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Maybe I’m too European for that, but I was under the impression that this is basically an umbrella term for humanities, art, literature, etc.
Maybe I’m too European for that, but I was under the impression that this is basically an umbrella term for humanities, art, literature, etc.
Or maybe we just don’t need hundreds of thousands of people trained in liberal arts.
I’m not trying to defend businesses here, but there’s only so many places for people who are trained in over-analyzing paint and clay.
That’s why I explicitly qualified my statement, because not all sociologists are in fact trained in statistics. Many just had the statistics 101 class and went into the more philosophical part of the trade.
The real question is: what else does this graph show in your interpretation?
If you are employed in a junior job within the field you have been trained in, you are not underemployed.
What this graph shows however, is that there are a ton of degrees that seem to teach hardly any transferable skills. A sociologist without proper statistical training has almost zero value in the business world. And that’s a problem.
Why are the doctors at fault? There’s a drug that helps patients achieve their weight loss goals. As long as it’s prescribed to overweight people, that’s perfectly fine.
Then why isn’t production increased?
It’s not like the hype is new, manufacturers just didn’t keep up. Whether stupidity or intent, I don’t know.
They don’t want you to know, but you can extract all the fumes and flavors using only your nose!
Seriously though, flux fumes do have a somewhat nice smell to them.