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Thats non science. Some people think you need a science major, but I know you dont. I was thinking of psychology or philosophy because they are very interesting. What do you think?

2007-12-31 07:02:07 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

6 answers

You are in high school or the first year of college, and you already know that you want to be an intellectual property attorney? Yikes! You must be fun at a party. Having said that, you could major in almost anything and get into law school. Economics, business, or the ones you mentioned would be fine.

2007-12-31 08:12:56 · answer #1 · answered by Ace Librarian 7 · 0 0

Philosophy. Everyone who goes into law does philosophy. Ok... That's a generalization, but philosophy really helps. Minor in some science though. I'm not sure what type but something that'll help with the ultimate goal. The philosophy helps you understand law.

2007-12-31 08:23:37 · answer #2 · answered by ambiguous_leaf 2 · 0 0

Uusually it's a pre law major or Poly sci major and actualy do you do need some science because Patents make up the largest amount of intellectual work.

So having a funadmental knowlege of chem, physics and engineering couldn't hurt

2007-12-31 08:09:09 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Your first task is to get into law school and become an attorney. Thereafter you can work your way into specializing in copyrights, etc.

Your college probably offers a pre-law major, but you could just as well major in psych or philosophy so long as you use your electives to cover all of the history, sociology, political science, and law courses that a pre-law major would take. You might also do well to consider the pre-law major using your electives to cover lots of courses that are relevant to the predominance of intellectual property law, e.g., mass media, music history, art history, literature, journalism.

Also, to enhance your odds of getting into law school, participate in your college's debate team--law schools view that as a plus. If you can, work (pay or volunteer) for lawyers--say, at the local legal aid society or as a paper-carrier for a firm--and make the acquaintance of some lawyers who might advise you about law schools.

The rest of your law school preparation will be to earn a flaming hot GPA and to score big time on the LSAT in your junior year.

2007-12-31 07:11:52 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Sounds like you don't want to hear it, but Engineering would be the best undergrad for that field.

2007-12-31 07:10:11 · answer #5 · answered by Geno 3 · 0 0

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2016-10-10 17:53:40 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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