Photography is fundamentally about observation — training yourself to notice light, geometry, and moment. It's the most immediate of the four disciplines: you see, you frame, you capture. But the simplicity is deceptive.
Every photograph is a dataset. The sensor captures photons across a spectrum, the lens introduces its own physics, and the resulting file is a matrix of values waiting to be interpreted. Post-processing is signal processing. Long exposure is integration over time. The darkroom was the first image processing pipeline.
This is where photography stops being "just art" and starts bleeding into every other field. The same skills that compose a street photograph — pattern recognition, timing, spatial awareness — are the skills that spot anomalies in a network log or structure in telescope data.