How Do You Navigate Infinite Knowledge Without a Clear Career Path?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Mhmmm
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Information Mass
Click For Summary
SUMMARY

The discussion centers on the overwhelming availability of knowledge online and the challenges of navigating a career path amidst this abundance. The participant expresses frustration with traditional education, arguing that self-directed learning can yield qualifications comparable to formal degrees. They highlight the desire to synthesize knowledge across disciplines rather than specialize in one area, ultimately questioning the value of degrees in favor of practical application of learned concepts.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of self-directed learning methodologies
  • Familiarity with online educational resources and platforms
  • Knowledge of interdisciplinary research approaches
  • Awareness of career paths in science and technology fields
NEXT STEPS
  • Explore online platforms for free courses, such as Coursera or edX
  • Research interdisciplinary fields that combine technology and science
  • Investigate career opportunities in science communication and project management
  • Learn about the role of knowledge brokers in research and innovation
USEFUL FOR

This discussion is beneficial for self-learners, aspiring interdisciplinary professionals, and individuals seeking alternative career paths outside traditional educational frameworks.

Mhmmm
Messages
1
Reaction score
0
Dude, what the ****. I apologize for the language, but this IS THE THIRD TIME I HAVE TRIED TO WRITE THIS. I HAVE SPENT TWO ****ING HOURS TRYING TO GET THIS QUESTION ACROSS. and of course its been ruined now. twice I have composed a question I really want some answers to and apparently you can't spend longer than 30 mins making a thread or PF signs you out of your account, effectively destroying your thread when you try and post it and end up at an error page. Anyway, I now resort to garbagety bullet points

You can learn everything on the internet. I've been to college. name the class, 101 to 501, the internet will teach you it all- you just have to sift through the BS, not to hard if your smart.

you can learn languages, build cars, you can literally, knowledge wise, be just as qualified for a MS as someone who spent 5 years in college getting one. maybe even a PHD, I just can't speak for the experience you gain in a lab or anything else hands-on.Fight me on that if you want, If you have your masters and hate my attempt to belittle your years spent at college. College is good, just not necessary. If you have the drive you can learn in yourself. They even have lectures and class PDF's online, all free.

so,what do you do in this life when all this knowledge is so easily available?Even worse, when so much of it is absolutely awesome, so much so that no one career choice or degree could ever be worth denying the rest?

Thats my dilemma, and one that doesn't exist for people who want to spend 30 years researching particle physics. And you are a badass for doing so, you advance science, you badass you. But that requires denial of a lot of other cool science. Yes you can't understand it all, but there IS this magical spot where you can understand just about all of it. You can manipulate factors n stuff like the PHD's but you can interpret their work, understand its implications and outcomes...

19, have taken a lot of college classes. Have read way to much about way to much on the internet. took a lot at the CSU, and a few at a UC and a community college. I went in with my GE completed, and now I have dropped out because its to expensive to be in college to try and "figure things out" (people who do so should be stabbed for stupidity). Nothing is worth my career, degrees ****ing bite. They turn you into a tool, stuck in a field.Am I going to be a hobo? Do I just want to control everything? Is there not some job where I can just look at all the cool research being done, allocate funds, and then tell the smarty pants scientists badass applications of combining their discoveries across fields in new technologies? I've sat in on over 20 upper division physics lectures, one of my schools is like top 50 for research or something, I did nothing but sit in on classes and go to research facilities talking with the head professors their for a month. nothing is worth getting that absorbed in. I took calc 3 last year, it was really hard but I got a B. I am not scared of the complication of these subjects, and I can, especially recently, understand a lot of it. I think its amazingly beautiful sometimes, It always the bigger picture and the applications that truly entices me- I don't want to be the one who figure it out, I want to make use of it after its figured out or combine it with something else. Fack. I am out. This question has become a trainwreck. I am destined to be a librarian, accumulating knowledge with no purpose but to have it and give it out to people who want to know something as well.
:cry:
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Mhmmm said:
Dude, what the ****. I apologize for the language, but this IS THE THIRD TIME I HAVE TRIED TO WRITE THIS. I HAVE SPENT TWO ****ING HOURS TRYING TO GET THIS QUESTION ACROSS. and of course its been ruined now. twice I have composed a question I really want some answers to and apparently you can't spend longer than 30 mins making a thread or PF signs you out of your account, effectively destroying your thread when you try and post it and end up at an error page. Anyway, I now resort to garbagety bullet points

When it happens, hit backspace or go "back" in your browser. Copy the text you have written and log in again. Works fine for me.
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 14 ·
Replies
14
Views
2K
  • · Replies 14 ·
Replies
14
Views
5K
  • · Replies 11 ·
Replies
11
Views
7K
  • · Replies 62 ·
3
Replies
62
Views
10K
Replies
28
Views
3K
  • · Replies 5 ·
Replies
5
Views
3K
  • · Replies 18 ·
Replies
18
Views
7K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
3K
  • · Replies 33 ·
2
Replies
33
Views
6K
  • · Replies 21 ·
Replies
21
Views
5K