I endorse this but would modify this slightly: if you are someone who can use free time productively and who is unlikely to benefit from a community of intelligent and highly educated peers and mentors (for example, if your interests are narrow and not widely shared, or if you prefer to work on your own rather than consult others, or if you're so many sigmas out on the right side of the bell curve that other people just slow you down, etc.), then that's probably true.
If you're able to benefit from the community, it can be a pretty compelling factor though.
I could definitely benefit from having a smart community around me.
Would professors be enough? All the colleges I've applied to have them (of course), but I'm a bit worried about accessibility.
All of the schools on my list have a form of honors colleges, so I'd expect to meet some people smarter than me wherever I go. Some schools more, some schools less. What's the marginal utility of intelligent people in the community?
On the one hand, there's only so many friends and acquaintances which I can keep track of at any particular time.
On the other hand, I fe...
I, and a lot of other people my age, are currently facing a pretty big life decision -- where to go to college. Since this is probably going to have a pretty big impact on my life, I'd like to get some more information on this.
Seeing as a lot of people here have probably made this choice already, gone through with some of the consequences of it, and are rational, I decided to ask here.
My current considerations are: