Brawndo said:
What are your views on the subject? Is a civil engineer more valuable to society than a philosophy major?
As a student of civil engineering in the final year of my degree... well, the objective position is pretty much
"Yes". The engineering profession as a whole is one which society is dependent on, and we'll always be needed; and the field being a profession, we're the only ones permitted to design and approve anything related to it. Engineers need to have a liscence, just as a medical doctor needs one. Civil engineering in particular is the field which focuses on the elements critical to the infrastructure of society: buildings, foundations, roads, environmental, and
running water.
While philosophy certainly is interesting, it doesn't have the same value (to society) as engineering; this isn't to imply that philosophy is useless, it's just not something which inherently benefits a society. Arts degrees in general all have this same issue, as are sciences which predominantly create knowledge instead of value (which I would guess applies to anthropology). Unfortuantely, they just don't create the same (monetary) value that harder sciences and engineering do. They aren't to be ignored, however. There's a reason (at least at my university) why engineering students are required to take a couple complimentary studies course in some more art-oriented fields --
we'd be boring otherwise. Of course, discussing the technical aspects of the field is interesting...
to us; but most people have no idea what the heck
"lateral-torsional buckling" means nor how significant it is.
In the end, I think it boils down to how much (monetary) value the degree creates. Academic studies, in both the arts and the sciences, aren't good at creating explicit value; they create knowledge (implcit value?). That knowledge can then be used to create more explicit value; but in current times (where money and profits are paramount), few are willing to invest the necessary funds needed to seek out knowledge which may not be useful.
---
Anyhow, I went into civil engineering because I have an interest in the field (more or less the logical conclusion of playing with Lego as a kid) moreso than the fact it will be a great aid for me starting my career after graduation; nor will I deny that high employability is a great perk. The other reason I'm studying it is the field's focus on problem solving; it's not purely academic, you have to make things work in the real world. Sometimes working around problems requires just as much lateral thinking as it does technical knowledge, and that makes it all the more fun to figure out; even in a field so rigorously dictated by mathematics, there is still some creativity (and practicality) required.
However, I wouldn't mind being able to study some of the arts if I could. Musical theory would be neat, history is surprisingly interesting, and even sociology is intriguing. However, I'm able to look into those at my leisure and enjoy them just the same. No idea what's the appeal behind financial studies (in terms of being interesting, not they're undeniable usefulness as a means to an end), but it could simply be different strokes for different folks.