Use your head ! Surely you must know enough about Physics and Engineering to realize
that in order to be really successful at either of them, you MUST be good at Math.
Have you ever heard of Newton, Einstein, Marconi, or Steinmetz ? Maybe instead of
posting the same question on this site 75 more times tomorrow, you could better
spend some time reading a little bit about a couple of them. That'll give you a better
idea of the relationship between Math, Physics, and Engineering than I can.
(And none of those guys was too bad at 1000-word essays either.)
You'll certainly not fail physics BECAUSE you are good at math - you NEED math for physics and engineering.
No.
No you will not fail.
On the contrary, you NEED math, especially for physics and engineering.
Math will help, not hinder, you in this. You actually need a LOT of math, especially for physics and engineering.
Certainly! All he needs to do is slough off his chemistry, physics, and engineering classes, and he can fail them just as solidly as if he were poor at math.Yes, to be very good in chemistry and physics and engineering you have to be good in mathTo be good in math you do not have to be very good in chemistry or physics or engineering
No, it is not true. It is false. In order to PASS physics, chemistry, and engineering, you must be pretty good at mathematics.
no
no
I'm good at Math and I passed Chemistry.
Sounds backwards to me.
None of those talents or shortcomings is a reliable predictor. You will fail Physics, Chemistry, Engineering, or any other specialty, if you expect it to be so hard that you'll fail it, or if you expect it to be so easy that you'll sail through without work. The decision to fail it or not fail it is your decision to make, and has no connection with what you think you're good at or not good at.