zooxanthellae said:
I'm not arguing that fields like economics or finance or law aren't incredibly complex and interesting, but I will argue that they aren't as fundamental as (what I imagine) Physics is.
That's a common idea. Personally I would disagree with it, but one thing that you should start looking into is where this idea came from (it started with Plato).
Namely, because those fields deal with fluid human constructs, not universal ones.
You are getting this from Plato. Personally, I come from a very, very different philosophical tradition in which the division between human constructs and Platonic universals is less sharp. Also I went to school in places that quite explicitly reject this idea.
Part of the problem here is that you learn your ideas from human beings, and if you don't understand where those ideas came from, it makes it more difficult to question them. One trap that I've seen physics undergraduates set into is that because just study physics and nothing else, they don't really think about or question some of the reasons why they study physics, and this causes problems when you get into the "real world."
One big problem with Plato's ideas is that they really aren't economically sustainable. Sure it's great to be a philosopher-king until you find out that everyone wants to be a philosopher-king and no one plows the fields.
At the end of the day, if I rise to the top of the heap in Economics, I've become better than most at understanding only how humans do things. Physics seems more encompassing, if that makes any sense.
It does, but you need to ask yourself where you got that idea from. Usually the answer is your parents and teachers. Then you ask where *they* got their ideas from. I'm pretty sure if you follow this thread, you'll end up with Plato. At that point you can have a conversation with Plato, so see if what you think really makes sense.
Which is honestly a reason I picked Chicago over Rice, because I feel that will give me a good grounding in many subjects and keep my options much more open.
One thing that you really, really do need to do is to spend your graduate school years somewhere other than Chicago. University of Chicago has an interesting history and so what they teach and the way that they teach it will be influenced by that history. This is good, but you'll end up learning a lot more if you go somewhere for graduate school that is really, really different.
Chicago-physics and Chicago-economics is different from NYC-physics and NYC=economics just like the pizza you get in Chicago is just different than what you get in NYC.