Can true intelligence improve most jobs?
I am on the verge of college and thinking about majors. I am interested in some hard sciences, arts, humanities, soft sciences, and history. I have special interests in several of these categories, such as civil engineering and Latin America.
I sometimes think that if I choose history over, say, chemistry, I will seem less intelligent to people. However, I have recently begun toying with the idea that in most jobs, intelligence will help you out regardless. Taxi cab drivers need to be able to read maps well. Cosmetology requires good understanding of certain chemicals and a solid grounding in calculation. Most businesses, even small ones, take a level head when it comes to managing finances, employees, etc.
This can be expanded to academia. You don't have to be brilliant to be a historian, author, or social scientist, but if you are, it would surely show.
This is something to keep in mind when choosing a job: What you do matters, but so does how you do it.
Or do you disagree?
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goatfish57
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While it is true that people skills are important, that does not mean that brains are not. In fact, you can make up for one with the other. My thesis was not that you couldn't be a good but stupid cosmetologist. My thesis was that intelligence could be exercised it that job.
Taxi drivers, too, are best when they're people friendly. However, spatial reasoning is still an asset, and intelligent doesn't equal pretentious; one of my closest friends purports to be "an average guy", and has practically our whole school in his friend roster, but is clearly extremely bright. He can sound smart yet approachable with ease.
As for academia, yes, again, but "may" does not mean "will". Also, one of my special interests is the discovery of the double-helix, and Rosalind Franklin, while profoundly brilliant, did not succeed in discovering the truth not out of a lack of brains but a lack of teamwork. However, she could not have done anything she did without being smart, so even in her case, intelligence helps. Ditto for "softer" academia.
Depends on what you want to do for the next 20+ years. Many skilled white collar careers in areas such as engineering, tech, medicine/chemistry/biology/physics/etc. *require* a degree or three (BS, MA, DR) in the field. Others that are less specialized and less siloed do not necessarily require such a targeted education and still others require only a degree. And of course, there are all those careers that don't require a degree at all yet pay well and be enjoyable & satisfying.
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