Suraj
Member
Hi there - I'm Suraj. I made this account a while back after stalking the forums for a while, but haven't posted very much since. I've been mulling over some tough college choices lately and figured maybe one of you INTPs have sufficient enough experience to lend me some advice.
I'm currently in my third year at an undergraduate college. I attend a research university (UCSB, if any of you know of it) and I really need to get a move on with choosing my majors.
For the last year or so I've been more or less set on a double-major in economics and psychology, but lately I've become very disinterested in our economics department. I'm very much interested in pure theory, but the emphasis here (and probably at many other schools as well) is placed on problem-solving - and while I'm by no means bad at math, it's neither my inclination nor something I want to spend too much time on. I'm still as into psychology as I've always been, and that's probably going to be my main focus.
I suspect philosophy is more or less responsible for my current apathy toward the economics major. I'm in my fourth or fifth philosophy class right now (free will/determinism) and I can't get enough of it - philosophy has always been one of my favorite subjects, and my brain seems decently built for it (I'm always looking for the demonstration of abstract philosophical themes in real life, as most of you probably do as well - otherwise things get boring quickly). It's a field I'm naturally drawn toward to the point where I frequent the library to read/study philosophy for the fun of it - to learn about and understand it as much as possible is an end I find good-in-itself. Existentialist thought in particular appeals to me - I've studied it independently for some years now.
Long story short - my intellectual interest is directed toward understanding the human condition: psychology studies the mind, economics studies how rational people make decisions/interact with each other, and philosophy attempts to answer a number of questions central to human existence. However, my focus seems to be understanding the self, and economics doesn't offer me half as much in this regard as the other two majors do.
So I'm thinking about double-majoring in psychology and philosophy. This new plan would give me sky-high intellectual enjoyment but also sacrifices a lot of real-world applicability by trading off economics (though for the record, none of the problem-solving seems very helpful outside of the classroom/academia - but many employers favor the major nonetheless).
My question to you INTPs is this: If I go with philosophy/psychology intending to somehow apply them beyond undergrad, am I essentially limiting myself to the professor/scholar's route?
I'm currently in my third year at an undergraduate college. I attend a research university (UCSB, if any of you know of it) and I really need to get a move on with choosing my majors.
For the last year or so I've been more or less set on a double-major in economics and psychology, but lately I've become very disinterested in our economics department. I'm very much interested in pure theory, but the emphasis here (and probably at many other schools as well) is placed on problem-solving - and while I'm by no means bad at math, it's neither my inclination nor something I want to spend too much time on. I'm still as into psychology as I've always been, and that's probably going to be my main focus.
I suspect philosophy is more or less responsible for my current apathy toward the economics major. I'm in my fourth or fifth philosophy class right now (free will/determinism) and I can't get enough of it - philosophy has always been one of my favorite subjects, and my brain seems decently built for it (I'm always looking for the demonstration of abstract philosophical themes in real life, as most of you probably do as well - otherwise things get boring quickly). It's a field I'm naturally drawn toward to the point where I frequent the library to read/study philosophy for the fun of it - to learn about and understand it as much as possible is an end I find good-in-itself. Existentialist thought in particular appeals to me - I've studied it independently for some years now.
Long story short - my intellectual interest is directed toward understanding the human condition: psychology studies the mind, economics studies how rational people make decisions/interact with each other, and philosophy attempts to answer a number of questions central to human existence. However, my focus seems to be understanding the self, and economics doesn't offer me half as much in this regard as the other two majors do.
So I'm thinking about double-majoring in psychology and philosophy. This new plan would give me sky-high intellectual enjoyment but also sacrifices a lot of real-world applicability by trading off economics (though for the record, none of the problem-solving seems very helpful outside of the classroom/academia - but many employers favor the major nonetheless).
My question to you INTPs is this: If I go with philosophy/psychology intending to somehow apply them beyond undergrad, am I essentially limiting myself to the professor/scholar's route?