by rogerhb » Tue 18 Oct 2005, 00:05:17
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PenultimateManStanding', 'S')uppose you earned an advanced degree studying foraminifera and knew them, throughout the ages, in all their forms. Now you spend the rest of your life with these damned things? How about the chemistry of a specific enzyme which you know better than just about anyone in the world. The list goes on and on. Specialties. Wouldn't it be better to drive a truck cross country for a living and just keep up with whatever is happening in science from a safe distance?
It all depends on who will pay you for your knowlege of
foraminifera and how applicable that is in the real world. Hang on, I'll look it up...

. Okay they are "single-celled protists with shells".
Being an electrical/electronic/computer/communications engineer by trade I have always thought it useful to have a skill that was in demand. I have used the same set of skills in both the army and in civilian life so I think that covers my options quite well. I know alot of detail but most importantly I can go by first principals to estimate and know where to find specific information.
Ironic that the trade that you mentioned, some drivers in the US have stopped because they just go into further debt with every load.
But biology and astrophysics? I find them interesting from the curiosity point of view.
"Complex problems have simple, easy to understand, wrong answers." - Henry Louis Mencken