Usually yes. A person who does not like mathematics is almost sure not to like thermodynamics!
Yes
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well, none, you just have to be good at your instrument
Yes, that is possible. The sciences of physics, chemistry, and engineering do not depend upon the ability to write essays.
no
A measure of a good person is how well they treat others.
Of course, there isn't a reason not to, because mathematics is the language of economics, science and engineering(with the exception of computer programming).
No, a person who is good at math will have the best chance of doing well in physics.
Math, science and logical thinking are necessary requirements for being a good programmer. If you're good at those, you'll definitely do well in computer programming!Open in Google Docs ViewerOpen link in new tabOpen link in new windowCopy link addressEdit PDF File on PDFescape.com
No. The opposite is true. A person who is good at math will tend to do well in physics and engineering.
No, you have to learn other subjects as well.
Well, while physics is very mathematical, you also need the ability to understand things conceptually. Like a ball falling through the air has a couple equations associated with it but as a physicist you have to be able to truly understand what those equations mean.