Re: what would it take for a "bachelors in extropian studies?"

From: Dan Fabulich (daniel.fabulich@yale.edu)
Date: Thu Nov 04 1999 - 01:07:05 MST


'What is your name?' 'john grigg.' 'IT DOESN'T MATTER WHAT YOUR NAME
IS!!!':

> I was wondering as seen in the form of degree requirements, what classes
> would a person have to take to get a "bachelors in extropian studies?"
> Would engineering be the foundation of this degree? How much philosophy,
> history, poly sci and sociology would be needed? And what about the
> biological sciences? A fine arts requirement possibly?
> I look forward to getting some detailed posts on this question.

I'm presently an undergraduate at Yale... I started out as a biomedical
engineering major, but these days I'm considering biomedical engineering +
philosophy.

Even if I COULD major in "extropian studies," I probably wouldn't. IMO,
extropy is just too interdisciplinary to realistically major in it. Any
attempt to do so would probably lead to knowing not enough about too many
different subjects. If I could, I'd be BiomedE, philosophy, computer
science, physics, math, music, psychology, literature... not necessarily
in that order.

-Dan

      -unless you love someone-
    -nothing else makes any sense-
           e.e. cummings



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