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College College is basically a bunch of rooms where you sit for roughly two thousand hours and try to memorize things. The two thousand hours are spread out over four years; you spend the rest of the time sleeping and trying to get dates. Basically, you learn two kinds of things in college: 1. Things you will need to know in later life (two hours). 2. Things you will not need to know in later life (1,998 hours). These are the things you learn in classes whose names end in -ology, -osophy, -istry, -ics, and so on. The idea is, you memorize these things, then write them down in little exam books, then forget them. If you fail to forget them, you become a professor and have to stay in college for the rest of your life. It's very difficult to forget everything. For example, when I was in college, I had to memorize -- don't ask me why -- the names of three metaphysical poets other than John Donne. I have managed to forget one of them, but I still remember that the other two were named Vaughan and Crashaw. Sometimes, when I'm trying to remember something important like whether my wife told me to get tuna packed in oil or tuna packed in water, Vaughan and Crashaw just pop up in my mind, right there in the supermarket. It's a terrible waste of brain cells.
After you've been in college for a year or so, you're supposed to choose
a
major, which is the subject you intend to memorize and forget the most
things about. Here is a very important piece of advice: be sure to
choose
a major that does not involve Known Facts and Right Answers. This means
you must not major in mathematics, physics, biology, or chemistry,
because
these subjects involve actual facts. If, for example, you major in
mathematics, you're going to wander into Class one day and the professor
will say: "Define the cosine integer of the quadrant of a rhomboid
binary
axis, and extrapolate your result to five significant vertices." If you
don't come up with exactly the answer the professor has in mind, you
fail.
The same is true of chemistry: if you write in your exam book that
carbon
and hydrogen combine to form oak, your professor will flunk you. He
wants
you to come up with the same answer he and all the other chemists have
agreed on. So you should major in subjects like English, philosophy, psychology, and sociology -- subjects in which nobody really understands what anybody else is talking about, and which involve virtually no actual facts. I attended classes in all these subjects, so I'll give you a quick overview of each:
ENGLISH: Your professor, who is sick to death of reading papers and never liked Moby-Dick anyway, will think you are enormously creative. If you can regularly come up with lunatic interpretations of simple stories, you should major in English.
PHILOSOPHY:
PSYCHOLOGY:
SOCIOLOGY:
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