I hope to stretch out my stay in graduate school as long as humanly possible. My favorite living philosopher, Stanley Cavell, spent thirteen years in graduate school. I consider that a good thing.
Okay, so I'm just about alone in that opinion, but I do love being a student.
Actually, "mastery of the subject" may be misleading way to put it. I can solve almost any freshman-level physics problem, plus explain the principles cogently and even teach them somewhat well. I can still do most sophomore-level problems, but odds are even whether I can actually teach them. And for anything of a higher level, the gaps in my knowledge prominently outclass what is present. I've mastered the basics, but may never master the entire core material, and can't reasonably expect to do more than master just one contemporary subfield... perhaps not even that.
Hopefully it'll be reassuring: yes, mastery is possible in the humanities, although you have to take the term "field" a bit narrowly. I have had the fortune of professors (most notably, one in writing/reading and one in philosophy) who demonstrated such mastery by their quality in teaching, insight and engagement. It's a shame those professors are never adequately appreciated. :P
It's a shame that physics has some big advantages in teaching over all of the humanities. In physics, a professor can (and should) set up a memorable demonstration of its principles in front of a class, a display of pyrotechnics, gadgetry and/or electricity. In the humanities, the teacher has to set up that same kind of demonstration inside the student's head.
no subject
Okay, so I'm just about alone in that opinion, but I do love being a student.
Actually, "mastery of the subject" may be misleading way to put it. I can solve almost any freshman-level physics problem, plus explain the principles cogently and even teach them somewhat well. I can still do most sophomore-level problems, but odds are even whether I can actually teach them. And for anything of a higher level, the gaps in my knowledge prominently outclass what is present. I've mastered the basics, but may never master the entire core material, and can't reasonably expect to do more than master just one contemporary subfield... perhaps not even that.
Hopefully it'll be reassuring: yes, mastery is possible in the humanities, although you have to take the term "field" a bit narrowly. I have had the fortune of professors (most notably, one in writing/reading and one in philosophy) who demonstrated such mastery by their quality in teaching, insight and engagement. It's a shame those professors are never adequately appreciated. :P
It's a shame that physics has some big advantages in teaching over all of the humanities. In physics, a professor can (and should) set up a memorable demonstration of its principles in front of a class, a display of pyrotechnics, gadgetry and/or electricity. In the humanities, the teacher has to set up that same kind of demonstration inside the student's head.