Is there a single person on Veeky Forums that managed to self taught physic or math on bachelor degree level?

Is there a single person on Veeky Forums that managed to self taught physic or math on bachelor degree level?

Is this achievable?

There are people who think they have.

For math absolutely, you don't really need any expensive equipment for it. For physics you're probably better off paying the tuition so you can access their lab equipment. It's harder to understand how things work from purely reading textbooks or watching videos but it's possible.

For sure. You're always self teaching, it's just about where you get your motivation from. Equipment is important too.

It took me until my junior year to realize, but undergraduate education is literally entirely self taught.

Its literally, "hey, look this up in the textbook and do these problems on it, for which there are usually pretty extensive explanations someplace online".

Literally the only reason to show up to class is for attendance points / IClicker / quiz points , and the only reason they do that is that they know nobody would need to show up otherwise.

Labs can be neat though. The practice with data analysis / error analysis helps a lot, and is arguably one of the only useful things I've benefited from in undergrad

Just pick up a textbook and go. You'd honestly probably get a better, deeper understanding than most students, as lecturers tend to skip around and fly through the book, without offering sufficient time to ingrain and deeply learn and ingrain any one segment.

Which one of Stewart's books is this step one referring to? Heard that most of them are shit for self study.

...

I'm self teaching myself as a CS major, I hope to make it

This.

College is a scam OP. You can always build physics experiments if you need to.

If you've got a computer and access to the internet, you can teach yourself pretty much anything with enough dedication. There are people in the past who taught themselves a surprising amount using just textbooks.