Is there any other country in the world where people get hung up about "doctors"?
Is it a Brazilian thing, or is there some other country in the world where (some) people get hung up about the fact that the word "doctor" may refer to both physicians and holders of doctorate degrees?
I'm trying to find some information online, but I'm having trouble tracing the origin of this myth and finding out whether it's a local belief. Is it?
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May-12-2014 00:00
Lews
Platipus And Prog Addict
Registered: Feb 2007
Location: Hugging Whales And Saving Trees
I'm not sure I understand what you mean by "get hung up by" or what myth you're talking about lol
Of course, this is wildly inaccurate, as doctor has come to have both meanings in most European languages, of which Portuguese happens to be one. So, if this myth exists here, I wonder if it exists in some other place where a European language is spoken.
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May-12-2014 01:19
Intellekshual
tranceaddict in training
Registered: Dec 2011
Location: Oubliette
Nope. Never heard of this nonsense.
If anything, it's the other way around. If you say the word "doctor", everyone assumes you're talking about an MD. If you're taking about another type of doctor i.e a holder of a doctorate degree, you have to specify which.
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May-12-2014 01:39
pkcRAISTLIN
arbiter's chief minion
Registered: Jul 2002
Location:
third world problems.
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May-12-2014 01:41
FuzzQi
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Sep 2009
Location: In your face
Re: Is there any other country in the world where people get hung up about "doctors"?
quote:
Originally posted by Lira
Is it a Brazilian thing, or is there some other country in the world where (some) people get hung up about the fact that the word "doctor" may refer to both physicians and holders of doctorate degrees?
I'm trying to find some information online, but I'm having trouble tracing the origin of this myth and finding out whether it's a local belief. Is it?
Yes, pedantics the world over get hung up about this
Originally posted by Intellekshual
Nope. Never heard of this nonsense.
If anything, it's the other way around. If you say the word "doctor", everyone assumes you're talking about an MD. If you're taking about another type of doctor i.e a holder of a doctorate degree, you have to specify which.
I feel the same, personally... this is what seems to wind these people up so much
quote:
Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN
third world problems.
In my experience, people who spout such nonsense here do perceive this as a symptom of a backwards society (usually due to cultural cringe). If FuzzQi heard about this in Kiwi-Aussie land, then it's no surprise someone pedantic sees their peers under an unfavourable light...
Do you remember where you heard that, Daniel?
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May-12-2014 03:51
Joss Weatherby
Banned
Registered: May 2008
Location: The Pacific Northwest, of course
If anything it is the opposite in the US, but even then rarely have I ever heard anyone have a problem with it.
Usually context and qualifiers are enough, and mostly people will say they have a "doctorate of xyz" or a "PhD in ..." if they aren't a MD.
May-12-2014 04:16
Lews
Platipus And Prog Addict
Registered: Feb 2007
Location: Hugging Whales And Saving Trees
Yeah, in America it's definitely the other way around, where people (ignorant people) are more likely to say you shouldn't call someone a doctor unless they have an MD.
Most people I know just say "I have a doctorate in ____", regardless of if its Medical or Philosophy. Though no one really introduces themselves as a doctor unless they are a medical doctor.
Registered: May 2008
Location: The Pacific Northwest, of course
Yea, the only time I've ever heard doctor generally used in the introduction of someone, like at a lecture or speech, and in that case they usually say "introducing Dr. Blahblah, a PhD in field XYZ".
If I am talking to someone who has a doctorate and talking to them in a formal tone then I will also say/write "Dr." instead of Mr. or Ms./Mrs.
May-12-2014 07:03
Vector A
Your petrochemical arms
Registered: Apr 2011
Location: U.S.
Here you also get a lot of self-helpy type books written by "FirstName LastName, PhD." Although it sometimes happens that the author's PhD is in a field that has nothing to do with the advice he or she is doling out.
May-12-2014 12:39
Serial Killer
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Oct 2007
Location: Here and There
quote:
Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN
third world problems.