There's some physics forums I lurk and occasionally post in, and every time the discussion goes beyond physics, holy shit are their opinions dumb as fuck. Just getting someone to understand a simple point that anyone could understand with like 2 sentences just feels like wading through mud with them because every time anything seems to challenge one of their preconceived opinions at all (or if they just don't understand it because they're out of touch) they get annoyed, and then they fixate on irrelevant parts of your point until you have to explain that part of your point again and again and again, and then everyone forgets what it was even about. Especially the boomers in there.
Then there's the ones "helping" people, who will basically act like they are doing a MASSIVE courtesy to you by explaining things, so they'll put people through the shredder for misunderstanding something or for phrasing the question in a way that isn't absolutely perfectly 100% crystal clear as if their compiler is giving an error or something.
And it's not just people in forums, like almost all the professors I know are also just complete morons about anything even slightly unrelated to their specialty.
Why are science nerds like that, I fucking hate it. Like holy shit grow up >:(
Engineers are like physics nerds but so much fucking worse, same haughtiness and shittiness. But they don't even understand whatever science their engineering is based on or physics, lol.
Lol yeah like 95% of all the cranks peddling nonsense theories are engineers because they are very confident and they THINK they understand the physics but they really don't. I've had an engineer professor who was supposed to be hot shit but he didn't really understand torque or conservation of angular momentum. Which are, like, super basic stuff that is very close to what he does. But he thought he did and he was just spouting blatantly wrong nonsense.
I may be a bit biased, but I agree completely. There are way more arrogant STEMlord types in engineering. My impression is that is because there are a larger subset that are just genuinely curious about how the world works in physics. I know several people that started out in philosophy and switched to physics in undergrad because they thought that would be better for understanding the world, but still read more humanities and are really interested in things like ontology. Which seems to blunt a lot of the STEMlord aspects, in my experience.