Answers to my chemistry lab manual?

Okay I am currently taking chemistry 2 because it's mandatory to get my masters in COMPUTER SOFTWARE ENGINEERING. Obviously I will need to know rate constants, activation energy, and other necessary information to program in multiple computer languages.

But sadly I just can't bring myself to study and learn something I am blindly being forced to take, and will never need to know again because the system has set up a hoop for me to jump through.

Does anyone know of a place where I can get answers to my chemistry lab manual? "experiments in general chemistry" by Wentworth?

Yes I am a terrible person for not wanting to waste my time and brain cells on learning such trivial things instead of wanting to learn things that actually apply to my future, God help me.

Answer:
No, you are not a terrible person. I would like to suggest, however, that you might be a little short-sighted. Chemistry is one of those sciences that employs a lot of math, reasoning, and critical thinking. These are all skills that will serve you well as a software engineer. This is most likely the reason chemistry is a requirement for your masters degree.

I honestly don't know where you could get the answers to your lab manual. If you do find the answers, I would suggest you disregard them and exercise your own skills in finding the answers.
This mainly tells me you'll make a terrible programmer in the real world.

Unless you're a solo artist, real world programming is about understanding other peoples needs, understanding other systems and processes, and finding ways to support and automate them.

Chemistry is one of the more complex yet well understood systems around, so if you can't be bothered to take the time to understand it, why should I hire you to program my critical business application?

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