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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]RE: [tlug] Speaking of computer usage ....
- Date: Sun, 02 Mar 2008 10:53:41 +0900
- From: "Stephen J. Turnbull" <stephen@example.com>
- Subject: RE: [tlug] Speaking of computer usage ....
- References: <ed10ee420802282026q44b13db7neb011ba53e4d4fe2@mail.gmail.com> <20080229113407.103654af.attila@kinali.ch> <874pbrljgk.fsf@uwakimon.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp> <20080301002855.GA27870@phb> <87ve46kiua.fsf@uwakimon.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp> <001101c87ba4$7bc7e510$7357af30$@com>
Kenneth M Burling Jr writes: > Professional means someone that does something as a profession. Precisely. "Professions" as conventionally thought of are represented by the medical profession and the legal profession. Both of which prominently feature ethical commitments as requirement of membership, specifically to keeping up with the state of the art and acting in a clients' interest. It's a kind of euphemism to call somebody a professional merely because they get paid. The difference between a professional athlete and an amateur athlete is that the former is obligated to perform on demand at a certain level and to attempt to improve his capabilities by a contract enforceable in court, not that he's paid to do it (although that pay is of course part of the contract). This difference is the same as the difference between a whore and a slut. The former is a professional (at least when a free lance rather than a slave) because of a commitment to satisfying the customer; the latter is not because he's only interested in satisfying himself. In other words, I'm using "professional" as the antonym of "unprofessional", rather than as a synonym for "paid", which is a perfectly good four-letter Anglo-Saxon word. > Ironically, what you described is more fitting to the definition of > Amateur, someone who does something for the love of it. Not at all. An amateur is an amateur precisely because they do not accept responsibility for the consequences of their actions. See GPLv2 sections 11-12 for a canonical example of the way amateurs accept responsibility in principle. Nor is amateur synonymous with craftsman. Especially in education I know many craftsmen who now hate their vocation because they accepted pay to do it. They are true professionals. Nevertheless, amateurs often take far more responsible actions than paid practitioners. The difference between amateurs and professionals is that the latter are expected to do so as part of a contract or on demand of a client. The magic of open source software is quite apparent when you consider how the aggregate of random responsible actions under voluntary coordination is something as reliable (ie, responsible on demand) as the Linux kernel. > Believe me, I know plenty of professionals that know squat about > their job. :P Sure, but there would be no loss of meaning in that sentence if it were written "Believe me, I know plenty of /paid practitioners/ that know squat about their job." I think it's pointless to use "professional" in contexts where it doesn't have the meaning "practicing as a profession".
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