Home
Forums
New posts
What's new
New posts
Latest activity
Log in
Register
What's new
New posts
Menu
Log in
Register
Install the app
Install
Home
Forums
Living
Living general
Academia is toxic to red pill men, and why I'm dropping my PhD program
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
<blockquote data-quote="Cobra" data-source="post: 668554" data-attributes="member: 1172"><p>On the first bolded point above: I think we knew that already as a general fact across ALL graduates and ALL C suites. Again, <strong>generally</strong>.</p><p></p><p>As far as the second bolded point above: You are now diluting your generalization and extrapolating that generalization itself to individual specialties and businesses, which is a logical flaw. This is the part I disagree with because it's simply untrue. To prove that it's un true I already told you which profession I'm in and what happens there. Again, PhD's and Graduate degrees are not indicators of success in terms of power or wealth in the Accounting and Finance world. They are hallmarks in the academic part of this world but again, these are not the powerful and wealthiest in this profession. This is a fact. Your generalizations do not apply there. </p><p></p><p>Again, not disagreeing with your general statement. Just pointing the logical flaw in applying that generalization to everything in the general population of educated people. </p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>"Many" executives with graduate degrees are managing business units outside of their specialties, generally, yes but many executives in my field are not. You can't point out some facts selectively and ignore other facts unanimously. </p><p></p><p>I'm not trying to debunk your arguments from a general standpoint. I'm just pointing out that the general concept that PhDs and graduates are somehow more skilled and "red pilled" in every profession and specialty is utter nonsense.</p><p></p><p>I have made it out of Accounting with only a Bachelor's degree and now part owner of my business which is consulting. No need for a hooker. I like game.</p><p></p><p>Edit: Geez, I realized you triple posted TWICE! I know you're out to prove a point but that might be a lot. Might a suggest a brisk walk outside and a few approaches?</p><p></p><p>Also, I noticed something:</p><p>[attachment=40158]</p><p>[attachment=40159]</p><p></p><p>Have you literally been refreshing and viewing this thread like a thousand times???? Not even Elon Musk gets that kind of attention.</p><p></p><p>Sorry man. I had to. No hard feelings. I was waiting for a call.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Cobra, post: 668554, member: 1172"] On the first bolded point above: I think we knew that already as a general fact across ALL graduates and ALL C suites. Again, [b]generally[/b]. As far as the second bolded point above: You are now diluting your generalization and extrapolating that generalization itself to individual specialties and businesses, which is a logical flaw. This is the part I disagree with because it's simply untrue. To prove that it's un true I already told you which profession I'm in and what happens there. Again, PhD's and Graduate degrees are not indicators of success in terms of power or wealth in the Accounting and Finance world. They are hallmarks in the academic part of this world but again, these are not the powerful and wealthiest in this profession. This is a fact. Your generalizations do not apply there. Again, not disagreeing with your general statement. Just pointing the logical flaw in applying that generalization to everything in the general population of educated people. "Many" executives with graduate degrees are managing business units outside of their specialties, generally, yes but many executives in my field are not. You can't point out some facts selectively and ignore other facts unanimously. I'm not trying to debunk your arguments from a general standpoint. I'm just pointing out that the general concept that PhDs and graduates are somehow more skilled and "red pilled" in every profession and specialty is utter nonsense. I have made it out of Accounting with only a Bachelor's degree and now part owner of my business which is consulting. No need for a hooker. I like game. Edit: Geez, I realized you triple posted TWICE! I know you're out to prove a point but that might be a lot. Might a suggest a brisk walk outside and a few approaches? Also, I noticed something: [attachment=40158] [attachment=40159] Have you literally been refreshing and viewing this thread like a thousand times???? Not even Elon Musk gets that kind of attention. Sorry man. I had to. No hard feelings. I was waiting for a call. [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Verification
Post reply
Home
Forums
Living
Living general
Academia is toxic to red pill men, and why I'm dropping my PhD program
Top