<p>hi folks!
I am having a hard time deciding between bio and physics. I hate experimental physics, and theoretical biology and love theoretical physics and experimental biology.lol its driving me crazy...:(
any advice would be much appreciated.</p>
<p>Major in math that way you don’t have to make that choice. Then do a specialization in both.</p>
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<p>Sounds like one of the greatest physicists: Werner Heisenberg, best known for everyone is “uncertainty principles”. He hates experiments, but a very bright theoretical phycisist. Behind his discovery, it was Bohr (Heisenberg worked for Bohr) helped him to discover a minor mistakes in his experiment. Heisenberg found the matrix mechanics (what we use in quantum mechanics today)</p>
<p>Biology and physics? Looks awkward to put them together. But I know you can do biophysics and yeah that’s pretty cool too.</p>
<p>I don’t know what year you are in, but I am sorry to inform you that, YOU HAVE TO DO BOTH EXPERIMENTAL AND THEORETICAL IN SCHOOL.</p>
<p>You don’t have to be great in both areas, but you are required to do them both.</p>
<p>Part of Heisenberg’s PhD study is experimental, and he was about to fail because he didn’t do it. The primary mentor of Heisenberg, Arnold Sommerfield passed him, however, despite Sommerfield’s experimental colleagues refused.</p>
<p>Like jwxie said, try looking into biophysics maybe you’ll find something you like.</p>
<p>here is a sample of a biophysics curriculum
<a href=“Home :: Andrews University”>Home :: Andrews University;
<p>Always major in math :-)</p>