<p>Actually, I think Yale might be a better choice because of it’s humanities bent. In addition to math and physics, you can take things like religion and philosophy that interest you. There is a Mathematics and Philosophy major that you might want to consider. In getting an undergraduate education it is very important to learn things other than just math and physics. Otherwise, you graduate college and become another engineer number cruncher type, which I personally find to be extremely boring. But it’s up to you; it depends on what you want to learn and what kind of person you want to be after college.</p>
<p>About the distributional requirements (Yale’s much more lenient version of a core curriculum):</p>
<p>“Students are required to take no fewer than two course credits in the humanities and arts, two course credits in the sciences, and two course credits in the social sciences. In addition to completing courses in these disciplinary areas, students must fulfill skills requirements by taking two course credits in quantitative reasoning, two course credits in writing, and courses to further their foreign language proficiency.” - <a href=“Yale College”>Yale College;
<p>Unless you really despise the humanities, which I didn’t gather from your post, the distributional requirements at Yale shouldn’t be bad for you at all.</p>