Really...

yes

>physics bachelors
>bachelors
Literal dogshit degree, it's like the first two years of an engineering B, only with more sparse coursework.

Call me when you're in grad-school and you've actually studied something can start to be called advanced.

>*they're
Wut? It was right the first time!

>engineering their being taught
But not the second, nigger

To be fair, a physicist isn't far from an engineer. Someone who excels in one subject can do the other with relative ease, but I'd say it's easier for a physicist to transition into an engineer than vice versa.
Admittedly, physics undergrads are short on modules with signal processing and control theory, but a module on quantum field theory will teach functional analysis, and a module on computational physics will teach signal processing... And the latter is really not that hard. I imagine it would be a lot more conceptually and mathematically challenging for an engineer to pick up QFT.

>Physicists vs engineers: Valve edition

>Half life. Bunch of physicists getting rekt by a wide variety of creatures and screaming like babies. Out of hundreds in the game, only one isn't a pussy, and that's because he's player controlled.

>TF2. Engineers dropping automated death-dispensers and caving heads in with a wrench.

Ask any engineering manager what is their opinion of physicists or people who spent too much in grad school without real world experience.

>Do physicists do anything that good math bachelors couldn't do at an equal or higher level with a month of training?

nope :3

how far is a mathematician from a physicist or an engineer

Tell me more about how you're an expert in
>finite element analysis
>fluid mechanics
>control theory
>materials science
>manufacturing processes

Face it: you don't know jack shit