The part about this thread that really pisses me off is that I made some complaints about the curriculum, the public's preconcieved notions, and the professors, and the pro-psych crew returns fire with:
Were it not for the narrow-minded, the forward-thinkers would be indistinguishable.
Anybody else notice how weird physics majors are or is it just me?
Ask a chemistry professor about something other than chemistry and his mind goes blank.
Jebus! Is that really what psych does for you?
My big problem with psych majors is that they think that studying books is a good way to learn about people. Physicists do physics labs, biologists do bio labs, etc., but the simple truth is that a) human subjects open up a mess of issues and thus it is not easy for a psych major to get any real scientific experience, and b) clinical experience in psychology is as irrelevant to daily life as physics or bio is. The average bartender, hustler, or cop has a far better understanding of the way people work and operate in real situations than the psych major does. The idea that anyone would be arrogant enough to imply that their undergrad psych degree would bring them to understand something as enormous and as heinous as the holocaust? Criminey! Talk about your ego trips! Moreover, if I
were looking for perspectives on the cause of the holocaust, I'd sooner ask a history major.
Biologists understand evolution, which is nothing short of being the process which
created the human mind. I personally feel that my understanding of evolution had provided far more understanding of the human mind than psych did, even when my psych classes outnumbered my bio classes.
Anybody who only "memorized facts" in their science classes should chalk that up to a personal failure to recognize that biology, chemistry, and physics are governed by comprehesible concepts. My psych classes have all been based largely on the scores acquired in multiple choice memorization tests taken with a gd scantron. My science classes have been based on comprehension and analysis, and putting the scientific method to work. All of these things have been useful in my life, from treating a chemical burn, to understanding nutrition, to problem solving in panic situations, and above all, in finding a job.
My biggest beef with psych is that it's a subject that, as Will Hunting puts it, could've been acheived with a buck fifty in late charges at the local library. I think that
psychology is absolutely the most fascinating subject that there is to study, but unlike the sciences that are based in labs that I could never afford to do on my own, psychology is something that I personally feel is better studied on your own through independant reading and
exposure to real people in real situations.