the three are quite different from each other so it depends on your personal interests, your talents, what you think you would do well in and enjoy in university.
Law will be a lot of reading of literature and philosophy and history depending on where you're studying it so if you like logic, philosophy, and discussion/debate-based courses, you might like law.
Psychology will be a lot of rhetoric and questioning things you thought you understood. It's really introspective. it's a social science so you'll be studying sociology-type classes that are a lot about human behavior and human reasoning and human thought... so it will be a lot of reading also, but about social thought, so if that's your thing you might like philosophy.
Dentistry will be a lot of math and science and memorization. You'll need to know anatomy, physiology, organic chemistry, biochemistry, and a lot of other sciences. It is big on memorization because you'll have to be well-versed in every single part of the mouth and the area surrounding the mouth. It also takes a while because you'll usually have a long-ish predental period before you actually start dealing with teeth. YOu'll want not to be squeamish about bad breath and disgusting teeth and you should also have steady hands and be able to deal with blood and gore.
The thing in common that all these things have is you have to have good interpersonal and social skills, but apart from that they're really different. It depends on your skills and talents so there's no "better course to pursue." It's all on you to choose...
2006-12-23 13:15:13
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answer #1
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answered by Melissage 2
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What is your passion, do you have the drive, the desire to attend medical school? Law school is three years, medical school is four, then internship, residency, dentistry you are looking at medical school as well. Anything in the medical field is a very long haul, and one must be dedicated to the field you chose. Law, you can go in several different areas after three years, pass the bar, and either teach, go into the FBI, work at a clerk for a judge, very, very diversified.
2006-12-23 21:09:01
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answer #2
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answered by Nancy S 6
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They are quite different, and so much depends upon your own interests and skills. They are not better than each other, just different. One may lead to more money in salary, etc. than others, but I don't sense that is what you are asking. I guess I would ask you these questions.
Do you like to listen better than to talk? If so, psychology wins over law.
Do you like to talk and present reasoned arguments better than to listen? Then law might win over psychology.
Do you prefer "hands on" work to mainly working with your brain and words? If so, then dentistry might win over law or psychology.
I hope this helps.
2006-12-23 21:10:34
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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I would say psycology, the law puts you in charge too much and dentists just plain old suck. My girlfriend is majoring in psycology and I think thats the best plan. Law takes too long and dentistry will only be sucessfull if you plan on having your own business.
2006-12-23 21:04:12
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answer #4
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answered by danielschmidt94521 3
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Psychology,law, then dentistry.
2006-12-23 21:03:58
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answer #5
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answered by Good Grief 4
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The one you really, truly have a passion for! I know-its difficult deciding on a major, and a career. Which one seems the most interesting and rewarding? Base all of the pros for each one-which one pays good money.
2006-12-23 21:01:28
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answer #6
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answered by ♪♥Annie♥♪ 6
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www.nbc.com/Law_&_Order -
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law -
dir.yahoo.com/Government/Law -
www.cnn.com/LAW -
www.barristerbooks.com
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychology -
www.psychology.org -
psychology.about.com -
www.dentistry.com -
www.mic.ki.se/Diseases/E06.html -
dir.yahoo.com/Health/Medicine/Dentistry -
dentistry.about.com -
www.dent.unc.edu
dir.yahoo.com/Social_Science/Psychology
2006-12-23 21:20:19
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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