What is the furthest field from architecture that requires higher level education?
Ie: doctor, engineer, etc.
Non Sequitur
Jan 30, 20 5:28 pm
all of them, but from the top of my head, let’s say: astronaut, surgeon, surgical astronaut...
What’s the point of your question anyways?
OddArchitect
Jan 30, 20 5:53 pm
Astrophysicist in a porn shop?
tduds
Jan 30, 20 6:43 pm
.
archanonymous
Jan 30, 20 9:54 pm
I saw a chart once that the career opposite of architect is butcher/ meatpacker, so I think surgeon is darn close while requiring higher education.
tduds
Jan 31, 20 11:42 am
That makes sense - putting together buildings is the opposite of taking apart animals.
Wilma Buttfit
Jan 30, 20 10:07 pm
Anesthesiologist
Wood Guy
Jan 31, 20 11:54 am
Ha, I have one as a client now and would agree--we exist on different planes.
mightyaa
Jan 31, 20 12:30 am
Accounting; not much abstract thinking, no understanding of physical sciences, no art or style, no creation, and only one correct answer. Not much crossover at all.
tduds
Jan 31, 20 11:43 am
My mother is an accountant. When I was a kid we'd play with Legos. Her favorite thing was to build the model on the box according to the instructions and put each model's pieces into a different baggie for easy reference. My favorite thing was to dump all the bags out & invent cites. We are in the appropriate careers.
Everyday Architect
Jan 31, 20 1:53 pm
lol, my FIL is an accountant type too (works in financial operations of a large corporation), and gets a new Lego set around Thanksgiving of some type of Christmas scene that we put together while watching football and staying out of the kitchen. He's exactly the same as your mother.
joseffischer
Jan 31, 20 2:16 pm
Now I'm worried I was supposed to be an accountant
Dokuser
Jan 31, 20 12:38 am
subjective question but here’s my subjective answer:
an engineer
JLC-1
Jan 31, 20 2:08 pm
lawyers - instead of solving problems, they create them to get money out of everybody.
Miles Jaffe
Jan 31, 20 4:07 pm
Although many architects do indeed create problems for money.
tduds
Jan 31, 20 4:15 pm
All this time I've been solving problems for no money. I've got it backwards.
What is the furthest field from architecture that requires higher level education?
Ie: doctor, engineer, etc.
all of them, but from the top of my head, let’s say: astronaut, surgeon, surgical astronaut...
What’s the point of your question anyways?
Astrophysicist in a porn shop?
.
I saw a chart once that the career opposite of architect is butcher/ meatpacker, so I think surgeon is darn close while requiring higher education.
That makes sense - putting together buildings is the opposite of taking apart animals.
Anesthesiologist
Ha, I have one as a client now and would agree--we exist on different planes.
Accounting; not much abstract thinking, no understanding of physical sciences, no art or style, no creation, and only one correct answer. Not much crossover at all.
My mother is an accountant. When I was a kid we'd play with Legos. Her favorite thing was to build the model on the box according to the instructions and put each model's pieces into a different baggie for easy reference. My favorite thing was to dump all the bags out & invent cites. We are in the appropriate careers.
lol, my FIL is an accountant type too (works in financial operations of a large corporation), and gets a new Lego set around Thanksgiving of some type of Christmas scene that we put together while watching football and staying out of the kitchen. He's exactly the same as your mother.
Now I'm worried I was supposed to be an accountant
subjective question but here’s my subjective answer:
an engineer
lawyers - instead of solving problems, they create them to get money out of everybody.
Although many architects do indeed create problems for money.
All this time I've been solving problems for no money. I've got it backwards.