<p>“I said 2 senior courses.”</p>
<p>What courses? What courses?</p>
<p>“I said 2 senior courses.”</p>
<p>What courses? What courses?</p>
<p>Muscle, but what if you “super smart” math people get sued, which happens quite a bit, and there are no lawyers??? </p>
<p>And I know some people who can do complex math without breaking a sweat, but couldn’t write a half decent paper if they tried. Which they usually don’t because they just whine about how stupid it is. </p>
<p>Love a future Political Science with an International Relations concentraion and Spanish double major with dreams of law school. :P</p>
<p>And on a side note there are NO truly pointless majors because you can always end up teaching said “pointless” majors. lol</p>
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<p>1 was a 3rd year english course on early modern literature (only took it because the prof was awesome) and 1 was a 3rd year soc course on cultural studies.</p>
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<p>I don’t really consider Law a major… it’s a professional degree. And, to be honest, if I had a choice, I wouldn’t be majoring in engineering (or science, or any other boring ****). Social sciences and English are 100x more interesting, but they’re easy and fairly useless in comparison.</p>
<p>Speaking of boring ****, I need to burn my DVD of 2001: A Space Odyssey.</p>
<p>I couldn’t watch that movie… anyway, out for a run.</p>
<p>“People who major in math/science are intelligent. People who major in any of the liberal arts are semi-■■■■■■■■ and/or lazy. End thread.”</p>
<p>What about liberal art majors who find the subjects uninteresting?</p>
<p>Math and science are included in the liberal arts …</p>
<p>FeelingVoxish and some others don’t think so.</p>
<p><em>swings engineering dick . . . has no concept of or appreciation for the arts</em></p>
<p>lol not even that . . . i bet the OP is a premed braggin about how hard BIO 100 is</p>
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<p>wow, that’s too bad. mathematics and physics are fine intellectual pursuits.</p>
<p>Physical Therapy majors at actual universities are a joke. That’s a major that you can get at a community college, and it would save you a crap load of money if they went there instead of a private college. </p>
<p>I think a lot of majors that are really meant for grad school are slacker majors. Business is the best example of this. Pre-med isn’t a slacker major, but it’s still a little dumb. People who plan on going to grad school should study what they love, or at least look into broader subjects within their interest area. Pre-meds should really be bio or chem majors. Business students would be much better off studying english or psychology, or even a science like engineering. Law students should try international relations or history (like my dad did.) Obviously there are a few exceptions depending on what you want to go in to, but for the most part undergraduate education should not just be training for what you’re going to learn in grad school.</p>
<p>“. . . has no concept of or appreciation for the arts*”</p>
<p>WOW.</p>
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<p>Explain to me, then, how people get to English 101 without knowing how to write a decent thesis statement.</p>
<p>Anyways. To answer the OP: Wine Business. Yes, it’s a real major at my school.</p>
<p>I am proud to sea Philosophy hasn’t been mentioned once in this entire thread. I’m ashamed to say I wasted 10 minutes reading this worthless thread to confirm that, when a simple search would have sufficed.</p>
<p>“I wasted 10 minutes reading this worthless thread to confirm that, when a simple search would have sufficed.”</p>
<p>HAHA.</p>
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<p>I don’t really see the value in a general business degree. It seems like skills like management, planning, etc. aren’t something you can learn in a class. If you are in the business school and aren’t studying something specialized like accounting or finance, then you may as well study something interesting during your time in college.</p>
<p>Argh, I was going to guess Econ when I saw I was right with math, but then I kept reading.</p>
<p>Yeah I think those majoring in buisness should seriously look into economics and another major/ minor ( like international relations/ studies). Though I wouldn’t say buisness major isn’t serious, since I think it is.</p>
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<p>I don’t hold it in much regard, but maybe that is because I am misinformed. Business (but non-accounting and non-finance) majors chime in: what do you learn in your business classes that you couldn’t learn by working in an office for 4 years?</p>
<p>I just want to say that the people who think writing is easy are the people who can’t write worth a damn. These are the same people who read great works of literature and think, “Hey, I could do that, doesn’t look so hard. Stringing words together on a piece of paper to form a coherent plot with relatable characters and decent pacing; why, it’s practically the same as talking!” These people are also disproportionately math/hard science majors. IF IT’S SO EASY LET’S SEE YOU WIN THE NATIONAL BOOK AWARD.</p>
<p>Yeah, that’s right. You can’t.</p>