Really? What do you think a dissertation is (thesis in some countries)? It's a culmination of the original research that you did in a field--the knowledge that you created.
I get what you're saying here, but PhD's are not just doing research papers. My dad got a PhD in Mathematics back in the 70's and he used his knowledge to break into the field of computer programming (from which I derive my own career) and formed his own development company building new cell phone tracking systems before GPS was ever widely used. He did these things after he acquired his doctorate. I suspect that there may be several PhD's around here who may also have done more than just research something and publish a dissertation on it.
I get what you're saying here, but PhD's are not just doing research papers. My dad got a PhD in Mathematics back in the 70's and he used his knowledge to break into the field of computer programming (from which I derive my own career) and formed his own development company building new cell phone tracking systems before GPS was ever widely used. He did these things after he acquired his doctorate. I suspect that there may be several PhD's around here who may also have done more than just research something and publish a dissertation on it.
Different countries and institutions have different takes on that, though, "thesis" sometimes applying to getting your doctorate. Which is pretty confusing. (Captain Pike did a "dissertation" on the Kelvin incident - is he a PhD? Or just a Master and Captain?).
Timo Saloniemi
In the course of Starfleet duties, an officer is referred to by Starfleet rank or position, not by academic credentials they may have (and I've stated elsewhere that I think it's doubtful that graduates of the regular four-year Starfleet academy program come out of it with doctorate degrees).
As an aside, I definitely would have gone for a master's degree if it was common practice for people to refer to somebody with a master's degree as "Master."
Kor
Quite welcome. And I'm very glad he took that path - he was the only thing standing in between me and a failing grade in College Calculus. My brain was clearly wired differently and my path was more towards software engineering (I make the computer do all the hard calculations for me), but for some perverse reason the school required one "advanced math" course, so I took the "easiest" one possible in that category. I survived with a C- and never looked back!BTW, Gebirg, I forgot to say thanks for sharing the story about your dad! Good for him!
If being a Master is so great how those who call themselves Doctor always beat them?
But who knows what qualifications exist in the Federation and what qualification you need to be awarded the title of Doctor? Perhaps those who hold the title of Doctor are less bothered by not being addressed by that title outside of more formal settings so don't correct people when they don't use that honorific.
I work with a few Ph.Ds and a couple of MDs. Neither seem to care about titles and seem kind of surprise when I address them as "Dr. So-and-So."I rarely get referred to as Dr. H. It's weird when it does come up, usually in a professional meeting, conference, etc. I always think they're talking about someone else and look over my shoulder.
Mr. is used and I don't correct anyone for using that. Some people are really anal about that and I don't get it. In newspapers, at least the LA Times, they only use Dr. in print to refer to Medical Doctors and the like.
I guess that would probably be different in academia, where students at least would call you Dr. or Professor. That's how I referred to my profs at the time anyway.
Quite welcome. And I'm very glad he took that path - he was the only thing standing in between me and a failing grade in College Calculus. My brain was clearly wired differently and my path was more towards software engineering (I make the computer do all the hard calculations for me), but for some perverse reason the school required one "advanced math" course, so I took the "easiest" one possible in that category. I survived with a C- and never looked back!All the CompSci classes I took, however, I aced and graduated with honors from that department (which was, ironically, a pin-off of the math department, which would explain their math requirement). I credit my dad for getting me through that as well, as I learned coding from him when I was 11 (he had several decades of Kobol, Fortran and Pascal under his belt, hence the coding company he built) and I've been doing it now for the past 40 years (34 professionally).
He's still around (retired), just turned 81, doing math problems for fun and started his own blog on the subject a couple years ago. I'm very glad to see he's not one of those octogenarians who are completely anti-tech. He still holds his own in that realm and he and I still have quite spirited discussions on modern coding practices.![]()
I work with a few Ph.Ds and a couple of MDs. Neither seem to care about titles and seem kind of surprise when I address them as "Dr. So-and-So."
Thank ye kindly. And sorry to hear about your dad. I've known other families who have lost loved ones around the holidays and it's particularly hard-hitting during such times.Don't count yourself short, man! Comp Sci is exactly a light subject either. Definitely a lot of abstract thinking there too as you know.
Glad to hear your dad is doing well. Treasure him. I lost mine before last Christmas.
My goodness, what an objectively wrong statement. Was that an attempt at a joke or something?
Wha?
While I can agree with the sentiment I have the view that doctors both have knowledge and are capable of producing knowledge. Most of the doctors are work with are not actively researching wile working in their specialty field. So while I appreciate the idea I feel like Ph.Ds are both, and saying they don't have knowledge feels oddly pedantic.This may be an oversimplification, but the way I always understood this concept was that, in academic fields, a doctorate degree (PhD) is recognition that your dissertation (with successful defense) has contributed something new and significant to your field of study at a high level, so that goes beyond "merely" researching and mastering the body of knowledge that already existed. Hence, you have produced knowledge.
While I can agree with the sentiment I have the view that doctors both have knowledge and are capable of producing knowledge. Most of the doctors are work with are not actively researching wile working in their specialty field. So while I appreciate the idea I feel like Ph.Ds are both, and saying they don't have knowledge feels oddly pedantic.
But, I might be being oddly pedantic myself.
Actually, I think you quite accurately quantified where I was going with this, and far more eloquently than I did. Sometimes my brain just gets too worn out to elucidate on certain things, especially close to the end of the day after an 8-hour code binge, when I just want to go home and be one with the couch.While I can agree with the sentiment I have the view that doctors both have knowledge and are capable of producing knowledge. Most of the doctors are work with are not actively researching wile working in their specialty field. So while I appreciate the idea I feel like Ph.Ds are both, and saying they don't have knowledge feels oddly pedantic.
But, I might be being oddly pedantic myself.
Precisely this.I'm thinking maybe the earlier post by Bad Thoughts was inadvertently missing a word. Instead of "Doctors don't have knowledge. They produce knowledge," the idea could have been intended as "Doctors don't just have knowledge. They produce knowledge."
That's what I assumed was meant, rather than the notion that doctors don't have any knowledge. If doctors didn't have any knowledge in the first place, then it wouldn't make sense for them to be able to produce new knowledge in their fields, because they wouldn't have any foundation to build on.
Kor
If I were to rewrite and clarify my statement, I would say, "Doctors aren't distinguished by having knowledge. They are distinguished by having produced knowledge." As you and @fireproof78 wrote, people who have earned doctorates are expected to be experts in their discipline.They have had their knowledge tested at early stages as a prerequisite to having their research proposals approved. However, I know many who surfed on a narrow knowledge base--what pertained to their research--and not a broad swath of literature and ideas from their discipline. They aren't as rounded as you might think. That's why I would put the emphasis on producing knowledge. It is the distinguishing feature. Indeed, a doctorate is more characterized by having focused on a problem or exploring a particular theory.I'm thinking maybe the earlier post by Bad Thoughts was inadvertently missing a word. Instead of "Doctors don't have knowledge. They produce knowledge," the idea could have been intended as "Doctors don't just have knowledge. They produce knowledge."
That's what I assumed was meant, rather than the notion that doctors don't have any knowledge. If doctors didn't have any knowledge in the first place, then it wouldn't make sense for them to be able to produce new knowledge in their fields, because they wouldn't have any foundation to build on.
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