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On 24 Jan 2005 00:35:37 GMT, N2EY wrote:
All can use the title "doctor." Yes, they can. But most that I know do not *require* it, outside their field of expertise. My brother-in-law has a PhD in Physiology (his field of expertise is geriatic physiology). His "daytime" job is as a profusionist - the expert who operates the heart-lung bypass machine during open-heart surgery. For many years he was a professor and then department head in his field at a famous teaching hospital. In class, he was "Professor". In academic meetings he was "Doctor". In the operating room he was "Mister" (he wasn't an MD - he knew too much for that!) although he was usually referred to by his first name. And yes, all the docs, including the anesthesiologists, asked him for advice on how much and what kind of anesthesia to administer. Heck, even a lawyers can use that title due their degree being a Juris Doctor ("Doctor of Law"). Yup, I got one of those. AFAIK there are no US law schools which grant a Batchelor of Laws degree any more. But they don't usually do that. Rumor has it that the only place in the US that does is a certain part of Michigan but I don't have any first-hand info to prove that. In the Eastern hemisphere lawyers are referred to as "Doctor" but only if they have the graduate degree (in most countries there law is an undergraduate degree program). As an aside, the British do not call American PhD holders "Doctor" because the attitude there is that the US schools hand the degree out like candy. In a recent BBC broadcast about Condoleeza Rice, she was referred to as "Miss Rice" continuously. Similarly, a dentist there is called "Mister" even though the coursework and training is as rigorous as that of a medical doctor. -- 73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane |
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