<p>I cant find any information about the course on the website, so could anyone give me a link? Or basic information on it? And can you take a combined degree with philosophy and french for example?</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>How about majoring in basic online research skills?</p>
<p>[Philosophy</a> | Columbia College](<a href=“Columbia College Bulletin < Columbia College | Columbia University”>Columbia College Bulletin < Columbia College | Columbia University)</p>
<p>…</p>
<p>And how about keeping your thoughts to yourself when you have nothing intelligent to say?</p>
<p>Some Columbia folk aren’t very nice.</p>
<p>And, yes, you can double major.
Or, are you referring to an interdisciplinary major?</p>
<p>Or are they all equally good for it?</p>
<p>Kwu, to be quite honest I have never heard of a interdisciplinary major so I dont even know what it is.
I was talking about getting two degrees at the same time, its called combined in the United Kingdom. But Im not actually sure whether you can get a combined degree in a university in the states… I heard you could get one major and one minor though.
Or am I mistaken…?</p>
<p>you can double major. a minor is typically MUCH less coursework and you can get multiple.</p>
<p>A Double Major is the same thing as a “combined degree,” then.
They are two distinct degrees, whereas interdisciplinary studies regard a hybrid of two closely related fields.</p>
<p>[The</a> Philosophical Gourmet Report 2006 - 2008 :: Overall Rankings](<a href=“http://www.philosophicalgourmet.com/overall.asp]The”>http://www.philosophicalgourmet.com/overall.asp)</p>
<p>Take this ranking with a grain of salt–i.e., treat it with skepticism.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>Your initial question: not the least bit intelligent</p>
<p>My response: profound</p>
<p>you’re probably gonna have some issues with a philosophy major if you couldn’t even find the website…</p>
<p>but its unusual to get two BAs. it’d just be a single degree in two majors.</p>
<p>Let’s say I want a degree in architecture and civil/structural engineering, how do I go about taking all the courses for them when those two majors are in taught in two different schools?</p>
<p>LOL @ Columbia2002’s preening “intellectualism”. Way to ■■■■■ these boards into your late 20’s (assuming you graduated in '02). Pray tell, would you speak to someone in real life that way? Or do you prefer to cower behind your computer screen?</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>LOL @ you not knowing the difference between “intelligence” and “intellectualism.” I’d say I’m intelligent but not an intellectual. Intellectuals annoy me and I don’t want to be characterized as one.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>Actually, yes. I’m perfectly blunt in normal conversation.</p>
<p>LOL @ you not knowing how to parse and utilize quotation marks. The difference between intelligence and intellectualism is negligible semantical conflation; the difference between intelligence and “intellectualism” is very different.
I was classifying you as a snob who confuses inappropriate derision for an intellectual argument; i.e., one that prefers reason to emotion.</p>
<p>Either way, to actually speak to someone as you did, you must have an inflated opinion of your judgment and the value of everyone else’s feelings. Or perhaps you truly lack empathy, in which case you’re pathologically psychotic.</p>
<p>Pick your poison.</p>
<p>“LOL @ you not knowing how to parse and utilize quotation marks. The difference between intelligence and intellectualism is negligible semantical conflation; the difference between intelligence and “intellectualism” is very different.
I was classifying you as a snob who confuses inappropriate derision for an intellectual argument; i.e., one that prefers reason to emotion.”</p>
<p>You need to work on your wannabe-intellectual cyber-slighting.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>I generally have empathy, but not sympathy / compassion. While I’m able to perceive and understand “everyone else’s feelings,” I don’t place too much weight on “the value of” them.</p>
<p>True, when I said you lacked empathy, I was assuming that you felt compassion and sympathy.
I hope you’re kidding, by the way; if you’re not, then I’m sure you know that that dearth is symptomatic of severe psychosis.</p>
<p>Do you know the difference between empathy and sympathy?</p>
<p>Indeed I do; empathy allows to you know how others feel, while sympathy is a feeling of pity for those people. Empathy is intelligence, sympathy is emotion.</p>
<p>However, one could lack empathy and still have sympathy. The sympathy would remain unused, of course, because the non-empathetic person in question would not be able to understand when it applied. This is what I was saying.</p>