- #1
zheng89120
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Is "Faith" required to have the best chance to be a physics professor?
Someone keeps telling me that that to be a physics professor, it is much better to believe that you will be one for sure (100% certainty), than to believe there is some chance that you will not progress through the good schools to become one (hence spending time and energy on transferable skills such as taking economic and compsci courses).
I agree that one probably have a little better chance of moving through the good school schools by having "faith". I want to be a professor much more than a high school teacher, but it seems having "faith" could be deluding and cut off back-up opportunies, such as in investing and engineering.
We have speculated on these two viewpoints for a while, so I would like some real evidence/experience, ideally opinions from current lecturers or professors (on whether one need to have "faith" (100% certainty) to have a much better chance to be a professor than realizing the risk of shortfall and taking account of backup plans).
(to be more specific, I am considering the audience in question to be above-average physics undergrads in above-average schools)
Someone keeps telling me that that to be a physics professor, it is much better to believe that you will be one for sure (100% certainty), than to believe there is some chance that you will not progress through the good schools to become one (hence spending time and energy on transferable skills such as taking economic and compsci courses).
I agree that one probably have a little better chance of moving through the good school schools by having "faith". I want to be a professor much more than a high school teacher, but it seems having "faith" could be deluding and cut off back-up opportunies, such as in investing and engineering.
We have speculated on these two viewpoints for a while, so I would like some real evidence/experience, ideally opinions from current lecturers or professors (on whether one need to have "faith" (100% certainty) to have a much better chance to be a professor than realizing the risk of shortfall and taking account of backup plans).
(to be more specific, I am considering the audience in question to be above-average physics undergrads in above-average schools)
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