“You know that part of a wedding where the pastor says, ‘If anyone knows of a reason why this couple should not wed, speak now or forever hold your peace’?”
“Um, yeah….” The question from my undergraduate research assistant caught me off-guard, coming as it did in the middle of a discussion on doctoral dissertations.
“Does that sort of thing happen at people’s Ph.D. defenses?”
I think he was just kidding, but I love the idea.
Weddings, by design, chug slowly and verbosely toward a foregone conclusion. Although the guests invariably opt to hold their peace, except in soap operas, the invitation to do otherwise provides a moment of delicious tension while everyone wonders whether some crazy uncle or besotted friend might derail the ceremony.
Doctoral defenses, like weddings, are long, wordy, and devoid of drama; the candidate knows that he/she is going to pass. All of this is as it should be. But why not put the person’s destiny on hold for a few extra seconds while the audience is offered a chance to contest the awarding of the degree? Wouldn’t it be fun to imagine rival scholars emerging from the woodwork in such situations?
At the very least, this change in protocol might cause more Ph.D. defenses to be featured in soap operas.
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