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- From: ara@zurich.ai.mit.edu (Allan Adler)
- Newsgroups: sci.math,sci.physics
- Subject: Re: math and physics degrees
- Message-ID: <ARA.92Aug17212629@camelot.ai.mit.edu>
- Date: 18 Aug 92 02:26:29 GMT
- References: <1992Aug17.125911.7989@pellns.alleg.edu>
- <1992Aug17.191102.18697@galois.mit.edu>
- Sender: news@mintaka.lcs.mit.edu
- Organization: M.I.T. Artificial Intelligence Lab.
- Lines: 31
- In-Reply-To: jbaez@euclid.mit.edu's message of Mon, 17 Aug 92 19:11:02 GMT
-
- In article <1992Aug17.191102.18697@galois.mit.edu> jbaez@euclid.mit.edu (John C. Baez) writes:
-
- Doing a PhD *simultaneously* in math and physics sounds almost
- impossible to me. Maybe there are some places where it can be done, or
- maybe you have twice as much energy and time than other grad
- students. But I suggest that you get a PhD in one or the other, which
- needn't prevent you from taking courses in BOTH subjects, as I did.
-
-
- People do get PhD's in more than one subject. For example, I believe that
- Lila Chichilniski (an economist who is or was at COlumbia University)
- has a PhD in math and a PhD in economics. Also, my friend Jeffrey Katz
- who since I knew him as an undergraduate had a passion for certain statistical
- models of psychology, obtained a PhD in math and a PhD in psychology.
- I think his thesis is about 900 pages long...
-
- For a perhaps more celebrated example, Peter Galiston, author of the book
- How Experiments End (which I found quite informative), obtained a PhD
- in History of Science but in order to be certain of competence in the
- particle physics whose history he was studying he also obtained a
- PhD in physics.
-
- So I don't think you necessarily have to compromise your dreams of doing
- both mathematics and physics. On the other hand, as John Baez points out,
- majoring in math doesn't necessarily preclude learning physics, particularly
- if you make sure you take enough lab courses so that you understand that
- physics is not a branch of mathematics. Max Born was a mathematics major and
- then went into physics.
-
- Allan Adler
- ara@altdorf.ai.mit.edu
-