That’s how the shape of benzene was first theorised.
Here Kekulé spoke of the creation of the theory. He said that he had discovered the ring shape of the benzene molecule after having a reverie or day-dream of a snake biting its own tail (a symbol in ancient cultures known as the ouroboros).
Not really, a day-dream is not a delusion
MLA format would be something like this:
Maneuver, The Picard. The Delusion. Picard, 2023.
Then, in your paper, to reference it, just write “(Maneuver 2023)”.
I like IEEE format, in text citations are just square brackets with a number [1]. Trust engineers to be
lazyefficient.Sources:
[1] https://ieeeauthorcenter.ieee.org/wp-content/uploads/IEEE-Reference-Guide.pdf
I have only known that as the Wikipedia format. But it’s obviously the best format. Straight to the point and easy to write.
Beautiful, lol
You can’t though, unless said delusion was previously published. You can publish delusions, e.g., in an autobiography, a novel, or even a psychology thesis.
Lmao “delusion” makes this
Pretend it’s in the “supplementary information”. Nobody reads it, with the exception of phd students
Hmm. Ask a republican, this is right up their alley
I wonder why that’s so prevalent on the right.
As a personal observation—“observation” vs “delusion” is a matter of perspective.
The fact that your observation turned out to be a delusion is irrelevant information
the proper use of you’re delusional.
Not a delusion but rather a dream in which August Kekulé found the chemical structure of benzene on his dream
I think you cite Emmitt Brown