Do you know what DDS stands for? FFS. |
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Mmm. Yes. I think 80% of a doctor.
I consider a vet 100% a doctor. I understand this is not rationale, lol. |
Do you understand what JD stands for? I'm a lawyer and I'm most certainly not a "doctor." |
^^^^^^^This person gets it.^^^^^^^^ |
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My (real) doctor friends hold off to see who steps forward on the plane first. It has happened to them a couple of times. One is a gastroenterologist and the other is a Dr NP who worked in an ER. Both times they ended up taking over the airplane patient as their qualifications were highest and the best fit for the emergency. Both times the patient lived.
I have heart issues and often look around a room or store to see who might be trained in CPR if the need were to arise. I hope there’s at least an Eagle Scout present as they’ve usually had CPR training a few times. Thankfully had been ok so far. |
| A veterinarian is also a doctor. I’d trust one in a human emergency. |
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A dentist is a doctor. A dentist is not a physician.
A PhD is a doctor. A PhD is not a physician. In fact back in the ancient days scholars had higher prestige than physicians, who adopted the title doctor to increase their prestige. |
| is it bad that I didn't think it was that hard to be a dentist but that it cost a lot of money to go to dental school? |
I’d take a dentist over Dr. Dre. |
| On the plane- it is less about the degree and more about the work. Who wants a dermatologist to respond? I’d take a ER nurse any day. And of course a dentist is a doctor in their office. I don’t get using it in daily life though. I’m an MD and I never introduce myself as doctor in daily life only a work in very specific circumstance (with patients). |
| I do. Yes, they are doctors of dentistry. |
| I hear Las Vegas has lots of head doctors for hire. |
Yes, OK, but do you agree that the word doctor floats between clinical authority and scholarly attainment, enabling situations where a dentist is a doctor in the credentialed sense while the same dentist is explicitly excluded from the category signified when we say a dentist is not a physician, just as a PhD is a doctor through the conferment of terminal academic mastery even though a PhD is not a physician, thereby underscoring that the term doctor operates less as a stable descriptor than as a linguistic corridor connecting multiple, sometimes competing, professional domains? |
| Yes. Dental school also has a residency. Your mouth health is connected to your vital organs. So yes dentists are important doctors. |
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Of course.
Now psychologists/psychiatrists are iffy if talking being a real "doctor", but then there are "professionals" and business doctors as well and not all medical doctors. |