Oh dear..professor ganson wrote:As a professor of philosophy,
You said it!I suppose my courses are on a par with this videogame class.
Regards,
A. Physicist.
PS:


Small correction: outside Anglophonic countries, there is a distinction between continental (Europe) philosophy and analytical philosophy. The former is what Professor Ganson describes in regard to France and Germany, the other is the Anglophonic model.professor ganson wrote: Philosophy as it's practiced in Germany and France is very different, very literary, but here in the US and in Britain philosophy is all about very rigorous argumentation.
Very nice. But this only serves to recommend the videogame class, since my courses are much loved.Eps wrote:Oh dear..professor ganson wrote:As a professor of philosophy,You said it!I suppose my courses are on a par with this videogame class.
Regards,
A. Physicist.
PS:![]()
That's crazy talk - nobody would sign up for a JAMMA-building course! I mean, you might learn something!!Blade wrote:Actually I would LOVE to take a class on how to build Jamma and other hardware.
Couldn't disagree more. I'm actually wondering if there's a way I could get a PhD, so I can stay in school longerstuffmonger wrote:Wow... This is partially why college is stupid.
Looks like the world is going to have another college professor before too long.Neon wrote:Couldn't disagree more. I'm actually wondering if there's a way I could get a PhD, so I can stay in school longerstuffmonger wrote:Wow... This is partially why college is stupid.I don't even drink that much.
WTF are you talking about? A society where you have to go to school where you don't learn anything usefull in order to get a higher paying job, instead of a society where you have to prove your skills through competence is not the way a country should be run. This ssbm class just goes to add onto the useless junk that don't have any real life usefulness. I'm in college right now, and I see all the bs that goes on... you don't really learn very much at all. You temporarilly learn what you need to know for the tests, and then a week later you have no clue what the hell the previous chapter was on. Even then, about 3/4 of the students drop out of the class before it is complete. They don't get any dings on their transcripts if they drop out, and they get their money back for the course if they do it before something like 3 weeks before finals day. If you drop a class, you should be required to finish it, and what you get, is what you get. College isn't about learning anymore... it's just another way for someone to screw you in the ass and take your money, while at the same time, holding you back from doing what you want in life.Neon wrote:Couldn't disagree more. I'm actually wondering if there's a way I could get a PhD, so I can stay in school longerstuffmonger wrote:Wow... This is partially why college is stupid.I don't even drink that much.
College=incredibly smart people explaining to you how the world works, reading worthwhile books/articles, and no "social segregation" (official term please? cliques, popular crowd etc) like in high school. It's literally that good.
Maybe things are different where you go to college, but around here they're way too fond of your money to give you that much leeway...I think you have to drop a course within the first couple of days to get much money back.stuffmonger wrote:...and they get their money back for the course if they do it before something like 3 weeks before finals day.
What do you mean by "less credible." I majored in history, and even though it's a liberal arts major, I regard it as credible a major as engineering or any other science major. I learned how to do great public presentations, communicate with people from different backgrounds, write entertaining as well as informative reports, "fish for the truth," and I was exposed to cultures and books that I never would have investigated otherwise.Eps wrote:That's crazy talk - nobody would sign up for a JAMMA-building course! I mean, you might learn something!!Blade wrote:Actually I would LOVE to take a class on how to build Jamma and other hardware.It might involve an ounce of actual engineering ability, and teach the people in the class some useful skills, and not just the usual "problem solving," "organisation" and "working in teams" bumf that gets trotted out as the 'skills' learned from joke courses!
(Sorry, my university's investing in, shall we say, 'less credible' degree courses at the expense of the sciences, which it is killing off, has made me even more cynical than before)
Dunno whether I've been zinged or not...Andi wrote:Looks like the world is going to have another college professor before too long.Neon wrote:Couldn't disagree more. I'm actually wondering if there's a way I could get a PhD, so I can stay in school longerstuffmonger wrote:Wow... This is partially why college is stupid.I don't even drink that much.
Funnily enough, all those skills -- even the one about cultures -- are cultivated as a scientist, in addition to the more well-known hardcore science knowledge element. But that response aside, I have to stress that I wasn't referring to the great liberal arts courses such as history (also dying at my university), English literature (same), or fine art (ditto). I'm talking about majors in video game studies and shit like that. Things that may be interesting to learn but should not form the basis of a college degree!! Sadly, they bring in the money: there are a lot of people who frankly just want to go to college so they don't have to get a job, and will get their parents to pay the fees of any old 'slacker course'. Specially with the UK government's target of over 50% of the population going to university -- which doesn't really tally with the role of universities as institutions of high-level education.The n00b wrote: What do you mean by "less credible." I majored in history, and even though it's a liberal arts major, I regard it as credible a major as engineering or any other science major. I learned how to do great public presentations, communicate with people from different backgrounds, write entertaining as well as informative reports, "fish for the truth," and I was exposed to cultures and books that I never would have investigated otherwise.
Well, might be the video industary (Development / Sale / Marketing / Acrade Operators / Game Mag) would to hire these people. Especially if this people also hold a degree in Computer Science or Fine Art.Eps wrote:I'm talking about majors in video game studies and shit like that. Things that may be interesting to learn but should not form the basis of a college degree!!
Haha, there was a thread on NTSCUK recently about this, featuring the input of a few people in the industry. The 100% consensus was: "OMG DON'T DO ONE OF THOSE CRAPPY DEGREES, ARE YOU CRAZY?! DO A DEGREE IN COMPUTER SCIENCE OR MATHS/MUSIC/FINE ART INSTEAD" (for programmers/musicians/artists respectivelySAM wrote:Well, might be the video industary (Development / Sale / Marketing / Acrade Operators / Game Mag) would to hire these people. Especially if this people also hold a degree in Computer Science or Fine Art.Eps wrote:I'm talking about majors in video game studies and shit like that. Things that may be interesting to learn but should not form the basis of a college degree!!