From: Amara Graps (amara@amara.com)
Date: Tue Oct 05 1999 - 18:47:00 MDT
Kathryn Aegis (k_aegis@mindspring.com) Mon, 04 Oct 1999 writes:
>I've been meaning to send a 'hello' to Amara Graps, so 'hi'!
(Hi!)
>I made the decision not to reenter graduate school until I could prove
>to myself a true commitment to one particular field. At the same time,
>that will not stop me from writing serious articles and books. Those
>will lead in the future to a more solid basis to acquire a graduate
>degree, if needed.
Oh, yes! And those articles and books would already show a serious
dedication. Certainly they'll benefit you, for both your future and
your present because you're probably enjoying the process too. That's
what I did/do (I write because I have always loved my field(s), writing
helps me to learn, and I like to express it in written form.)
>And, already, you seem to have produced a body of work comparable to
>most persons who already have the Dr.!
It looks strange, I know. The physics faculty head at the University
of Heidelberg asked me why I want or need a PhD with my papers and
experience, and I had to try to explain (mit meiner sehren schlecten
Deutsche ...).
Why a PhD now? This is what I mean about a degree having a special
meaning if you've been in the field that you love for a while.
I need to truly know what are my abilities. I don't want to be in
any kind of safe and secure environment for my work. I want to reach as far
outside of myself as I can go and just see what are my limitations (very
useful information) and what are my strengths (even more useful information).
I want to put myself in a situation where I'm away from everything I know,
and see what I can learn about about the Universe and myself in the process.
I want to be a real expert in one area, instead of (in addition to?)
semi-knowledgeable in many areas. And I want to give myself more
choices and options for astronomy work for the next few decades of my
life. These are the reasons I chose to get a PhD, after all of these years.
(I'm afraid I didn't explain that very well to the Dekanat, but the
University admitted me into their PhD program anyway :-). )
Amara
P.S. I'm actually not the oldest graduate student in our group, there's
a Swedish fellow 5 years older than I am, that has built spacecraft
experiments
for 10 years, works at a well-known ESA research center in the Netherlands
(he commutes to our group periodically), has technicians and a secretary
working for him, and has more published papers than me.
I think that sometimes there comes a time in a person's life when he/she
simply says, "OK, now it's time to do it." And you do it.
********************************************************************
Amara Graps email: amara@amara.com
Computational Physics vita: finger agraps@shell5.ba.best.com
Multiplex Answers URL: http://www.amara.com/
********************************************************************
"Trust in the Universe, but tie up your camels first."
(adaptation of a Sufi proverb)
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