The market speaks.
Saw this evil piece today from some engineering nerd who believes they're at the peak of critical thought.
For too long, these colleges have clung to the notion of being uniquely “noble”, insulated from market pressures and buffered by government funding and external endowments.
A particularly stubborn myth is that liberal arts education has a monopoly on cultivating critical thinking. This belief not only discounts the intellectual rigour demanded in Stem fields but also perpetuates an outdated hierarchy of disciplines. Critical thinking is not the sole attribute of literature and philosophy department
Rather than worry about funding cuts or condemning their threat to academic purity, liberal arts institutions should embrace a market-oriented mindset.
Fears about “dumbing down” degrees or commodifying education can be addressed through market accountability and employer feedback.
Now I'm no longer in school, it's been years. And I know there are a range of "sympathies" toward higher education (ideological state apparatuses and all that jazz), and I could also imagine good points being made about the need for better engineering in the United States and the west.
But I still hated this article telling schools to bow down to the free market, shut down their English departments, and recognize the engineers at Palantir as the pinnacle of human thought.
Nope, economics is part of STEM. It's right there in the name. Science, technology, economics, and mathematics.
Wow that's not engineering? Christ lib brainworms are more powerful than I thought
Sorry I was ragebaiting. I didn't think people would take me seriously
Damn u got me good, I'm happy that STEM, though a limiting and weird incestuous set of approaches, at least doesn't include fuckin lib econ. I was pissed thinking about it