Thursday, August 30, 2018

US History: Case Study




The Milgram Experiment


US History: Case Study


1. The rules Bess follows are the typical rules for bibliography, putting his name, the title, the publication city, the publication, and then the year. The page number is also provided for the notes, not the bibliography. The first time, he writes these, the second time he takes off the place where he got the source from, and the third time he just says the source is the same.
2. In Bess' mind, annotated means finding the most important examples to make a point.
3. The notes that do not have a page number citation are 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, 15, 24, and 25. This is because some of the notes are just common knowledge or is just a majority of the book or books, and don't need to have a page number.
4. Bess credited his sources as he still writes in the language and form of other authors and therefore know the author and the book. He also quoted the authors directly sometimes. However, we wouldn't know what page number he got it from.
5. Bess' argument is original as he writes it in his own words but using the other authors' tone, especially in 5. He quotes a sentence in this passage, so that it would be directly out of the author's words to let people know it wasn't his quote, so the use of using quotes to explain the work isn't his is actually original.

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