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Standards for references and citations

Standards for references and citations:

For citation and references use APA, see American Psychological Association, (2020). Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (7th ed.). https://doi.org/101037/0000165-000:

  1. Book:

Landemore, H. (2017). Democratic Reason. Princeton University Press.

Parenthetical citation: (Landemore, 2017)

Narrative citation:  Landemore (2017)

 

  1. Book Chapter:

MacGrath, M. (2015). Skepticism About Knowledge (1986). In Goldman, A. & MacGrath, M., Epistemology (pp. 81-104). Oxford University Press.

Parenthetical citation: (MacGrath, 2015)

Narrative citation: MacGrath (2015)

 

  1. Journal article:

Worsnip, A. (2015). Possible False Knowledge. Journal of Philosophy, 112(5), 225-246. doi:10.5840/jphil2015112514

Parenthetical citation: Worsnip (2015)

Narrative citation:  Worsnip (2015)

 

  1. Page and Web Site:

D.1 With no date

Douven, I. (n.d.). Covid-2019, Induction and Social Epistemology. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science & Short Reads. http://www.thebsps.org/short-reads/douven-socialepistemology/

Parenthetical citation: (Douven, n.d.)

Narrative citation: Douven (n.d.)

 

D.2 Blog spot

Hanna, R. & Heftler, S. (2022, October 9). A Moral Argument For Gun Abolitionism in 100 Words and 8 Simple Pictures. Against Professional Philosophy.  https://againstprofphil.org/2022/10/09/a-moral-argument-for-gun-abolitionism-in-100-words-and-8-simple-pictures/

Parenthetical citation: (Hanna & Hefter, 2022)

Narrative citation: Hanna and Hefter (2022)

Note. If the source (article or book) has a DOI, it must be placed as part of the bibliographic reference.