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/sci/ - Science & Math

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>> No.12394046 [View]
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12394046

>>12392020
Radin's pseudoscience was put in the trash where it belongs.
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01891/full

>> No.12309552 [View]
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>>12304829
You can tell the person who made this TOTALLY works / studies STEM.

>> No.12306784 [View]
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12306784

I'm finishing up with an entry program in around a week and it looks like I'll be able to take any STEM undergrad I want at a decent university, so I'm wondering if any knowledgeable people lurking could weigh in on how they're finding their respective fields without sugar-coating it.
I've listed my 5 allowed preferences as follows, but I'm able to change them whenever I want within the next month.
>Electrical Engineering
>Electrical and Electronic Engineering
>Science (Applied Physics)
>Biotechnology
>Computer Science
I've read pretty mixed opinions on all of these during my time lurking so I'm not sure what to think.
I really enjoyed physics (even the done to death classical mechanics shit) after my professor teased that some of what we were learning isn't necessarily true anymore and would love to continue down that road, but the employment opportunities seem really limited.
Thoughts?

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