The speakers have no idea what working outside of academia is like. Finding jobs with Physics / Math degrees ranges in difficulty. If you don't mind never using the level of physics you learn in college then there are plenty of jobs using basic math, think algebra, and maybe some statistics if you go into data science type job, but machine learning jobs are better, but even then you tend to use canned ML algorithms, nothing new, no time for research, because for your employer it's business. Academic jobs are highly sought after because after teaching, after faculty meetings you actually get paid to do research, and write papers, but not outside of academia, please the papers I've read by people in industry are 99% garbage and not on fundamental science, but related to specific job project that usually uses basic math.
"Clothes make the Man", (or Woman), but a Degree of any sort is a tool kit for the person who has aquired it intentionally for a purpose. All the policy based institutions with rituals and rote learning have a "one size fits all" attitude of conformity, with a labelling system of words ending in "ism, ist" etc. It isn't the purpose of the kind of adaptive confusion and hopeful investment of time and money, that Universities were designed to Research into practical categorizations, by the original search for meaning and "truth". Issac Newton's life path is the kind of messy brilliance that epitomizes a cultural shift, from Apprenticeships in learning by doing, to surreptitious replacement of ritualistic rote with scientific methodology. There's always a turbulent interface between calculated possibilities and memorized probabilities, that's life in the observable universe.
Get out of here with that bull crap. Physics is extremely versatile. While you may not find a job in physics, you can get a job in just about any other industry where problem solving, mathematics, and computer science/ programming are necessary skills. One that comes to mind is in the investment banking industry or quantitative analysis in the financial sector.
The speakers have no idea what working outside of academia is like. Finding jobs with Physics / Math degrees ranges in difficulty. If you don't mind never using the level of physics you learn in college then there are plenty of jobs using basic math, think algebra, and maybe some statistics if you go into data science type job, but machine learning jobs are better, but even then you tend to use canned ML algorithms, nothing new, no time for research, because for your employer it's business. Academic jobs are highly sought after because after teaching, after faculty meetings you actually get paid to do research, and write papers, but not outside of academia, please the papers I've read by people in industry are 99% garbage and not on fundamental science, but related to specific job project that usually uses basic math.
i completely agree
nice
Sad but true!
Ive gotten 1:54 a lot. It makes sense because I'm a first year, but yes, physicists are a thing
"Clothes make the Man", (or Woman), but a Degree of any sort is a tool kit for the person who has aquired it intentionally for a purpose. All the policy based institutions with rituals and rote learning have a "one size fits all" attitude of conformity, with a labelling system of words ending in "ism, ist" etc.
It isn't the purpose of the kind of adaptive confusion and hopeful investment of time and money, that Universities were designed to Research into practical categorizations, by the original search for meaning and "truth". Issac Newton's life path is the kind of messy brilliance that epitomizes a cultural shift, from Apprenticeships in learning by doing, to surreptitious replacement of ritualistic rote with scientific methodology.
There's always a turbulent interface between calculated possibilities and memorized probabilities, that's life in the observable universe.
Good explanation
i studied bsc in physics and i couldn't find job in my field exept teaching i feel stupid now please any advice on further study
Sir I'm studying in BS Physics 6th semester I want credit Transfer to Australia
What are the field work options for a physicists?
Physical Oceanography??? What about it? Do you Will make very much money?
I'm completed physics career as master degree in India can I work in foreign.. If it is what are the requirements
The language?
@@humanrevelations1949 😂
Master in physics,aren't you kidding??I mean,look at your language!!
@@relddirR I guess they could improve their English, but c'mon that's a bit rude lmao.
@@relddirR shut up
physics leads to unemployment
people dont realize apart from academia, u can start a career in quantitative finance and make a tons of money
Fuck u
Get out of here with that bull crap. Physics is extremely versatile. While you may not find a job in physics, you can get a job in just about any other industry where problem solving, mathematics, and computer science/ programming are necessary skills. One that comes to mind is in the investment banking industry or quantitative analysis in the financial sector.