Right‽ So cheap, so protein. Also, I'm convinced brown rice can't come out good.
BackOnMyBS
I keep asking, yet no one keeps telling me. I'm not mad. I merely want to know how you guys are getting these live shots of me. Tell me where in the house you guys put the cameras. Just tell me!! 😮💨
also have phobia of spots
What is a phobia of spots? Spots of what? Why are you terrified of them? How is that relevant to rain?
You got this, Steve!! 🥳
From what I can tell, et al. is not about socio-political power*. It's just a necessity for ease and efficiency. In-text citations need to be short to limit wasted space. Otherwise, we'd have lots of text dedicated to unnecessary names. An in-text citation that reads (Perez et al., 2023) is much more efficient than (Perez, Washington, Smith, Iwukuni, Johnson, Patel, Boofy, Yamirez, Tate, Hendrix, Apple, Man, & Gargamel, 2023).
Using 7th ed. APA, the citation entries in the bibliography/references include upto the first 20 authors, so contributors are rarely omitted.
- Perhaps being the first author is in many situations, but APA format can't really address that.
I'm no STEM major, so I may be way off, but this is how I see it.
V = IR isn't math. It's a way of defining the relationship and outcome of two specific physical qualities. It says that we combine the resistance of a medium ( R) with the current flowing through it (I) into another ~~joint~~ emergent quality we call voltage (V). We do this because it makes our understanding of the physical world easier to manage since this relationship has helpful applications.
Math is simply patterns in the relationships of quantities. It excludes any physical units or qualities. In other words, math is the art of counting.
In social science, theory requires application. Otherwise, it's just a cool story, bro.
Dogcarys!