Wiki User
∙ 12y agoyes
Wiki User
∙ 12y agoNo. You can still excel or do well in physics even if you are not good at computer science and chemistry. For example, physics is one of my favorite subjects, and I am pretty good at it. I am also good in math, but have never done anything computer science-related. I dislike chemistry, but love physics. I do not know much about the engineering aspect though, sorry. I'm sure you'd be fine though.
That depends on the individual
Because math, physics, chemistry and computer science are not the same things. Just because you're good at using maths doesn't necessarily mean you're not good at applying them. Theoretical and applied mathematics are widely considered very different fields.
If you think you can draw that kind of correlation, then I've got news for you: You're not that good at math.
Not necessarily.
No. You can still excel or do well in physics even if you are not good at computer science and chemistry. For example, physics is one of my favorite subjects, and I am pretty good at it. I am also good in math, but have never done anything computer science-related. I dislike chemistry, but love physics. I do not know much about the engineering aspect though, sorry. I'm sure you'd be fine though.
That depends on the individual
Science is more about vocabulary while math is about numbers
Because math, physics, chemistry and computer science are not the same things. Just because you're good at using maths doesn't necessarily mean you're not good at applying them. Theoretical and applied mathematics are widely considered very different fields.
Science is science, we only separate it into physics, chemistry and biology for convenience. Interestingly all three rely on one another: Good physics wouldn't exist without the scientific process. Good chemistry wouldn't exist without physics. Good biology wouldn't exist without chemistry. So really there is the following dependancy: Scientific Process > Physics > Chemistry > Biology
If you think you can draw that kind of correlation, then I've got news for you: You're not that good at math.
Not necessarily.
I don't think so! Long before there were computers (and computer science), there were brilliant physics and engineering students and they obviously were good at math.
I don't think so! Long before there were computers (and computer science), there were brilliant physics and engineering students and they obviously were good at math.
Not necessarily but you will be expected to understand computing - as a tool for aiding complex calculations, not an end in itself. You are right about the maths, but economics? Engineering is the practical application of science, principally physics but also chemistry.
yes
Physics, Chemistry, Engineering, English Literature, Political Science, Comparative Religion, Business Administration, and Computer Science are going to be hard for you if you expect them to be. If you're interested in them and want to know something about them, then they won't be hard for you. And if you're still high-school age, then you may have the beginning of an idea of what you're interested in, but you don't have the foggiest clue yet of what you're good at.