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Possible Majors

prplchknz

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 11, 2007
Messages
34,397
MBTI Type
yupp
Right now I'm a fiction major, but not sure if this is what I want, at the same time not sure if this is not what I want.

I've always enjoyed figuring out how things work, people mostly.

-Like why do they do what they do?
-How people think and why?
-If someone says I have this fear/addiction/I believe this, I want to know why.
-Is their a historical connection to how people think in general today?
-How important are genetics in making up a personality?
-I'm very curious about what makes people what they are
-I want to know about different cultures
-do animals have indivdual personalities? I believe they do, but I want proof.


I thought psychology, but surely their has to be more then just that I'd be interested in.
 

ThatsWhatHeSaid

Well-known member
Joined
May 11, 2007
Messages
7,263
MBTI Type
INTP
Enneagram
5w4
Right now I'm a fiction major, but not sure if this is what I want, at the same time not sure if this is not what I want.

I've always enjoyed figuring out how things work, people mostly.

-Like why do they do what they do?
-How people think and why?
-If someone says I have this fear/addiction/I believe this, I want to know why.
-Is their a historical connection to how people think in general today?
-How important are genetics in making up a personality?
-I'm very curious about what makes people what they are
-I want to know about different cultures
-do animals have indivdual personalities? I believe they do, but I want proof.


I thought psychology, but surely their has to be more then just that I'd be interested in.

Psychology, but maybe Animal Behavior/Primatology/Biology
 

nozflubber

DoubleplusUngoodNonperson
Joined
Mar 30, 2008
Messages
2,078
MBTI Type
Hype
A lot of people are under the impression that psych is about nothing but Freud and therapy. In actuality this is a small minority of what people do with their psych degrees. For example, there's an entire branch of cognitive psych that looks at how people make decisions, game theory, and so on, and that's just a subbranch of a branch.

Sounds to me like you would enjoy Social psych, maybe even sociology.
 

prplchknz

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 11, 2007
Messages
34,397
MBTI Type
yupp
I think my problem is, I have broad interests, but I tend to get bored at the same time. It's one month I'm really into one thing then the next I'm not then a few months later I'm once again interested in what I was the first month. I wish I could get a degree by changing majors every month.


but people have suggested social psych, sociology, and anthropology (specifically cultural) in real life. they've also suggested film (didn't fit), television, history, and creative writing.


I really don't know what I want to do with my life. I'm 21 and I feel pressured to make a decision.
 
S

Sniffles

Guest
Anthropology and sociology maybe some good choices. I'd say stick to topics related to social sciences and humanities - since they largely deal with human affairs.

Of course like you, I too have broad interests, and sadly the intellectual enviroment of the academic world is characterised more and more by specialisation. The days of the respected generalist(or "Renaisance man") is no longer so.

Of course, I don't wish to say that one should just accept this as some inevitable unalertable fact. I think more should be done to bring the Generalist aspect back to its respectful place. You need both generalists and specialists.

As the old saying goes, "A jack of all trades is often better than a master of one."
 
Joined
May 27, 2008
Messages
1,026
MBTI Type
ENTP
I have the same problem as you... at least very similar... my first love was literature, because it deals with so many issues... what Peguy said is largely true... but I feel like writers can still be Renaissance men when it comes to the breadth of their interests, aggregating all sorts of information into their narratives or whatever it is they're writing.

As others have said, psychology and social psychology are good... biology and, imo, neuroscience... sociology and anthropology... philosophy isn't bad either...

BUT... in the end... the scope of your questions ranges from questions of biology and psychology to questions of anthropology and philosophy. So...

I'd say focus very hard on one or two subjects... like your fiction major... or just take a deep breath and dive into one of the other majors you like... and try to learn as much as you can on the side... I'm a philosophy and linguistics double major, but I'm doing as much physics and mathematics as possible, taking a biology class next semester, and studying psychology on the side... one of the things about being a writer is that you have to mine your own material a lot of the time...
 

redacted

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 28, 2007
Messages
4,223
if there's a cognitive science major at your school, you should do that.

i'm not sure how many schools have it though...

(it's my major)
 

dnivera

New member
Joined
May 4, 2008
Messages
165
MBTI Type
ISTJ
Enneagram
6w5
Instinctual Variant
sp
I'm in a doctoral program in Anthropology right now. I'd recommend taking an introductory course in Anthro, particularly cultural or a 4-field survey course, for some broad ideas about why humans are the way we are. You don't even have to sign up formally for a course - you might want to audit (sit in on) a few lectures, with the instructor's permission, and find out if the course covers ideas you're interested in and is something you'd be interested in taking. The first few weeks of the semester are particularly good for shopping around for classes that pique your interest.

The college bookstore is also good for shopping around for majors/courses at the beginning of the semester. Walk through the aisles and look at the textbooks used in different-level courses for each major. Religious studies, Anthro, Sociology, Psychology, English, History of Science, any kind of Behavioral biology and anything with a humanistic bent in general seems applicable to you.
Check out the books...do they look like something you'd want to read on your own? Do any of them catch your eye? Of course, texts themselves may not be representative of a dynamic professor or may be actually really boring. But this will give you an idea of what kinds of ideas people are talking about in humanities/social science majors.
 

prplchknz

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 11, 2007
Messages
34,397
MBTI Type
yupp
I have decided for now that I'm going to stay in my current major, and maybe major in anthropology or pscych for grad school. Haven't decided totally.
 

Lisa73

New member
Joined
Jun 8, 2008
Messages
17
MBTI Type
INFP
Relax. You're 21. It might not seem like it, but you have lots of time.
I totally identify with your problem though. In college I loved taking a broad spectrum of humanities and social sciences classes, but I never wanted to major in any particular one. They all seemed too specialized. I loved psychology classes, but the idea of doing a psychology undergrad (much less graduate) degree never appealed to me. Psych programs nowadays have abandoned humanistic psychology and its variants, it seems like. They're all about measuring and quantifying people and doing experiments.
My regret at this point in my life is that I wish I'd taken a theater class in college. I have a full-blown love of theater now, and I wish more than anything I'd taken at least a theater appreciation class back in college. I didn't because I thought it was too scary, and I had untrue stereotypes and assumptions about theater people.
 

edcoaching

New member
Joined
Jun 30, 2008
Messages
752
MBTI Type
INFJ
Enneagram
7
Just know, too, that a ton of INFPs have so many things they could be interested in. And, most people switch careers a bunch of times anyway. All the things you're considering would be a great base. Finishing and thinking grad school is a great way to deal with uncertainty.
 
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