MyDoorsAreOpen
Bluelight Crew
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2003
- Messages
- 8,549
Medicine on the other hand is almost entirely wrote learned material and very rarely do you have to solve unforeseen problems, but rather be good at memorising. As a result, the students I met in medicine are a lot more hard working than engineers. I believe this is because engineers develop the skills to solve unfamiliar problems not requiring memorisation but rather logic. Medicine on the other hand requires the mundane task of memorisation rather than logic. This is just a comparison between engineering and medicine.
Medicine is not as hard as people think. It just requires more dedication.
I'm a fourth year medical student and am married to a second generation engineer turned math teacher. She hated engineering and left it, and while I respect engineers greatly, I am very sure that career is not for me, and unlike you, enjoy medicine quite a lot. While I think you're onto something here, I'll quibble with a few of your points.
On the average, yes, I think the average engineer is book-smarter (in a quantifiable and testable way) than the average physician. Engineering requires more outside-the-box thinking and more risk taking and gambling with resources. Both careers are about problem solving using logic and science. But because people vary a lot less in their physical properties than things, engineering as a whole field involves more uncharted territory and uncertainty.
However, what you're forgetting about medicine is the formidable interpersonal challenges involved with the career. To be a good physician, you have to be both book-smart and people-smart. You have to be able to see your patients as both specimens to be regarded with the cold light of scientific scrutiny and human beings just like you to be regarded with care and compassion, often simultaneously, and without cognitive dissonance. You can't really fail at either half of this if you want to keep patients coming back to you. And the fact is, most people in the world are not up to this challenge. Most people are good at analyzing and understanding systems logically, or navigating the uncertain world of human communications networks, but not both, let alone both at once!
In contrast, I've seldom met an engineer who was skilled enough with people to hold a job that depended on it. They're stereotyped as abrasive or socially inept, and while I'd hardly say that's true across the board, stereotypes exist for a reason. Back when I was taking my science prerequisites for medical school along with pre-engineering students, some of them even remarked, "I'm so glad I'm going into a career where I don't need to be good with people, I just need to invent things that work." Or something to that effect.
A more charitable way to say what you said about memorization and medicine, is that physicians rely more on predetermined algorithms to solve problems than engineers do. I take issue with the assertion that there's less logical reasoning involved. A doctor who makes clinical decisions without sound, well-thought-out logical reasons for doing so is a train wreck waiting to happen. It's just that the reasoning tends to follow more trodden paths.
In the end, though, both fields are hard because both of them are dynamic, changing games. Neither a physician nor an engineer can afford to not stay abreast of the newest developments in his/her field. Both must be ready to jettison an outmoded, less efficacious way of doing things, no matter how cherished, ingrained, or convenient it may be, if he's to stay competitively employed.