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| ▲ | robotresearcher a day ago | parent [-] | | His title at Oxford was 'Professor', and he was addressed as 'Tony'. He made incoming DPhil (PhD) students a cup of tea individually in his office at the Computing Laboratory. It was a small group, but still I appreciated this personal touch. | | |
| ▲ | tialaramex 18 hours ago | parent [-] | | I never met Tony, but I liked his work. I'm not much of a one for tea, but I don't think either of my PhD supervisors ever bought me a drink - I didn't finish (got cancer, I'm fine now†, some cancers are very curable, but frankly I was struggling anyway so it was a good excuse to quit) and I'm sure it's traditional to buy something a bit harder than a cup of tea if you pass, but I didn't get that far. Anyway my point here was just a PSA that honorary degrees "don't count". If somebody only has an honorary doctorate but insists on being called "Doctor" they're an asshole. In fact, even outside University I know a lot of MDs and PhDs and in most contexts if they insist on the title "Doctor" they're an asshole even though they're entitled. † Well not fine, I'm old but I think that's an inevitable side effect of surviving so the alternative was worse. | | |
| ▲ | EdNutting 18 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | There's having An honorary degree... and then there's having 6 of them plus numerous other awards, and all the achievements to back them up :) Regardless, I've met people with only honorary doctorates, and it's a mixed bag when it comes to preferred titles. Often, though, the ones that really care, soon acquire a 'superior' title anyway, so it ends up becoming a moot point. | |
| ▲ | robotresearcher 13 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | You’re right. And ‘Professor’ comes and goes with the job, independent of degrees held. |
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