Practice makes perfect
Possibly. You also have to be good at and enjoy engineering concepts which do involve math.
You need good math to do engineering at a professional level.
On the contrary, you will need a lot of math to be good at science and engineering, so if you are good at math you have a good start, at least.
Of course not. Certainly, you won't be bad at physics or engineering BECAUSE OF your math skills. You NEED math for physics, and both math and physics for engineering, so somebody who is not good at math is more likely to have trouble with physics or engineering.
No, where do you get such weird ideas? You NEED math for physics and engineering!
Math, digital logic, math, data structures, math, structured system design, math, database management, math, writing functional specifications. And did I mention, math. I agree, the above is probably a little tiresome, but math logic is essential to becoming a good software engineer. Boolean algebra needs to be a second language.
No. The opposite is true. A person who is good at math will tend to do well in physics and engineering.
You'll certainly not have difficulty in physics and engineering BECAUSE you are good at math or economics; math, especially, is important in physics.
Math will help, not hinder, you in this. You actually need a LOT of math, especially for physics and engineering.
Nope, understanding math is the basis of understanding engineering
Not really. Science Engineering deals basically with Math subjects. Therefore, if you're good in Math, you'll do good in Science Engineering.
You bet it does ... and plenty of it, too. There will be massive formulas to calculate - most software engineering positions require one to know Calculus, too.