Brown v. UPenn - Diversity, Personality, etc

<p>As far as I know, there is no limit. There is only a natural limit because, say, if you're a PSCI major, you're not going to find any PSCI course that also meets the Life Sciences requirements. But you should be able to fulfill your PSCI requirement and hit up the "history" and "society" categories</p>

<p>Yeah, they have a bunch for society, and 1 for II (i forget the name). But i was asking to see how many a typical PSCI major will get to double count. I ask cuz i was thinking about a dual degree.</p>

<p>outside of history and society, the requirements are all science and mathy stuff...maybe you can find some class that has to do with quantitative aspects of polisci to count, but other than that, you'll be doing some stuff that is just for the core...unless of course your 2nd degree in the dual degree happens to be covering those sciency things!</p>

<p>It's not really much. you have to take a math course, a life sciences course (take psyc-001 it's fantastic AND useful), a physical sciences course, and then another one from the 3 catagories. That's 4-5 courses extra at Penn. You can do it and dual-degree. Clearly zillions of Penn dual-degree folk do, right?</p>