<p>I’m curious only because I’m having my SAT rescored and am expecting it before Dec. 10 ( if not CB is going to get a very rude phone call) and want to know-if there was a mistake, and Yale receives the correction before the 15th, would they re-review my app?
Thanks</p>
<p>That would probably be too late. And if you made it far enough to be seriously considered, a change in one of your scores wouldn’t affect anything.</p>
<p>Unless the rescored SAT differs by like 100+ points (e.g. somehow you got a 2400 as a result of the re-score), the SAT score is never going to make or break your case, and even a 2400 will probably not do much. The previous post is right; if you are seriously considered they will move beyond your scores, and if not, an improved score is probably not going to help much at that late stage.</p>
<p>Agreed… and Yale goes thru apps in the order that you submit them. So if you submitted yours earlier, they probably have already made a decision, and are sending them ALL out by Dec 15.</p>
<p>But also note that the interview reports are due on Dec. 1. If you had an interview and a decent application, they might still hold on for a few days.</p>
<p>I doubt it. That’s why I laugh at people praying on decision week. Not even God can change Yale’s decision by then.</p>
<p>Two Yale 2013 students helping out? Yes yes yes! Lol.
I think your SAT score would not make it. late</p>
<p>But you never know if you’re just on the edge of being accepted along with a bunch of similar applicants. If the interview really didn’t make a difference, they wouldn’t bother asking for one.</p>
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<p>God isn’t limited by time. You could pray to God now, and, in the past, “he” would’ve known that you were going to pray in the future. Think about it. ;)</p>
<p>If God can destroy Sodom, I’m pretty sure changing a Yale decision would not be a big deal.</p>
<p>You can’t try and understand God when we are restricted to our dimensions. It would be like a 2D stick-figure trying to comprehend our 4 dimensional-selves =)</p>
<p>God doesn’t exist. end of discussion =]</p>
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<p>Good job. Welcome to philosophy. You’ve entered into a fundamental question in the field, “What is God’s relation to time?” My professor’s interest is in this field. It’s very interesting once you get into it. Later on it ties into the “Do human beings have free will” question. For example, if God knew the past, present, and future with absolute certainty, do we still have the freedom to act? Or is it predetermination? Or if we DO have free will does it simply mean that God knows every possible potential outcome?</p>
<p>if a tree falls in the forest, and no one’s there to hear it, does any body give a sh</p>
<p>buddy, that brings to mind something that my psych teacher had on his board a few weeks ago:
“If a man is talking in a forest, and there is no woman around to hear him, is he still wrong?”
haha :p</p>
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<p>IB philosophy served me well. :)</p>
<p>It’s pretty interesting to think about that. God may know what we will do before we do it, but that doesn’t mean that he necessarily interferes in our decisions. He knows something will happen before it does, but gives us the free will to make it happen for ourselves. I guess this whole conception of god is what allows faith to be possible. If God didn’t allow for the free will to determine one’s own actions, faith wouldn’t be a choice, and would lose a lot of its meaning… hmm.</p>
<p>maybe, g-d doesn’t give two craps about whether anyone gets into yale?</p>