this is comparing a third-year engineering course to a fourth year physics course. There is no difference in difficulty between third and fourth year courses, at least in physics and math.
Does your math minor include courses that were required for your degree? I don't see how engineers would have time to do that. I have taken 11 math courses so far, and would need an extra three to get a math minor...
I never said engineering was easy. I have a ton of respect for engineers and I realize a lot of them are much smarter than me. If you are going to try and argue that an engineering undergraduate degree is more difficult than a physics one, you are just plain wrong.
You can argue that an undergrad in engineering is more work than you average bio student and would be correct, but once you strip away all the pre-med students and other people just breezing through those degrees, you will find people who have to work their asses off just as hard as engineers.
In a way we are also comparing apples to oranges. I look at people like my brother and my dad and can just tell that they have engineering-type minds. They are always designing stuff, always sketching things on napkins, etc. My dad has no idea how electricity works, but he knows every well what it will do and how he can use it. Whereas someone like myself has a fairly good understanding of what electricity is, but if you asked me to design a circuit I would definitely fuck something up.