knowledge-base of mankind" and obtain a PhD. And everyone will tell you that a PhD physics degree is the ONLY physics degree that gets you a job... I just got lucky with getting my foot in the door during an internship.

Best of luck, I'll be around if you ever need to pick my brain.

_refugee_  ·  3733 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Just curious, do you have a master's or just a BA? In physics, would you skip the MA and move right on to the PhD? (as will a more careful review it looks like you probably don't have the MA)

am_Unition  ·  3733 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I just have a B.S.

Depends on the school, but more than likely I'll skip the master's and hop on the PhD track. Some schools route you through a master's, but most let you shoot for a PhD right away.