31 comments
@nonfedimemes Note that there is precedence here, because this has already been done multiple times. @nonfedimemes @Annaspanner In her senior year my daughter did three big “research” papers. Her last paper cited one of the earlier ones. Haha I hadn’t thought about this in a while. What a kook my kid is. @nonfedimemes here is the method in case chatgpt wants to copy it. 1. Open the trash @f4grx @nonfedimemes Was it a copy printed out from your computer? If so, then it’s already too late. @nonfedimemes something like : ‡ John B. Goode, "Red tiles house" dream, Boston MA, 2023. @nonfedimemes 1)Get a diary Go the FBI way and find a citable, non-national security, source that has the same information. You would probably cite it as you would a lecture you attended. The Almighty, Maker of Heaven and Earth, G. (0035, April). A Vision, via bright light. Damascus ; Main Road. @1dalm @nonfedimemes One could introduce it thus: Edgar Allen Poe once wrote that And on a similar vein, I myself was recently dreaming that.... @nonfedimemes I believe professional citing for dreams and visions begins with, "booga booga booga." @nonfedimemes A friend of mine, the scientists, PHD: Amateur. "It is commonly accepted that..." 😏 @oantolin @nonfedimemes Haha! How did I get so far in life without knowing that story? But there's a PDF of the paper here: https://www.maths.ed.ac.uk/~v1ranick/papers/tt.pdf @nonfedimemes Hold on. I had to go look it up. Coleridge. All I ever remember of that poem is the note explaining that he attempted to transcribe it directly from a dream but was interrupted. I felt I could relate to that in my younger days. I held an idea that creativity was mysterious and dreamlike and had to be captured. I no longer hold that view. Dreams are great inspiration though. @nonfedimemes Perfectly adequate question. I am not familiar with APA, but I am sure #Wikipedia has a template for such case.
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@nonfedimemes