Did computer programming make you a clearer, more precise thinker? How about mathematics? If so, what kind? Set theory? Probability theory?
Microeconomics? Poker? English? Civil Engineering? Underwater Basket Weaving? (For adding... depth.)
Anything I missed?
Context: I have a palette of courses to dab onto my university schedule, and I don't know which ones to chose. This much is for certain: I want to come out of university as a problem solving beast. If there are fields of inquiry whose methods easily transfer to other fields, it is those fields that I want to learn in, at least initially.
Rip apart, Less Wrong!
Here is Pour-El and Richards. Here is a more recent reference that makes my claim more explicitly. Both are gated.
I'm not sure what to say. You've accused me of "confusing levels," but I'm exactly disputing the idea that sets are at a lower level than real numbers. Maybe I know how to address this:
I don't know about human behavior, which isn't much illuminated by any subject at all. But the reduction of biology to physics absolutely does illuminate biology. Here's Feynman in six easy pieces:
You simply can't say the same thing -- even hyperbolically -- about the set-theoretic idea that everything in math is a set, made up of other sets.