February 5th, 2011, 3:47 pm
@daveangelI completely agree. It is much easier to state good intentions than it is to follow through on them. If neither of the banks give me anything firm before my academic deadlines, then (at this point at least) I will take one of the academic jobs. Now, obviously if I do that, and a bank comes to me and says, "hey, we'd like to hire you for 10 million dollars a year" then I'd probably quit my academic job in a heart-beat. I know that isn't a realistic scenario. I'm just trying to illustrate that, like you said, it is hard to follow through on good intentions.@ArthurDentI don't care, per se, of what people think of me -- certainly not people that I barely know. But, I do care that my actions don't reflect poorly on others, especially if they are my friends and colleagues. Like I said previously, taking a job at a university and then cutting and running would reflect poorly on my adviser and my co-authors. So it isn't something I would consider at this point.Additionally, it has been my experience that a cut-throat, winner-take-all attitude doesn't get you very far in life. No matter how smart you are, at some point you are going to depend on others for help.