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!
Is that supposed to be a lot or a little statistics?
The meme that liberal arts majors are almost always terrible at mathematics is incredibly dangerous to raising the sanity line. The meme is part of the same cluster of ideas as "Liking/Being good at math is weird and not for normal people." Sorry if I'm overreacting to the joke, but I really believe the meme is that dangerous.
If you weren't joking, sorry for misinterpreting you. The answer to your question, you want enough statistics training that you can deduce the really basic concepts (population, sample, null hypothesis) by yourself. Depe... (read more)