To apply for any job, you need experience and need to be able to demonstrate that experience. Actual real experience contributing to a real project that affected real people. Most university degrees will have an aspect of that, so anyone who has completed a degree will have some amount of experience. Usually a very tiny amount for a bachelors but a masters or doctorate have a lot more experience tied into them. So that’s why job applications require a degree. But if you can demonstrate your experience elsewhere, then that experience is more valuable than a degree. And employers won’t give a fuck if you don’t have a degree. What Elon is saying here, is to just go and do whatever you want to and make an impact. You don’t need education to do that, go educate yourself
Degrees get you into most companies because nobody got fired for employing the most qualified applicants. Even when they turn out to be useless they just point to the CV - not my fault boss. Before you know it, everyone there has a degree so it becomes a defacto standard.
When I started University on the West Coast in 1970 it cost me $90 per quarter and about $10 for books. So under $500 a year. I paid it all myself. I bought a house several years later for $44,500 with a view of the water and mountains on 1 acre of land. Paid $278 month payments. Now they want $20,000 for a year of University and $450,000 for my house. Something happened in between and it was not by accident! They had to employ those well papered people somewhere and needed a lot of money to do it. Government debt loves inflation. Individuals not so much! I had a chance that is not so available today!
What's really funny is at the time everyone (and I mean everyone!) told me it was the stupidest thing to do! They said rent would spiral downwards in the future due to overbuilding!@@rafewheadon1963
People who's primary income that comes from investing is reliant on inflation and prices constantly going up. It's no coincidence those people are in politics influencing policy that benefits their investments.
house inflation: 10x, education: 40x, salary inlation: ? the issue isnt inflation, the issue is when things are not inflated in balance with each other
Only time you should consider a PhD is if you want to go into R&D. Only time you should consider getting a masters is if there is something you specifically want to do that can only be done with a masters. Otherwise, simply having a degree is fine if the field is in demand. Another thing. People get too caught up on "This successful person didn't have a PhD" or "That successful person didn't finish college"....those people are(or were) usually self motivated individuals who went into their programs with an understanding of the subjects in their curriculum and didn't feel there was anything more for them to learn, and left to do something very specific like start a business or pursue a field of research. These aren't stories of people who failed at college and found success elsewhere, so don't try to compare yourself to them just cause you didn't make it through school. Motivation, discipline, and vision are the keys to success
Just pass the exam boards you want to work in and show what you have done in those fields over the last to yrs. The best people have been dabbling in their fields since early teens
It's not about what can only be done with a master's, and a PhD is not only for R&D. One of the most useful PhD's for high tech innovation is a PhD in applied math. Godlike problem solving skills are always useful.
@@safffff1000 I clearly stated Applied Math. Not theoretical. Premises are required for rigorous proofs. Not for volumetric analysis, applied game theory, statistical quality control, differential or matrix math used to solve problems in a production or fabrication environment. Who's going to be better at applying math than an applied mathematician?
Some, but it's more about whether or not you can prove that you can do the work. They often don't require "degrees" per se. I've personally never been asked for a copy of my college degree in my life.
Tesla contacted me two times for two different roles, I do not have an advanced degree. Or rather, not one that could be considered useful for them or the roles.
For those that get confused about what "utility delta" is: utility (of your creation) means usefulness/value and is a common term in fields such as economics, game theory and machine learning. Delta can be understood as difference/change. So the utility delta of something you'd want to create simply means the added value of the thing you want to create. Also, using terms like this is not a sign of intelligence or sophistication. It's a sign that you hang out with a particular group of people that commonly use such terms and have incorporated those terms into your own vocabulary because you also find utility in using them. What utility he finds in using them, I leave up to you to decide.
Thank you. This is not part of my everyday vocabulary, snd i was hung up on the shape of the letter *∆* thinking of a three-way connection or effect or something... 🤷
Misleading title. People spin Musk up too often to be a “college is useless” advocate. The idea he expresses here is reality, however. Continued education such as masters and PhDs are *sometimes* useful. But they aren’t useless or a waste of time for every career field. In heavily expertise fields it can be very helpful. Take his own company for example, engineers working on Tesla products greatly benefit from continued college education. That isn’t to say it’s impossible to gain an education without experience in the field in lieu of it, but gaining experience in *parallel* with an education can expedite peoples progress.
Yeah I don’t think saying whether or not school is useful in a TH-cam Short’s the best way to go. If it was an hour long debate then it’d be interesting.
Well of course. Nobody thinks a PhD is useless in all fields. What most people go to school for is useless even if they get a PhD. Yeah if you’re going to be a doctor obviously it’s very useful. No one would ever say being a doctor and getting educated to be a doctor is bad. Except like 16 people on earth and they are morons. You can be very against higher education in every way and then still acknowledge but if you want to go to school for a handful of certain fields it’s a great idea if you stick to it and do it intelligently
Engineering is applied science so it makes sense for a degree. For most other things degree is a waste of time that slows down education. Learning directly from the experts is the best form of education better than any degree or PhD in the world.
I did a PhD because it was the easiest way to immigrate from the Middle East to Europe. Then, I immigrated to the US and got a job in learning and development. If I were born and raised in a developed country, I would have never thought of going through the hardship of a PhD.
Hey Im currently studying HR and L&D. Can you explain in brief which courses/colleges you went to and what were the job prospects for this field in the european country you went to?
@Mahalakshmi-Khan Hi, I did a PhD. in organizational behavior at the University of Paris Nanterre and then a postdoctoral fellowship in impact assessment of learning programs. In parallel, I gave courses in HR and project management at multiple universities and business schools in France. Afterward, I immigrated to the US and wanted to move to industry. I started by working on my own as a learning programs developer for small clients (the first ones where friends who have startups and for whom I did some projects for free just to gain some experience and fill my CV) + earned some certificatios in HR and instructional design. 2 years later, I applied for positions in learning and development and got a position of a Learning Program Manager at a construction company in the US.
He’s saying getting a PhD in some cases is not the correct trajectory for someone with a great idea. If you have a phenomenal business idea, going into business school for 4 years would not be the best or quickest route to creating your business.
Its like the joke about physicts. If they didnt get a phd to teach theory, they are fairly useless. I have a friend with a Maaters in math and for him to get a job is hard. Most of the time he gets jobs in computer science writing software.
@@kaijen2688 a Phd in mathematics is very overkill for someone who wants to code php/c/whatever, a MSc in mathematics already means he performs at the top level of coders.
@@JacobBogersyou do know there is an entire career called scientific programming right? Web dev jobs are stupid. A PhD in applied mathematics is just the entry point to the gigantic career of a scientific programmer, and newsflash, it is MUCH harder than web dev.
Degrees aren’t necessary but they are very helpful at showing time management, dedication, goal driven people who can problem solve and complete tasks. That’s what company’s want
@@quantumpolariton122 you do realize there are other degrees besides MDs, right? Obviously I’m not saying doctors but you’re wanting to feel smart and decided to argue against a point I clearly didn’t make. Trying to take arguing out of the shower eh?
@@flyberd7848 well then you should have not generalised. And phds not just degrees are necessary to work to some companies, like many chemical company in Germany and say research department at intel, so your wrong there too.
@@quantumpolariton122 what about degrees in horticulture, botany, zoology, software design, web design, coding, geology… these are examples, that you will find people in the real world don’t always have degrees for and they have experience. Even in chemical/lab research some people may not have degrees, I’ve worked in labs where my lab manager didn’t have a bachelors (she was an idiot). I did say degrees were helpful dumb dumb. I didn’t say you didn’t need one, but degrees were helpful because it is possible to have experience that replaces the need for one. In the real world you will find even the EPA desires degrees but will also look at experience. Experience is really helpful but degrees are easier to showcase knowledge and abilities. Reading comprehension must be hard.
@@flyberd7848 answer me one question, dumb dumb. How do you get experience in a company if you don’t even have a degree to show them? and your mixing many different professions together. You can learn web design but certainly not zoology. Do you realise that researcher in zoology at a university, not only has a degree but a PhD, then several years post doc experience, then several years as a research fellow , and then only can you get a permanent position at the university? If you wanna talk out of your back side at least turn around so I can hear you properly
@@rizkyekaputra9960 cancer cure would be for a vast number of people. Cancer causes 1 in every 6 deaths. You’re talking about something that kills tens of millions of people every year
If you can findsomone that you think is capable of it but doesn't have one. It's better to hire them and train them to do they job instead of them focusing years trying to generalise a subject?
Would you recommend electrical engineering over electrical maintenance. I’m currently in trade school and not sure if the 4 more years of school is worth it.
@@lukemarvenko2845 These are completely different areas, electrical engineering... Lots of maths and theory, simulations etc. Electrical maintenance mostly practical.
Immunoseb and Immunbio, CoQ10 and Lipoic Acid, Palmitoylethanolamide are listed as possible therapeutic interventions in papers on the NIH. A Randomized Controlled Trial of the Efficacy of Systemic Enzymes and Probiotics in the Resolution of Post-COVID Fatigue
As someone who considered getting a PhD, I agree with that, too many people pursue a PhD as a way to demand a higher salary or consider themselves more intelligent then others, which is not necessarily the case.
Well clearly this is wrong to get a PhD you need to first pass your GCSEs then go to your a levels and get 7 to 8 then go to uni which is difficult in its own right then have to pass through 11 years of that there is no way PhDs don't require super high IQ and natural ability your comment holds so much delusion it's like those who think any 1 can become rich with effort no they can't genetics places a massive barrier this is like those who use this mentality to screw over disabled people even knowing genetic bio bank data exists with high causation between poverty and iq they still jump back to disabled people and tell those people it's there fault and there not trying hard enough well maybe humans are the sacred cows if your a creationist but if you accept darwin which i assume you do you would realize most of our actions is done by our neural wiring and our genetics
If you do a PhD for those reasons you’re likely not to finish. It’s requires high level of self motivation to complete which you can do only if you’re motivated.
if you pursue a PhD to demand better pay then you don't know anything about PhDs. IMO they're more for people passionate about discovering new things in their field (while being equipped to do so by their institution).
yep - its at that point that lectures have less success because your mind goes on autopilot to go in the direction to learn what it needs - it begins to feed itself
Well, I have been blessed with this life just once, I have only one life...I don't care whether other people consider my work "useful". Like people, don't ask yourself "how to be useful", just do what makes you happy (yeah I am not practical but who cares)
The thing about PhD, you think it’s all the great stuff but when you ask someone who is in the process for 4-5 years most of them will tell you it’s a waste of time and effort. But the cold hard truth is, you have to waste these efforts in order to know what is important and how to do things. There’s no easy way around it, both for Elon and a normal PhD student.
@@sexykjetil yea but he is selling his image here. Its about promoting his brand, the "too cool for school" kid. And as you said, as if he hires people without a phd.
@@mrspams3489 The dangerous thing is that young people are easily led by this people, not only Elon but so many others who gives so called advice for success. Hopefully most have a strong father figure in the home, that can guide the kids the best way.
The thing is PhD is useless, if you didn't learn anything while in the process. It's the same with education, you can memories and get a good mark. That's awesome, but then you learn almost nothing and regret later. I feel that, education system is broken phrase is not fully right. I do agree that the way we compress so much in very short amount that, students have no way but memorise. But I feel like this exams and PhD and university, isn't just to study and have a degree or certificate. But it's more into, the process you make up to get that degree, because the process is what makes your degree worth. Not that final exam nor the degree itself. Just giving my opinion here, you can contribute how ever you want!
@@allsides5626 you said it all, maybe you won't need to know the answer...But you will need the tools you picked up on the way, because you will encounter new problems to solve!
@@zak61221which due to the finite lifespan of humans affected is still awesome, as it essentially makes the limited time spent alive better. Plus it only goes to zero if left untouched - if constantly maintained or even improved it itself goes to infinity.
Tbh i have met lots of Phd students and i can say they are not most of the wise people ive met in life .They cant even win an argument ,prove their point or even like Evolve in the society or cope with a group of People.
@@karimyassine98, the more I work on my Ph.D., the more I second-guess myself. I'm definitely not going to convince you of anything if I can't even convince myself. On the other hand, I can prove pretty conclusively that if you haven't studied at all what I've been working on for years, you definitely don't have a clue about it.
It’s a pretty sensible answer, no shade intended. PhDs are time consuming and often expensive, focusing on a narrow rail of knowledge. Most likely your overall impact will be minimal. But you get to study what interests you, and if you’re lucky, gain useful skills
True. Yes. I did what interested me. It was a conundrum I was bent on solving, creating a path to, and did. It was the big exercise that beckoned and PhD, the discipline. Money not it
For commenters reading this, in the U.S. PhD programs pay you a stipend. It's just a job. The only potentially "expensive" part is that you are missing out on income, I suppose. Also, in the U.S., programs prefer you not to have an MA.
Like already mentioned, you get paid for a PhD not the other way around. The amount of problem you encounter during your PhD makes you a good problem solver, a good communicator, and to be able to think critically, all useful transferrable skils
Summarized : to become the most useful is to find a way to impact a vast amount of people, create something of that sort that makes a difference. It's not about phds but how far you can think and create.
@@martingarreis You summed up what he said in a perfect way! Hats off! People don't seem to consider who is telling the message, and in this case, it is very important.
I always get asked why I did not pursue a PhD (as I have a research master and publications). The honest answer is that I don't see that for the type of impact I want to have, I need to write for a niche of 50 experts in my own room. Somebody else might thrive on that, but I like to work for shorter goals, more gratification, more visible outcome.
And what did you research? I can’t imagine anyone ever saying that about true chemistry physics and biology research. It’s either private research or academic, and good luck getting a private research gig without a PhD haha.
@@TheHermitProcess I worked for a think tank on a project basis, and I work in academia, it's not unthinkable at all to co-auther a research publication in my position to the network I have in my role. But it's not my primary goal either.
I'm now thinking whether I should pursue PhD in Molecular Biology or not... I have Master in Cell Research and I was always thinking that I want to do PhD... but I cannot see the final goal. I'm not planning to become a Professor neither I want to, but I just don't know what to do.... I also don't want to do routine work at some Biotech company.... especially since the salaries there are not that great, not like in the HighTech. Is anyone there in the same situation as me? Or perhaps was? Any ideas? help?
That's absolutely not true. If you can show certain qualities or level of thinking and problem solving, you can get the job. He doesn't hire on the basis of some paper that you may or may not have obtained on your own. He hires based on skills and thinking that you demonstrate in the hiring process. If you're a programmer, you have to be able to demonstrate you understand programming verbally, situationally, and through a demonstration of your ability through a test or series of questions. If you're a forklift driver.... not nearly as complicated. I am actually going through the hiring process now.
You are right Mr. Musk my father started 2 businesses retired well to do at 55 with only an 8th grade education he taught me how to run those businesses I only had a high school education at that time, later I got an RN degree to support my husband and 4 children because he had a heart attack and couldn’t work. Thank you for helping to straighten this country up. I’m 75 and I weep when I see what’s happening.
My coworker in the roofing union studied at Stanford university and got doctoral degree after many years. He still can’t find work because he doesn’t have work experience. He’s currently full of debt. Now he’s working as an apprentice making what I made 4 years ago. I make $30 an hour more than him and debt free! He will eventually make as much as me but college isn’t always the solution to make good money. And have the weekends off unless you want overtime! 💰
That’s sounds weird, what did he get his PhD in? These days a STEM PhD from a tier 1 school is an immediate 150-250k starting salary and it only goes up from there
@@diverman1023 The comment is probably not true. If by any chance it were, it must have been a very niche degree, or the person didn't take advantage of any of the university infrastructures and has a bad resume.
I mean thats all very well. But a PhD is designed for someone who wishes to do scientific research (academia), not for someone who wishes to go into industry. Hence why the misalignment between the skills set require, but this is it always the case as someone said above if you are a STEM PhD. Just so you know this.
Musk got an electrical engineering degree. He might’ve benefited from a masters, but certainly some people don’t benefit from advanced degrees. But the fundamental physics and chemistry sometimes does need advanced research degrees.
the problem is that Elon equates usefulness with making things. He was asked what could help people figure out how to *be most useful* and responded with a formula for how to calculate the scale and impact *of an invention.*
It's as dumb as saying "do you think people who want to be useful become a firefighter as the best way to achieve it ?" There is no single path to be useful, it would be counterproductive if everyone had a PhD or worked as a firefighter. But it doesn't mean he thinks that's useless...just saying because some people didn't get Elon's speech.
@@_bug_y.t its not "ordinary people".. its the people who made musk billionare in the first place.. its them who actually did the big brain work of inventing these technologies.. musk is just a businessman, not an inventor
@@aabc that's bullshit. 🤣They are just labours who are taking orders and working on his vision and plans.By your logic ,every business owner and entrepreneurs are stupid and the employees are the smart people.A company with 1000 employees and no leader will go nowhere.If he could,he could do it all alone but to do a scalable business you need workers who you give commands to and you give back benefits for their time and skills.Your comment is so stupid 🤣
Few Engineers get PHDs or even Master's Degrees. They do get many further certifications and PE licenses etc because they are practical and useful. Its not all research. Engineers are the ones who attempt to make PhD's theories actually work in real life.
engineers make lots of things work...on paper, lol. so many engineered stuff that is on a set of drawings often gets "modified" in the field so it will actually work. and engineers continue to make the same mistakes because they refuse to leave their chair
Thats why they make "as built" drawings. But any significant changes will only go thru engr or they blow their errors and omissions insurance. Someone with a degree has to sign off on the drawings@@feelingtardy
What is a PhD? Many people do a batchelors degree and that's essentially a hard version of high-school but you're maybe not living at home and you have some grants, loans and these days you have a part time job too. You leave your degree with lots of knowledge but very little to no practical skill. A master course gets you a year to 18th months of a research apprenticeship. A PhD is basically a 3-6 year research job with little pay and a 60 hour working week. You get--- for the first time---to experience managing your own projects (if you're lucky with some guidance) and have to take responsibility for problem solving. If your PhD is academic, same thing but with theoretical problems to solve.You do a PhD with two paths ahead: 1) A post-doctoral position maybe leading to an academic professorship (Tenure if someone dies) 2) You leave and go into industry. 3) You leave and stop working in that profession. There are around 20% of graduates that do a PhD in science. Of them, around 20% take on a postdoctoral position. Around 20% of them will do 2 or 3 postdoctoral positions. Some of them may get a professorship. Most people in that path drop out at some juncture. If you for instance do a PhD in molecular biology and end up applying for a job working at big a pharma company, there will be 100 graduate jobs for every 2 positions requiring a PhD. Thus, having a PhD makes job hunting harder. It's easier and cheaper to grow your own graduate into the worker you want than it is to pay postdoctoral wages to then have to do the same thing to a PhD holder. Unless you have some very sought after skills (a specific niche), you're better off going into industry instead of a PhD if you think being a professor isn't for you. PhD students in biological sciences can end up in teaching, Medical communications, medical sales and a variety if other affiliated professions that aren't research. Thus, don't do a PhD in research unless you really love research and that's what you want as a career. Do a masters first before a PhD, so you find out what the life is like before you sign up for a full PhD. There are many benefits going through the process of doing a PhD: you learn to sell ideas (how you get funded), you get to learn how to plan large projects and plan how to write a thesis. You'll be good at writing after you complete your PhD. However, it is not an easy path and not for the uncommitted. PhD in subjects less well funded will actually cost you money---they won't come with grants. In these cases, you can't afford not to be sure it's what you live for. My advice for PhD students is this: 1) Put your PhD work first, everything else last. 2) Get into work early and ask your questions before everyone gets into their own work. 3) Before you start research, read every major paper and review article your PhD supervisor has written or been involved with. Read all the main papers they cite often. Spend most of your 6 months at the beginning learning where the field is at and where the interesting questions are at. Don't just start doing work on what your supervisor suggests, as you won't have his perspective. To be independent, you need to be on their page so you can talk at their level. This will impress them and they will take you more seriously. 4) If you're doing a PhD, and you're not getting the help you need nor are you able to work out how to do things, network with other people not in your lab/department! Get on forums and ask questions. Talk to other researchers not in your lab or department. Socialise with them. Get an outside mentor---maybe a retired researcher. Use ChatGPT. Do whatever it takes to broaden your perspective and find a way to solve your problems. 5) Always have 3 projects: one main, one backup, and one wildcard. Don't expect any of them to work. Don't be afraid to transition a project that's stuck for lower hanging fruit, especially if the equipment is not sensitive enough or some other technical reason which can't be overcome within the duration.
To those u got confuse what he ment is that Delta Utility Model (DUM) is a multi-attribute decision model which is used to help designer making decisions when trade-offs exist in design tasks. The utility theory is applied to quantify preferences in the model. Delta is devoted to innovation and systematically developing new products and technologies, particularly those that are high-efficiency and energy-saving. Aiming to reduce global warming and ensure mankind's sustainable future with better value and performance, Delta is continuously enhancing our engineering capabilities and is committed to developing innovative technologies and solutions for a better tomorrow.
What’s most important is to find one’s purpose and ultimate goals in life and pursue it with passion and courage regardless of having a higher or highest academic achievement or less. Some professional students remain students because or while waiting to find their purpose and goal in life
My father once said that “everything in this world is made by human hands, for human hands”. 🙌🏻 meaning that you can educate yourself by putting your hands on things that you are interested in.
I got cert 1, 2, 3, 4, a diploma, then masters in IT, got nowhere with it but cleaning out keyboards. Went for a internship with a indie animation studio which cost nothing and am now a professional cartoonist and animator wokring for Fountain's Pen Productions in L.A
People forget that degrees are needed, particularly PhDs because it’s technological progress that made the West wealthy in the first place and continues to help it in exploiting resources from poorer countries. It’s easy for a billionaire to say anything about stuff they don’t understand but a whole system is made of many types of skilled people and just because they don’t make a lot of noise doesn’t mean that they aren’t contributing to progress.
I find the way Elon’s brain works to be absolutely fascinating. I was never a numbers person, but I like how calculated he is with his analysis. It’s almost like anything in life could be a mathematical formula.
The way Elon's brain works is it thinks complicated things can be simplified to simple formulas, resulting in him vastly over promising and under delivering. Most of his ideas are a load of shit. He said the Hyperloop was as simple as an air hockey table inside a tube. Not true, and like most of his dumb ideas is in the process of failing.
Very true. As a matter of fact, just about anything you can comprehend in totality, can be written down mathematically. A contradictory example of this is, infinity. This is often where either our minds can not comprehend, or our math is incomplete. Have fun with that rabbit hole!
@@BigReptileCrew most people barely got through highschool and are easily impressed by basic iamverysmart shit it's honestly both amazing and sadining how stupid d and gullible people are
The average person who just finished high-school at 18 is going to be in the labour force till ~55. I'd rather spend 4 years enhancing my overall level of education and then proceed with working the next 32 years than I would just working for 37 years. People are in such a rush. There is too much life ahead to try and have everything you want instantly.
@@16m49x3 why? Having children is not a rush. I think definitely every healthy couple should at least 1 child that's trve, but what is in a rush is intellect, money, sexuality, love, sports, health, nature ye know...
I agree. Most people I work with who have a PhD do the same work I do without one. In fact, I would say that having a PhD does not show how competent you are at doing the job. On the other hand, an MS was very beneficial -- at least in my case.
answer is yes and no, degrees don't mean you can get rich, BUT i wouldn't trust a person to design a skyscrapper or a surgeon to operate on me and tell me a degree its just a piece of paper
… which at the end of the day it is, a piece of paper. And many only learn what they’re fed by their teachers. Been alive during the past 3-4 years, should give you an idea of what i am talking about. Many only follow orders.
@@Me_Cavemanintelligence brings about innovation. an old and experienced individual would do something which has already been done, just efficiently. its the degrees which bring about a new line of thinking and different approaches to a problem. both have their good sides
No matter what you do in life, whether you have a college degree (BA, MA PHD) etc., you have to do it with a good work ethic, wonderful morals, and always be kind and respectful to the person next to you. If you start a project, always finish it.❤
if nobody pursues PhD's anymore in science and technology, who will conduct the research that advances our understanding of science and who will teach the next generation of scientists and engineers?
8 out of 10 (in Nigeria, with Nigerians anywhere they may be, 9.999 out of 10.000) go for a PhD to get a title. To hell with any research or the betterment of mankind. That's why only very few of them turn out to have any value to society. It's all about ego and better life prospects. Same with the other degree levels. It's all a waste of time and money for the overwhelming number of people. And they're progressively getting dumber and dumber every decade
People with PhD’s in my opinion are the people that usually are the worst at training and teaching others. A PhD isn’t required for advancement in technology. Elon just said they are useful but for most people a PhD is not, and he’s right.
Unironically this is the smartest thing I've heard him say. And no, that's not me calling him dumb or anything. It is the most impressive thing I've heard him say.
Good answer to a strange question. Here's my take. I wanted to teach at a college level in the U.S. To do that where I want to, I need a PhD. Simple as that. The only question you need to ask is whether you NEED it. Also, two things people dont often know about PhD programs in the U.S. A) they pay you to go--it's a job. B) In most programs I know of, it is preferred you do not have an MA degree first.
If you get a PhD in engineering but do research in non-applied theoretical areas, you are of little use to the industry. If your PhD is in an applied field, your peers with a bachelors are technicians relative to what you can do or create
That’s exactly what I worked to do for my topic. Found a customer with a strategic need/problem in a field that I’m interested in. They agreed to fund me, and my institution couldn’t resist.
Pay attention to who you are; then be the best that you can be. When I was young, people asked me to explain things to them, so I realized I was a teacher.
Ppl always come to me for help when they are having issues especially relationship issues. Ppl always come to me when they are hurting and in need of support ever since I was a kid. Ppl always came to me for guidance, direction, help, encouragement ect. When done talking with them I could see and feel their vigor to keep fighting and going another day. So what’s a good job for someone who ppl naturally gravitate towards to open up and be guided. I’m one of those intuitive ppl who can read a room of emotions in seconds hate that feeling. It’s one of the reasons I’m mostly a loner but as I said the one family and friends will call to spill their hearts when they are emtionally or physically wounded or exhausted. I’ve been through things many couldn’t survive but not many know.
@@boundariessetinstone5893 wow. I think we both have very similar gifts. I’ve asked people a very similar question (people that are close to me or have known me for over a decade) and they’ve answered, a teacher, a coach, a therapist, as you can see, they’re all related to helping that individual and also understanding their emotions while navigating their emotions to help them reach a solution. Let me know if you have any other ideas!
I think the main message is in the line" Create" something that makes a difference" ... If a phd is directly a part of if that then it does matter if not probably not You can be a highly trained musician and never write a song you will be employed by those who write the songs many of those cannot even read music.....
He didn’t answer the question. Do a PhD if 1) you like to 2) want a career in academia. Impact comes in many ways, you can do research in academia or industry and you can even be a good manager and investor like Elon. All of those things can have a positive impact. If you want a glamorous or lucrative career, a PhD is of no use. -Someone with a PhD
T HAVE INCURRED SO MUCH LOSSES TRADING ON MY OWN...I TRADE WELL ON DEMO BUT I THINK THE REAL MARKET IS MANIPULATED... CAN ANYONE HELP ME OUT OR AT LEAST TELL ME WHAT I'M DOING WRONG?
I hope when Elon stabalizes all the projects he's currently working on maybe he could make a higher education certificate program like he's done for his kids schools (he has a special school for his kids that's unorthodox and just focuses on what they're good at instead of memorizational nonsense)
You hmm I don't trust all these PhD in education to know what they are doing when they pump out the most educated people on the planet I'll just believe this shillster to y stark wanabee because I'm a highschool dropout but still project myself as elon. This is legit your brain right now.
@@CeleryMan666 that's not what I said at all, nice strawman though.. college is prohibitively expensive, certificate programs like for example Googles career certificate program is alot more efficient and reasonably priced way to train workers in some fields without putting our youth in crippling debt at 25. cope harder though.
He just is not good an explaining things. People should persue their passion but be realistic about their earnings Elon should stop getting high and getting on Twitter or running toward a microphone.
He said mostly not probably tf laced meth you smoking that you need a phd to understand what he said next. He literally chuckled and gave a slight laugh while saying some yes but mostly not. Me personally I need help with wtf he said next after that starting at utility delta.
@@artugert He seems like an attention whore to me. The topics seem to be ego based rather than to further the interests of one of his businesses. I was routing for his car company to do well, but shortly he will not even be the top ev seller.
Master degree is sufficient platform for someone to do an outstanding job… PhD is for research purposes only the interview apparently needs to get some more information about the purpose of these degrees first before start to fish for answers to turn them down
I have an education degree. I self publish instructions for projects on embroidery machines. A lot of people used my products to make things for other people. So I affect a lot of people in a small way. I love that!
*Legitimate Education/proof of real merit:* .Military Experience .Trade Certification .College degree in Engineering or Computer Science *Illegitimate Education/does not suggest one has any real merit:* .College degree in anything outside of engineering and computer science
If you can demonstrate analytical, logical thinking, with thought process and reasoning, that’s what he looks for. For example one of the questions he asks is, if you have two lightbulbs and a 100 floor staircase, what’s the best way to figure out at what floor a lightbulb when dropped will break. There is no “perfect” solution to this problem, however there are many many approaches, with reasoning behind each approach, he looks at your thought process not your answer.
Utility Delta, I'll use that the next time I order at the drive through...
@Leanne Wesk correct, difference of what I ordered as opposed to what I get.
@Leanne Wesk so you took my burger!
“What’s the utility difference between the cheeseburger and the chicken nuggets?”
@Leanne Wesk *GIVE HIM HIS BURGER BACK, YOU THIEF!*
@@MyselfStefano 😂
To start a company you dont need a degree, but to apply to that same company, you need a degree.
Starting a company from nothing and making it successful enough for people to constantly apply for it is by no means an easy task.
To apply for any job, you need experience and need to be able to demonstrate that experience. Actual real experience contributing to a real project that affected real people.
Most university degrees will have an aspect of that, so anyone who has completed a degree will have some amount of experience. Usually a very tiny amount for a bachelors but a masters or doctorate have a lot more experience tied into them.
So that’s why job applications require a degree.
But if you can demonstrate your experience elsewhere, then that experience is more valuable than a degree. And employers won’t give a fuck if you don’t have a degree.
What Elon is saying here, is to just go and do whatever you want to and make an impact. You don’t need education to do that, go educate yourself
Degrees get you into most companies because nobody got fired for employing the most qualified applicants. Even when they turn out to be useless they just point to the CV - not my fault boss. Before you know it, everyone there has a degree so it becomes a defacto standard.
@@onlygoodpersonby no means an easy task but also by no means requires a degree lol
@@rockyblumble yeah I didn't say they needed a degree
When I started University on the West Coast in 1970 it cost me $90 per quarter and about $10 for books. So under $500 a year. I paid it all myself. I bought a house several years later for $44,500 with a view of the water and mountains on 1 acre of land. Paid $278 month payments. Now they want $20,000 for a year of University and $450,000 for my house. Something happened in between and it was not by accident! They had to employ those well papered people somewhere and needed a lot of money to do it. Government debt loves inflation. Individuals not so much! I had a chance that is not so available today!
you lucky bastard.
What's really funny is at the time everyone (and I mean everyone!) told me it was the stupidest thing to do! They said rent would spiral downwards in the future due to overbuilding!@@rafewheadon1963
Thanks Boomer you for voting for running the printing press and fucking over future generations so you could retire comfortably
People who's primary income that comes from investing is reliant on inflation and prices constantly going up. It's no coincidence those people are in politics influencing policy that benefits their investments.
house inflation: 10x, education: 40x, salary inlation: ? the issue isnt inflation, the issue is when things are not inflated in balance with each other
Only time you should consider a PhD is if you want to go into R&D. Only time you should consider getting a masters is if there is something you specifically want to do that can only be done with a masters. Otherwise, simply having a degree is fine if the field is in demand.
Another thing. People get too caught up on "This successful person didn't have a PhD" or "That successful person didn't finish college"....those people are(or were) usually self motivated individuals who went into their programs with an understanding of the subjects in their curriculum and didn't feel there was anything more for them to learn, and left to do something very specific like start a business or pursue a field of research. These aren't stories of people who failed at college and found success elsewhere, so don't try to compare yourself to them just cause you didn't make it through school. Motivation, discipline, and vision are the keys to success
Underrated comment
Just pass the exam boards you want to work in and show what you have done in those fields over the last to yrs. The best people have been dabbling in their fields since early teens
It's not about what can only be done with a master's, and a PhD is not only for R&D. One of the most useful PhD's for high tech innovation is a PhD in applied math. Godlike problem solving skills are always useful.
@@hammerfist8763 Lol, mathematics depend on good true premises which is oftened assumed
@@safffff1000 I clearly stated Applied Math. Not theoretical. Premises are required for rigorous proofs. Not for volumetric analysis, applied game theory, statistical quality control, differential or matrix math used to solve problems in a production or fabrication environment. Who's going to be better at applying math than an applied mathematician?
He may not have a Phd, but I'll bet the people he hires have advanced degrees.
just be useful
He hires with questions that test someone problem solving abilities and even if they wrong he just wants the mental horsepower to solve big issues
@@LunaWaves yes kween
Some, but it's more about whether or not you can prove that you can do the work.
They often don't require "degrees" per se.
I've personally never been asked for a copy of my college degree in my life.
Tesla contacted me two times for two different roles, I do not have an advanced degree. Or rather, not one that could be considered useful for them or the roles.
For those that get confused about what "utility delta" is: utility (of your creation) means usefulness/value and is a common term in fields such as economics, game theory and machine learning. Delta can be understood as difference/change. So the utility delta of something you'd want to create simply means the added value of the thing you want to create.
Also, using terms like this is not a sign of intelligence or sophistication. It's a sign that you hang out with a particular group of people that commonly use such terms and have incorporated those terms into your own vocabulary because you also find utility in using them. What utility he finds in using them, I leave up to you to decide.
Thank you. This is not part of my everyday vocabulary, snd i was hung up on the shape of the letter *∆* thinking of a three-way connection or effect or something... 🤷
This dude said Elon is using big words to sound smart lmao
Very good.😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
Well done! You have a heart of gold. It comes through in your thoughts.
Thank you. I wasn’t quite sure but got the sense that THAT was what he was talking about.
Misleading title. People spin Musk up too often to be a “college is useless” advocate. The idea he expresses here is reality, however. Continued education such as masters and PhDs are *sometimes* useful. But they aren’t useless or a waste of time for every career field. In heavily expertise fields it can be very helpful. Take his own company for example, engineers working on Tesla products greatly benefit from continued college education. That isn’t to say it’s impossible to gain an education without experience in the field in lieu of it, but gaining experience in *parallel* with an education can expedite peoples progress.
Yeah I don’t think saying whether or not school is useful in a TH-cam Short’s the best way to go. If it was an hour long debate then it’d be interesting.
having a degree does show that you’re willing to put it the hard work to get something achieved, whatever it may be.
Well of course. Nobody thinks a PhD is useless in all fields. What most people go to school for is useless even if they get a PhD. Yeah if you’re going to be a doctor obviously it’s very useful. No one would ever say being a doctor and getting educated to be a doctor is bad. Except like 16 people on earth and they are morons. You can be very against higher education in every way and then still acknowledge but if you want to go to school for a handful of certain fields it’s a great idea if you stick to it and do it intelligently
Engineering is applied science so it makes sense for a degree. For most other things degree is a waste of time that slows down education. Learning directly from the experts is the best form of education better than any degree or PhD in the world.
Any engineering job at tesla, spacex, etc requires an engineering degree. One only needs to look at the job postings.
I did a PhD because it was the easiest way to immigrate from the Middle East to Europe. Then, I immigrated to the US and got a job in learning and development. If I were born and raised in a developed country, I would have never thought of going through the hardship of a PhD.
Hey Im currently studying HR and L&D. Can you explain in brief which courses/colleges you went to and what were the job prospects for this field in the european country you went to?
@@RamMohammadJosephKaurYou are a crazy person asking a random person such question.
@@SPenninah0425 why?
@@SPenninah0425 stop poking your nose in others business
@Mahalakshmi-Khan Hi, I did a PhD. in organizational behavior at the University of Paris Nanterre and then a postdoctoral fellowship in impact assessment of learning programs. In parallel, I gave courses in HR and project management at multiple universities and business schools in France. Afterward, I immigrated to the US and wanted to move to industry. I started by working on my own as a learning programs developer for small clients (the first ones where friends who have startups and for whom I did some projects for free just to gain some experience and fill my CV) + earned some certificatios in HR and instructional design. 2 years later, I applied for positions in learning and development and got a position of a Learning Program Manager at a construction company in the US.
He’s saying getting a PhD in some cases is not the correct trajectory for someone with a great idea.
If you have a phenomenal business idea, going into business school for 4 years would not be the best or quickest route to creating your business.
PhD takes lot more than 4 years
@@Z3phlar they weren’t referring to a phd in the second paragraph bud
@@FruitCoupes I think they were bud. Give your balls a tug.
@@FruitCoupes he was. Even says going to "business school for 4 years" in the second paragraph.
@@mrspams3489 yes. Business school. Not a post-graduate program for a PhD.
He didn't laugh at the idea of getting a PhD. He even said it is right for some people. He just laughed at the unconventional nature of his answer.
Its like the joke about physicts. If they didnt get a phd to teach theory, they are fairly useless. I have a friend with a Maaters in math and for him to get a job is hard. Most of the time he gets jobs in computer science writing software.
@@kaijen2688 a Phd in mathematics is very overkill for someone who wants to code php/c/whatever, a MSc in mathematics already means he performs at the top level of coders.
@@JacobBogersyou do know there is an entire career called scientific programming right? Web dev jobs are stupid. A PhD in applied mathematics is just the entry point to the gigantic career of a scientific programmer, and newsflash, it is MUCH harder than web dev.
correct.
Elon apologist says WHAT ??
Casually using "delta" in convos signals his peer group
what does it mean?
@@skipperofschool8325 delta is a Greek letter it means change in science.
@@TeacherToolkitDemo
so he said "utility delta (change)"
like a.. change of.. utilities?
???
@@skipperofschool8325 what I believe this means is how effective your creation is in comparison to the most cutting edge technology.
@@keiharris332
ohh, ok
thank you
Degrees aren’t necessary but they are very helpful at showing time management, dedication, goal driven people who can problem solve and complete tasks. That’s what company’s want
Medical doctors should not have a degree ?
@@quantumpolariton122 you do realize there are other degrees besides MDs, right? Obviously I’m not saying doctors but you’re wanting to feel smart and decided to argue against a point I clearly didn’t make. Trying to take arguing out of the shower eh?
@@flyberd7848 well then you should have not generalised. And phds not just degrees are necessary to work to some companies, like many chemical company in Germany and say research department at intel, so your wrong there too.
@@quantumpolariton122 what about degrees in horticulture, botany, zoology, software design, web design, coding, geology… these are examples, that you will find people in the real world don’t always have degrees for and they have experience. Even in chemical/lab research some people may not have degrees, I’ve worked in labs where my lab manager didn’t have a bachelors (she was an idiot). I did say degrees were helpful dumb dumb. I didn’t say you didn’t need one, but degrees were helpful because it is possible to have experience that replaces the need for one. In the real world you will find even the EPA desires degrees but will also look at experience. Experience is really helpful but degrees are easier to showcase knowledge and abilities. Reading comprehension must be hard.
@@flyberd7848 answer me one question, dumb dumb. How do you get experience in a company if you don’t even have a degree to show them?
and your mixing many different professions together. You can learn web design but certainly not zoology. Do you realise that researcher in zoology at a university, not only has a degree but a PhD, then several years post doc experience, then several years as a research fellow , and then only can you get a permanent position at the university?
If you wanna talk out of your back side at least turn around so I can hear you properly
he lost me at “utility delta”
Delta is difference. So how much more better/different this new "thing" would be
Its how useful your idea is.
Very useful for small number of people (Cancer cure)
Or quite useful for vast number of people
(Entertainment)
@@rizkyekaputra9960 cancer cure would be for a vast number of people. Cancer causes 1 in every 6 deaths. You’re talking about something that kills tens of millions of people every year
Haha 😂
🤣
As someone who has a PhD in electrical engineering, I have to agree with him. It’s complicated.
If you can findsomone that you think is capable of it but doesn't have one. It's better to hire them and train them to do they job instead of them focusing years trying to generalise a subject?
@@mryellow6918 Depends on the person. Some train easier in particular fields and might also learn slower in other areas.
I'm an electrician....... what was your thesis about...?
Would you recommend electrical engineering over electrical maintenance. I’m currently in trade school and not sure if the 4 more years of school is worth it.
@@lukemarvenko2845 These are completely different areas, electrical engineering... Lots of maths and theory, simulations etc. Electrical maintenance mostly practical.
Looking for a reaction “if you want to be useful should you get a PHD” is a silly question. It will depend on the person. Too many variables
I have always wanted to expand my business but I could not do that because the cash was not forth coming as I had planned
...compared to robots; ehh. Doesn't matter.
If you want to make every single useful person more useful, get a PhD. If you want to be a useful individual, stay at Bachelor's.
Leading/loaded question more like. Take any degree/skill one wants to argue against, and one can come up with such a question.
Immunoseb and Immunbio, CoQ10 and Lipoic Acid, Palmitoylethanolamide are listed as possible therapeutic interventions in papers on the NIH.
A Randomized Controlled Trial of the Efficacy of Systemic Enzymes and Probiotics in the Resolution of Post-COVID Fatigue
As someone who considered getting a PhD, I agree with that, too many people pursue a PhD as a way to demand a higher salary or consider themselves more intelligent then others, which is not necessarily the case.
Well clearly this is wrong to get a PhD you need to first pass your GCSEs then go to your a levels and get 7 to 8 then go to uni which is difficult in its own right then have to pass through 11 years of that there is no way PhDs don't require super high IQ and natural ability your comment holds so much delusion it's like those who think any 1 can become rich with effort no they can't genetics places a massive barrier this is like those who use this mentality to screw over disabled people even knowing genetic bio bank data exists with high causation between poverty and iq they still jump back to disabled people and tell those people it's there fault and there not trying hard enough well maybe humans are the sacred cows if your a creationist but if you accept darwin which i assume you do you would realize most of our actions is done by our neural wiring and our genetics
why didn't you get PhD?
If you do a PhD for those reasons you’re likely not to finish. It’s requires high level of self motivation to complete which you can do only if you’re motivated.
if you pursue a PhD to demand better pay then you don't know anything about PhDs. IMO they're more for people passionate about discovering new things in their field (while being equipped to do so by their institution).
“How can people be useful who wanna be”
Elon: “well actually I have a math formula for that.”
Elon in 2025: just buy our robot, he'll replace you
That doesn't surprise me
I think this way too. Just lack of funds to bring my ideas to life lol
Underrated comment right here 😂
Brilliant 👍😂
Once the mind becomes focused, learning never stops. Constantly evolving.
I am constantly learning! I absolutely love information providing shows. Even like utube and Google! I watch documentaries because I like them!
@@tudiecampagna5793Good 😀😀😀
😅😅😅
yep - its at that point that lectures have less success because your mind goes on autopilot to go in the direction to learn what it needs - it begins to feed itself
Well, I have been blessed with this life just once, I have only one life...I don't care whether other people consider my work "useful". Like people, don't ask yourself "how to be useful", just do what makes you happy (yeah I am not practical but who cares)
The thing about PhD, you think it’s all the great stuff but when you ask someone who is in the process for 4-5 years most of them will tell you it’s a waste of time and effort. But the cold hard truth is, you have to waste these efforts in order to know what is important and how to do things. There’s no easy way around it, both for Elon and a normal PhD student.
And if you want to work for Elon, you probably need to have a PhD.
So I think it's kind of idiotic statement, since he wouldn't hire anyone without.
@@sexykjetil yea but he is selling his image here. Its about promoting his brand, the "too cool for school" kid. And as you said, as if he hires people without a phd.
@@mrspams3489 The dangerous thing is that young people are easily led by this people, not only Elon but so many others who gives so called advice for success.
Hopefully most have a strong father figure in the home, that can guide the kids the best way.
The thing is PhD is useless, if you didn't learn anything while in the process. It's the same with education, you can memories and get a good mark. That's awesome, but then you learn almost nothing and regret later. I feel that, education system is broken phrase is not fully right. I do agree that the way we compress so much in very short amount that, students have no way but memorise. But I feel like this exams and PhD and university, isn't just to study and have a degree or certificate. But it's more into, the process you make up to get that degree, because the process is what makes your degree worth. Not that final exam nor the degree itself.
Just giving my opinion here, you can contribute how ever you want!
@@allsides5626 you said it all, maybe you won't need to know the answer...But you will need the tools you picked up on the way, because you will encounter new problems to solve!
He threw in a real life formula
😂😂
Sure
@@fredducaunt You're mocking because you're too sdupit to understand 😂
@@zak61221well time isn't infinite in practice. We all die at some point so you should only consider a lifetime
@@monzerfaisal3673or maybe even more in some cases.
@@zak61221which due to the finite lifespan of humans affected is still awesome, as it essentially makes the limited time spent alive better. Plus it only goes to zero if left untouched - if constantly maintained or even improved it itself goes to infinity.
As a PhD student…he’s right
As someone graduating this summer with a PhD, I agree! Hang in there btw!
Tbh i have met lots of Phd students and i can say they are not most of the wise people ive met in life .They cant even win an argument ,prove their point or even like Evolve in the society or cope with a group of People.
@@karimyassine98 she says eloquently in a totally coherent sentence…
@@karimyassine98 because those people only get PhD not because they wanted to, but either following others or recommended to them.
@@karimyassine98, the more I work on my Ph.D., the more I second-guess myself. I'm definitely not going to convince you of anything if I can't even convince myself. On the other hand, I can prove pretty conclusively that if you haven't studied at all what I've been working on for years, you definitely don't have a clue about it.
It’s a pretty sensible answer, no shade intended. PhDs are time consuming and often expensive, focusing on a narrow rail of knowledge. Most likely your overall impact will be minimal.
But you get to study what interests you, and if you’re lucky, gain useful skills
❤🎉🎉❤Bravo Mt Musk Elon
True. Yes. I did what interested me. It was a conundrum I was bent on solving, creating a path to, and did. It was the big exercise that beckoned and PhD, the discipline. Money not it
For commenters reading this, in the U.S. PhD programs pay you a stipend. It's just a job. The only potentially "expensive" part is that you are missing out on income, I suppose. Also, in the U.S., programs prefer you not to have an MA.
Like already mentioned, you get paid for a PhD not the other way around. The amount of problem you encounter during your PhD makes you a good problem solver, a good communicator, and to be able to think critically, all useful transferrable skils
Summarized : to become the most useful is to find a way to impact a vast amount of people, create something of that sort that makes a difference. It's not about phds but how far you can think and create.
@@martingarreis You summed up what he said in a perfect way! Hats off! People don't seem to consider who is telling the message, and in this case, it is very important.
I always get asked why I did not pursue a PhD (as I have a research master and publications). The honest answer is that I don't see that for the type of impact I want to have, I need to write for a niche of 50 experts in my own room. Somebody else might thrive on that, but I like to work for shorter goals, more gratification, more visible outcome.
You are right, For others and yourself short-term goals and achievements Benefiting more people, is what he is talking about is better usually.
And what did you research? I can’t imagine anyone ever saying that about true chemistry physics and biology research. It’s either private research or academic, and good luck getting a private research gig without a PhD haha.
@@TheHermitProcess I worked for a think tank on a project basis, and I work in academia, it's not unthinkable at all to co-auther a research publication in my position to the network I have in my role. But it's not my primary goal either.
"... I like to work for shorter goals, more gratification, more visible outcome." Huge applause for that perspective.
I'm now thinking whether I should pursue PhD in Molecular Biology or not... I have Master in Cell Research and I was always thinking that I want to do PhD... but I cannot see the final goal. I'm not planning to become a Professor neither I want to, but I just don't know what to do.... I also don't want to do routine work at some Biotech company.... especially since the salaries there are not that great, not like in the HighTech.
Is anyone there in the same situation as me? Or perhaps was? Any ideas? help?
Absolutely! Everybody has their gift, focus on what that is and find the tools that make that gift happen!
Not everyone on the team needs a PhD, but its good to have at least one or more on the team.
Tesla and space x both require advanced degrees or serious experience that you can only get… through advance degrees
I think he’s talking generally about the world population as a whole
Not everyone can and will be a rocket scientist, doctor, or engineer.
That's absolutely not true. If you can show certain qualities or level of thinking and problem solving, you can get the job. He doesn't hire on the basis of some paper that you may or may not have obtained on your own. He hires based on skills and thinking that you demonstrate in the hiring process. If you're a programmer, you have to be able to demonstrate you understand programming verbally, situationally, and through a demonstration of your ability through a test or series of questions. If you're a forklift driver.... not nearly as complicated. I am actually going through the hiring process now.
@@luisvillalobos6517 you rock. !
That's because the actual answer is mostly yes.
"The Best for the Group comes when everyone in the group does what's best for himself AND the group."
- John Nash, Mathematician & Nobel Laureate
Yes. ”Ubuntu”. If something isn’t good for everyone it is not good for anyone.
You are right Mr. Musk my father started 2 businesses retired well to do at 55 with only an 8th grade education he taught me how to run those businesses I only had a high school education at that time, later I got an RN degree to support my husband and 4 children because he had a heart attack and couldn’t work. Thank you for helping to straighten this country up.
I’m 75 and I weep when I see what’s happening.
My coworker in the roofing union studied at Stanford university and got doctoral degree after many years. He still can’t find work because he doesn’t have work experience. He’s currently full of debt. Now he’s working as an apprentice making what I made 4 years ago. I make $30 an hour more than him and debt free! He will eventually make as much as me but college isn’t always the solution to make good money. And have the weekends off unless you want overtime! 💰
But i bet he at least understands the question and answer in this video
What did he study at Stanford?
That’s sounds weird, what did he get his PhD in? These days a STEM PhD from a tier 1 school is an immediate 150-250k starting salary and it only goes up from there
@@diverman1023 The comment is probably not true. If by any chance it were, it must have been a very niche degree, or the person didn't take advantage of any of the university infrastructures and has a bad resume.
I mean thats all very well. But a PhD is designed for someone who wishes to do scientific research (academia), not for someone who wishes to go into industry. Hence why the misalignment between the skills set require, but this is it always the case as someone said above if you are a STEM PhD. Just so you know this.
For me getting a degree is about studying with discipline, some cannot focus without money or grades being involved
We don't need to have money to create prosperity, money robbed us from our wealth
All of his technology comes from former doctors of physics, chemistry, engineering, maths. Standing on the shoulders of giants, Elon.
Michael Faraday and Sir Isaac Newton didn't have PhDs either.
My grandpa was an "engineer" for Allison and developed helicopter engines for defense contracts. He had zero degrees.
@@rockssolid2543 Feynman, Dirac, Einstein, Heisenberg, von Neumann, (...), did. What's the point?
@@MS-fg8qo Takes a PhD to know.
Musk got an electrical engineering degree. He might’ve benefited from a masters, but certainly some people don’t benefit from advanced degrees. But the fundamental physics and chemistry sometimes does need advanced research degrees.
the problem is that Elon equates usefulness with making things. He was asked what could help people figure out how to *be most useful* and responded with a formula for how to calculate the scale and impact *of an invention.*
It's as dumb as saying "do you think people who want to be useful become a firefighter as the best way to achieve it ?"
There is no single path to be useful, it would be counterproductive if everyone had a PhD or worked as a firefighter. But it doesn't mean he thinks that's useless...just saying because some people didn't get Elon's speech.
Elon: nah bro you don't need a PhD
Elon's HR: PhD with 20 years industry experience in xyz required for this position
He is talking about billionaire people, not for an ordinary people.
@@_bug_y.t its not "ordinary people".. its the people who made musk billionare in the first place.. its them who actually did the big brain work of inventing these technologies.. musk is just a businessman, not an inventor
He has said on many occasions he hires people without degrees
@@aabc that's bullshit. 🤣They are just labours who are taking orders and working on his vision and plans.By your logic ,every business owner and entrepreneurs are stupid and the employees are the smart people.A company with 1000 employees and no leader will go nowhere.If he could,he could do it all alone but to do a scalable business you need workers who you give commands to and you give back benefits for their time and skills.Your comment is so stupid 🤣
@@aabc ah yes. chief engineer. definitely just a businessman.
It's amazing how he sounds perfectly South African and then American in one statement
South African?😂
@@con_el_maestro3544 Elon musk is from south africa
@@con_el_maestro3544Elon musk is South African is their point lol
@@jamalyeboah4322 yeah and I'm also South African, and Afrikaans people do not sound like Elon Musk
@@con_el_maestro3544because he is not Afrikaner, more Anglo than anything else.
As a retired RN I found. a university nursing system
a poor program. Nursing was more effective from a 3 year focus of nursing.
Few Engineers get PHDs or even Master's Degrees. They do get many further certifications and PE licenses etc because they are practical and useful. Its not all research. Engineers are the ones who attempt to make PhD's theories actually work in real life.
You are correct. I have Engineers working under me. And yes, i have a PhD.
In other words, in the words of Sheldon from Big Bang Theory, the Oompa Loompa's of science, lol.
@@patrickjohnson568 🤣 Spot on!
engineers make lots of things work...on paper, lol. so many engineered stuff that is on a set of drawings often gets "modified" in the field so it will actually work. and engineers continue to make the same mistakes because they refuse to leave their chair
Thats why they make "as built" drawings. But any significant changes will only go thru engr or they blow their errors and omissions insurance. Someone with a degree has to sign off on the drawings@@feelingtardy
What is a PhD? Many people do a batchelors degree and that's essentially a hard version of high-school but you're maybe not living at home and you have some grants, loans and these days you have a part time job too. You leave your degree with lots of knowledge but very little to no practical skill. A master course gets you a year to 18th months of a research apprenticeship. A PhD is basically a 3-6 year research job with little pay and a 60 hour working week. You get--- for the first time---to experience managing your own projects (if you're lucky with some guidance) and have to take responsibility for problem solving. If your PhD is academic, same thing but with theoretical problems to solve.You do a PhD with two paths ahead: 1) A post-doctoral position maybe leading to an academic professorship (Tenure if someone dies) 2) You leave and go into industry. 3) You leave and stop working in that profession. There are around 20% of graduates that do a PhD in science. Of them, around 20% take on a postdoctoral position. Around 20% of them will do 2 or 3 postdoctoral positions. Some of them may get a professorship. Most people in that path drop out at some juncture.
If you for instance do a PhD in molecular biology and end up applying for a job working at big a pharma company, there will be 100 graduate jobs for every 2 positions requiring a PhD. Thus, having a PhD makes job hunting harder. It's easier and cheaper to grow your own graduate into the worker you want than it is to pay postdoctoral wages to then have to do the same thing to a PhD holder. Unless you have some very sought after skills (a specific niche), you're better off going into industry instead of a PhD if you think being a professor isn't for you.
PhD students in biological sciences can end up in teaching, Medical communications, medical sales and a variety if other affiliated professions that aren't research. Thus, don't do a PhD in research unless you really love research and that's what you want as a career. Do a masters first before a PhD, so you find out what the life is like before you sign up for a full PhD.
There are many benefits going through the process of doing a PhD: you learn to sell ideas (how you get funded), you get to learn how to plan large projects and plan how to write a thesis. You'll be good at writing after you complete your PhD. However, it is not an easy path and not for the uncommitted.
PhD in subjects less well funded will actually cost you money---they won't come with grants. In these cases, you can't afford not to be sure it's what you live for.
My advice for PhD students is this:
1) Put your PhD work first, everything else last.
2) Get into work early and ask your questions before everyone gets into their own work.
3) Before you start research, read every major paper and review article your PhD supervisor has written or been involved with. Read all the main papers they cite often. Spend most of your 6 months at the beginning learning where the field is at and where the interesting questions are at. Don't just start doing work on what your supervisor suggests, as you won't have his perspective. To be independent, you need to be on their page so you can talk at their level. This will impress them and they will take you more seriously.
4) If you're doing a PhD, and you're not getting the help you need nor are you able to work out how to do things, network with other people not in your lab/department! Get on forums and ask questions. Talk to other researchers not in your lab or department. Socialise with them. Get an outside mentor---maybe a retired researcher. Use ChatGPT. Do whatever it takes to broaden your perspective and find a way to solve your problems.
5) Always have 3 projects: one main, one backup, and one wildcard. Don't expect any of them to work. Don't be afraid to transition a project that's stuck for lower hanging fruit, especially if the equipment is not sensitive enough or some other technical reason which can't be overcome within the duration.
That's a lot of words damn
To those u got confuse what he ment is that Delta Utility Model (DUM) is a multi-attribute decision model which is used to help designer making decisions when trade-offs exist in design tasks. The utility theory is applied to quantify preferences in the model. Delta is devoted to innovation and systematically developing new products and technologies, particularly those that are high-efficiency and energy-saving. Aiming to reduce global warming and ensure mankind's sustainable future with better value and performance, Delta is continuously enhancing our engineering capabilities and is committed to developing innovative technologies and solutions for a better tomorrow.
Thanks bro, but why do you know this?
@@questionmark9619homie did a quick google search, found an article, paraphrased for the rest of us. Easy as that.
@@questionmark9619 Sounds a lot like a ChatGPT answer after the first half sentence with the typos😂
@@nickgibboni8469 Keen eye! 🦅
How was that confusing? He explains what he means right after.
EXACTLY! That is why I have always called PHDs short for "Piled Higher & Deeper" it is to force you into a box & surpresses creativity
Bro just created an equation for the meaning of life.
nope, he did it fer capitalism :)
Npc spotted
Hey , look another gruppie
@@Srt3D01-db-01😂
@@Dave.Mustaine.Is.Geniushe said useful not profitable.
I’d love to see this full interview, what’s it from?
Leaving a reply in hopes someone drops the link
Ted
Agreed, the context around this conversation would be....useful
I think this might be from MKBHD’s interview with hom
Here’s the link to Elon’s interview with Sam Altman: th-cam.com/video/tnBQmEqBCY0/w-d-xo.html
What’s most important is to find one’s purpose and ultimate goals in life and pursue it with passion and courage regardless of having a higher or highest academic achievement or less. Some professional students remain students because or while waiting to find their purpose and goal in life
My father once said that “everything in this world is made by human hands, for human hands”. 🙌🏻 meaning that you can educate yourself by putting your hands on things that you are interested in.
I got cert 1, 2, 3, 4, a diploma, then masters in IT, got nowhere with it but cleaning out keyboards. Went for a internship with a indie animation studio which cost nothing and am now a professional cartoonist and animator wokring for Fountain's Pen Productions in L.A
Wow.
Good for you
Wow I was not expecting such a superb comment! Impressed once again.
College used to be an education program, now it's a business.
Então bem.assim
People forget that degrees are needed, particularly PhDs because it’s technological progress that made the West wealthy in the first place and continues to help it in exploiting resources from poorer countries. It’s easy for a billionaire to say anything about stuff they don’t understand but a whole system is made of many types of skilled people and just because they don’t make a lot of noise doesn’t mean that they aren’t contributing to progress.
Such a beautiful equation 🌞😁😇 Simple and 100% to the point ❤️
I find the way Elon’s brain works to be absolutely fascinating. I was never a numbers person, but I like how calculated he is with his analysis. It’s almost like anything in life could be a mathematical formula.
The way Elon's brain works is it thinks complicated things can be simplified to simple formulas, resulting in him vastly over promising and under delivering. Most of his ideas are a load of shit. He said the Hyperloop was as simple as an air hockey table inside a tube. Not true, and like most of his dumb ideas is in the process of failing.
Very true. As a matter of fact, just about anything you can comprehend in totality, can be written down mathematically. A contradictory example of this is, infinity. This is often where either our minds can not comprehend, or our math is incomplete. Have fun with that rabbit hole!
@@BigReptileCrew 🤡👉🗑️
@@BigReptileCrew orrrr you're a salty liberal incel
@@BigReptileCrew most people barely got through highschool and are easily impressed by basic iamverysmart shit it's honestly both amazing and sadining how stupid d and gullible people are
The average person who just finished high-school at 18 is going to be in the labour force till ~55. I'd rather spend 4 years enhancing my overall level of education and then proceed with working the next 32 years than I would just working for 37 years. People are in such a rush. There is too much life ahead to try and have everything you want instantly.
Only thing that actually is a rush is having children and not dying before they get married
@@16m49x3 why? Having children is not a rush. I think definitely every healthy couple should at least 1 child that's trve, but what is in a rush is intellect, money, sexuality, love, sports, health, nature ye know...
A PhD is about 6 years on top of those 4 though
Most people do not retire at 55. The average age has been 61 the past several years and is likely to increase
I agree. Most people I work with who have a PhD do the same work I do without one. In fact, I would say that having a PhD does not show how competent you are at doing the job. On the other hand, an MS was very beneficial -- at least in my case.
😂😂😂 I love it,” Mostly not.”
So true
THANKS FOR THE INFO ELON!!👍👍👍👍
answer is yes and no, degrees don't mean you can get rich, BUT i wouldn't trust a person to design a skyscrapper or a surgeon to operate on me and tell me a degree its just a piece of paper
I'd take an old and experienced person over a young person with fifty degrees; experience even conquers intelligence.
… which at the end of the day it is, a piece of paper. And many only learn what they’re fed by their teachers. Been alive during the past 3-4 years, should give you an idea of what i am talking about. Many only follow orders.
A PhD is only 1 kind of degree. A bs or masters yes, PhD? Thete are a ton of masters degrees that are useless out there.
@@Me_Cavemanintelligence brings about innovation. an old and experienced individual would do something which has already been done, just efficiently. its the degrees which bring about a new line of thinking and different approaches to a problem. both have their good sides
@@Me_Cavemanyou can’t just cut open people or design a toy bridge in your garage and then operate on people
No matter what you do in life, whether you have a college degree (BA, MA PHD) etc., you have to do it with a good work ethic, wonderful morals, and always be kind and respectful to the person next to you. If you start a project, always finish it.❤
if nobody pursues PhD's anymore in science and technology, who will conduct the research that advances our understanding of science and who will teach the next generation of scientists and engineers?
You're trying to use logic in this circle. It won't work
Einstein and Tesla (Nikola) didn't have a PhD.
8 out of 10 (in Nigeria, with Nigerians anywhere they may be, 9.999 out of 10.000) go for a PhD to get a title. To hell with any research or the betterment of mankind.
That's why only very few of them turn out to have any value to society. It's all about ego and better life prospects. Same with the other degree levels. It's all a waste of time and money for the overwhelming number of people. And they're progressively getting dumber and dumber every decade
People with PhD’s in my opinion are the people that usually are the worst at training and teaching others. A PhD isn’t required for advancement in technology. Elon just said they are useful but for most people a PhD is not, and he’s right.
certainly, not the most people will advance the science and civilization or teach next generation. Hence most people shouldnt go for PhD
Unironically this is the smartest thing I've heard him say. And no, that's not me calling him dumb or anything. It is the most impressive thing I've heard him say.
I really enjoyed this genuine and reasoned discussion. I’m very glad to have come across it. Well done presentation.
STEM is still important. To be at the cutting edge of Science, A.I, Quantum computing, space engineering you still need to get a degree or PHD.
this guy answers everything by saying yes and no simultaneously
the real world is ambiguous
The interviewer laughed first; that’s why Elon joined in laughing. He wasn’t laughing at people getting PHDs; he said ‘mostly not.’ Misleading title!
Thats how social media works. People picking sides of a fight that doesn't exist.
Being a good parent fits his category.
Amen!
Good answer to a strange question. Here's my take. I wanted to teach at a college level in the U.S. To do that where I want to, I need a PhD. Simple as that. The only question you need to ask is whether you NEED it. Also, two things people dont often know about PhD programs in the U.S. A) they pay you to go--it's a job. B) In most programs I know of, it is preferred you do not have an MA degree first.
I love how he barely blinks like a robot would
Ambiguous statement detected. Exterminate.
If you get a PhD in engineering but do research in non-applied theoretical areas, you are of little use to the industry. If your PhD is in an applied field, your peers with a bachelors are technicians relative to what you can do or create
That’s exactly what I worked to do for my topic. Found a customer with a strategic need/problem in a field that I’m interested in. They agreed to fund me, and my institution couldn’t resist.
Pay attention to who you are; then be the best that you can be. When I was young, people asked me to explain things to them, so I realized I was a teacher.
Ppl always come to me for help when they are having issues especially relationship issues. Ppl always come to me when they are hurting and in need of support ever since I was a kid. Ppl always came to me for guidance, direction, help, encouragement ect. When done talking with them I could see and feel their vigor to keep fighting and going another day. So what’s a good job for someone who ppl naturally gravitate towards to open up and be guided. I’m one of those intuitive ppl who can read a room of emotions in seconds hate that feeling. It’s one of the reasons I’m mostly a loner but as I said the one family and friends will call to spill their hearts when they are emtionally or physically wounded or exhausted. I’ve been through things many couldn’t survive but not many know.
@@boundariessetinstone5893 wow. I think we both have very similar gifts. I’ve asked people a very similar question (people that are close to me or have known me for over a decade) and they’ve answered, a teacher, a coach, a therapist, as you can see, they’re all related to helping that individual and also understanding their emotions while navigating their emotions to help them reach a solution. Let me know if you have any other ideas!
Trade school for computer skills in 1988. Worked in data centers until 2021.
This is going to be on my microeconomics final.
Dude simple plugs out every emotional aspect a human is capable of upholding!
Sounds like you got a phd and can’t do much with it
He is on the autistic spectrum after all.
Well rounded sophisticated human beings usually do that. Emotion is a thing of the uneducated.
"How should someone figure out how they can be more useful?"
-"Well, the most useful thing they can do is volunteer to go to Mars."
...become a robot.
🚀
I think the main message is in the line" Create" something that makes a difference" ...
If a phd is directly a part of if that then it does matter if not probably not
You can be a highly trained musician and never write a song
you will be employed by those who write the songs many of those cannot even read music.....
I don't why some people call this man a genius.
Why wouldn't they? He's an inventor.
He didn’t answer the question. Do a PhD if 1) you like to 2) want a career in academia. Impact comes in many ways, you can do research in academia or industry and you can even be a good manager and investor like Elon. All of those things can have a positive impact. If you want a glamorous or lucrative career, a PhD is of no use.
-Someone with a PhD
You missed the whole thing, and it was so simply put. You're trying to make something simple, complicated. Waste of time.
I have a PhD in materials science, and you can’t do my job without it. Actually, even with a PhD you can barely scratch the surface. So it depends.
scratching the surface of materials science, eh?
@@rianczer yep
@@rianczer ha!
Wow i admire this man so much
God bless you n ur family
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Best haircut he has had to date
true
I hope when Elon stabalizes all the projects he's currently working on maybe he could make a higher education certificate program like he's done for his kids schools (he has a special school for his kids that's unorthodox and just focuses on what they're good at instead of memorizational nonsense)
You hmm I don't trust all these PhD in education to know what they are doing when they pump out the most educated people on the planet I'll just believe this shillster to y stark wanabee because I'm a highschool dropout but still project myself as elon. This is legit your brain right now.
@@CeleryMan666 that's not what I said at all, nice strawman though.. college is prohibitively expensive, certificate programs like for example Googles career certificate program is alot more efficient and reasonably priced way to train workers in some fields without putting our youth in crippling debt at 25. cope harder though.
That’s Sam Altman interviewing Elon. Times have changed
love his honesty
GO ELON.... so true!!
Elon: says we probably don’t need PhDs
Me: needs a phd to understand what he said next
He just is not good an explaining things. People should persue their passion but be realistic about their earnings Elon should stop getting high and getting on Twitter or running toward a microphone.
He said mostly not probably tf laced meth you smoking that you need a phd to understand what he said next. He literally chuckled and gave a slight laugh while saying some yes but mostly not.
Me personally I need help with wtf he said next after that starting at utility delta.
I didn’t even go to college, but found it quite easy to understand. Probably has more to do with what books you read and what media you consume.
@@artugert He seems like an attention whore to me. The topics seem to be ego based rather than to further the interests of one of his businesses. I was routing for his car company to do well, but shortly he will not even be the top ev seller.
@@Applecompuser ok dude, you telling Elon musk what to do lol
Do what you want.. how you want and make any difference
Master degree is sufficient platform for someone to do an outstanding job… PhD is for research purposes only the interview apparently needs to get some more information about the purpose of these degrees first before start to fish for answers to turn them down
This man is literally Tony stark
New PhD requirements should include a thesis on this. 🤯
But then again phds are not designed for people to wish to go into industry, it’s for academic research, where it is a requirement
Please 🥺 explain, "utility delta" love the expression
Change in usefulness
I have an education degree. I self publish instructions for projects on embroidery machines. A lot of people used my products to make things for other people. So I affect a lot of people in a small way. I love that!
Ph.Ds, researchers... Are critical in certain parts of the economy.
More at the foundation where a lot of key knowledge is discovered.
Most millionaire dont have PHD's. Money and assets makes you more powerful than a phd salary
You're assuming it's for the money.
"SOO TRUE!!!"
- anti-college people
PhD is not a taught degree. 🤦♂️ You are just the cheap labour of academia. They should ban PhD degrees.
Lol
As they type this out on phones that years of university research made possible
Elon Musk create beautiful things ✨️ 😍 ❤️ Donna
No use for a PHD in an emerald mine or on a TSLA production line. 😬
He uses robots for that
Those tools and processes won't be there in the first place, if academics hadn't contributed to those!
(Utility - Current State ) × #of Impact = Solution
*Legitimate Education/proof of real merit:*
.Military Experience
.Trade Certification
.College degree in Engineering or Computer Science
*Illegitimate Education/does not suggest one has any real merit:*
.College degree in anything outside of engineering and computer science
If you can demonstrate analytical, logical thinking, with thought process and reasoning, that’s what he looks for.
For example one of the questions he asks is, if you have two lightbulbs and a 100 floor staircase, what’s the best way to figure out at what floor a lightbulb when dropped will break.
There is no “perfect” solution to this problem, however there are many many approaches, with reasoning behind each approach, he looks at your thought process not your answer.
Thinking brains recognize thinking brains and can talk and reason with one another.
I don't know what those bulbs are made of but regular bulbs break from 1m already.
@@MichielvanderBlonk the point is you need to prove it in terms of the question.