Perhaps this was mentioned and I missed it, but with respect to James, Susy
Smith doesn't seem to include him in the bibliography, and she certainly
takes authorship (and most likely remuneration), though she "admits" that
she didn't write the book (it was really James). She states that, although
t
I understand that it is bad form to reply to one's own post but
an example came to mind which I thought I'd throw out there:
On Wed, 4 Dec 2013 19:37:35 -0500, Mike Palij wrote:
Hmm, a more vexing question, I think, is how do you cite
the voices in one's head? Should one just identify this as a
_
From: Mike Palij [m...@nyu.edu]
Sent: Wednesday, December 4, 2013 9:15 PM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Cc: Michael Palij
Subject: RE: [tips] Has anyone ever received this inquiry from a student about
APA style?
On Wed, 04 Dec 2013 18:45:18 -0800, Tim Shearon wrote:
&
On Wed, 04 Dec 2013 18:45:18 -0800, Tim Shearon wrote:
Mike Palij asked: "I also wonder if the physicists ever get asked
questions
like this?"
Experimental physicists- unlikely. But theoretical ones likely get
thousands of
them from many universes- often from younger versions of themselves in
Mike Palij asked: "I also wonder if the physicists ever get asked questions
like this?"
Experimental physicists- unlikely. But theoretical ones likely get thousands of
them from many universes- often from younger versions of themselves in the
future.
Tim
___
Timoth
On Wed, 04 Dec 2013 15:27:30 -0800, Rick Froman wrote:
Apastyle.org has evidently thought of everything:
http://blog.apastyle.org/apastyle/2013/10/how-to-cite-works-from-the-spirit-world.html
Hmm, a more vexing question, I think, is how do you cite the voices
in one's head? Should one just id