Is a Bioengineer/Biomedical Engineer the "man of all trades" when it comes to science and math?
>Engineering
>Math
>Physics
>Chemistry
>Biochemistry
>Biology
>Microbiology
>Bionics
>Programming
Is a Bioengineer/Biomedical Engineer the "man of all trades" when it comes to science and math?
>Engineering
>Math
>Physics
>Chemistry
>Biochemistry
>Biology
>Microbiology
>Bionics
>Programming
Other urls found in this thread:
en.m.wikipedia.org
twitter.com
>Bioengineer
>Math
Hahaha that guys head looks like a dick
Yes, math
That's suppose to be emperor Palestine from star wars. Get it right, nerd.
Life science like biomedical engineer is soft math. You really only need calculus 2, calculus one physics, and maybe some other math class. These people could had done maths like physics but they don't care about math.
>Palestine
Yes but they are a master of none so they have a hard time in the job market
This
this
if you study that many topics, you don't go in depth in any of them.
Biomedical engineering is the worst possible engineering major you could take, it covers very little, and you'll have a hard time once you get a job. Instead of going into BmE you should major in mechanical engineering and take some bio and chem classes. This will help you go into prosthetics. If you want to create materials, you should go into materials engineering and take some bio and chem classes. This will help you much more than just taking BmE.