Let's say that I want to use articles and/or books as references in a paper. |
|
Let's say that I want to use articles and/or books as references in a paper. |
|
Last edited by zoth00; 03-16-2013 at 12:37 AM.
No one cares if you physically own them or not, since most of the stuff is probably freely accessible any way. If I were to buy a book off amazon, I wouldn't have to reference amazon as a source. So you don't really need to say where you got a book just reference the book it self so others can find it. If an article is reprinted then depending on the format they might want where you read it and the reference going back to the original as well. |
|
As long as you cite the author and title you should be fine, unless the article is only published on the web and in no paper format. |
|
Thanks Alric and melanieb, you both make pretty good points. Unless the article/book is only published on the web (which I'm guessing it's not very common) people can't accuse me of anything, since I can simply say I got it from a colleague. |
|
I don't think anyone will ask you for the book unless it was something super rare. They would probably just go to the library, or down load it off the internet. |
|
Bookmarks