<p>If you take one person and one person only, and you required that he maintained a 3.8 GPA in pursuing a business degree, and then you took that same exact person but instead required him to maintain a 3.8 GPA in Electrical Engineering, you can bet your ass he will have to spend more time in Electrical Engineering. Whether he is strong in math and sucks at business, or he is excellent in business and sucks in math - either way, he will have to spend more time working for his 3.8 in engineering. </p>
<p>Now, you CAN argue, however, that in the pursuance of his engineering degree, depending on his personality/individual qualities, the engineering degree might possibly actually be easier, but this is besides the case. More effort will be required to complete the engineering degree.</p>
<p>This is by no means a superiority complex. You can trust I’d be the last person to think my major is superior than any others’ (you don’t even know what I’m majoring in). As another stated on CC, I respect anyone who is a scholar in his studies, whether that’s a liberal arts degree or one in Nuclear Weaponry.</p>
<p>The only people making that distinction are people who have a superiority or inferiority complex</p>
<p>For you to think you can judge people to the extent that you do (having superiority complex) based on a simple distinction made, makes me feel you yourself have a self-purported/elevated sense of nature, one that thinks you are better than others in your field because you don’t deem your major as “superior” and so you live with enlightened eyes that others have not been fortunate enough to experience (and in saying this, I mean in no ways that I do deem engineering majors as “superior” - get over it).</p>