I’m thinking Stirling university might suit me the best for now, it’s outside town, has a good economics department, and is closest to where I live after Aberdeen. Still, I’m not set, did Edinburgh have a decent Economics faculty when you were there?
No idea, I was in philosophy. (...That, and I stopped showing up to classes partway through the semester. Turns out when nobody notices if I go to a thing or not, I rarely go to the thing.)
In Edinburgh, I was taking three classes: philosophy of language (we discussed Superman a lot), moral and political philosophy (I most clearly remember covering Rawls), and philosophy of mind (philosophers of mind love pain). I took one course my entire academic career that was entirely about something Greek (a graduate course on the Republic). We read it in English.
And lo, she did answer the question concisely and effectively! I doubt Bayesianism is available in any of the universities I might be going to though, so I think Economics, minoring in Sociology and Psychology would suit me best.
I’m thinking Stirling university might suit me the best for now, it’s outside town, has a good economics department, and is closest to where I live after Aberdeen. Still, I’m not set, did Edinburgh have a decent Economics faculty when you were there?
No idea, I was in philosophy. (...That, and I stopped showing up to classes partway through the semester. Turns out when nobody notices if I go to a thing or not, I rarely go to the thing.)
But how can you even be sure you really exist?! Maybe you’re just a figment of someone else’s imagination?
I’ve always wondered, what do people do in the philosophy course? Is it all ancient greek poetry, or is that image outdated?
In Edinburgh, I was taking three classes: philosophy of language (we discussed Superman a lot), moral and political philosophy (I most clearly remember covering Rawls), and philosophy of mind (philosophers of mind love pain). I took one course my entire academic career that was entirely about something Greek (a graduate course on the Republic). We read it in English.
And lo, she did answer the question concisely and effectively! I doubt Bayesianism is available in any of the universities I might be going to though, so I think Economics, minoring in Sociology and Psychology would suit me best.
Who?
(I am a she.)
Ah, edited. Perhaps I shouldn’t have made the assumption.