Citing Michael Slote’s paper and finding alternatives for “replace their fear”
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😎 how to cite this paper correctly?
“Existentialism and the Fear of Dying, by Michael Slote, published in the American Philosophical Quarterly, Vol-12 (1975)”
🤖 To cite the paper “Existentialism and the Fear of Dying” by Michael Slote, published in the “American Philosophical Quarterly” in 1975, you would follow the format of the citation style you are using. Below are examples in APA, MLA, and Chicago styles:😎 “Slote, Michael. 1975. “Existentialism and the Fear of Dying.” American Philosophical Quarterly 12: [page 27].”
**APA Style (7th edition):**
Slote, M. (1975). Existentialism and the fear of dying. *American Philosophical Quarterly, 12*, .
**MLA Style (8th edition):**
Slote, Michael. “Existentialism and the Fear of Dying.” *American Philosophical Quarterly*, vol. 12, 1975, .
**Chicago Style (17th edition, author-date):**
Slote, Michael. 1975. “Existentialism and the Fear of Dying.” *American Philosophical Quarterly* 12: .
Please replace “” with the actual page numbers of the article if they are known and necessary for your citation. The requirements for including page numbers can vary depending on the specific guidelines of your citation style and the context in which you are citing the paper (e.g., if you’re citing a specific argument or idea from the paper).
is this correct? “page 27”, “p. 27”, “Page 27″…
🤖 For a Chicago style citation, when you are citing a specific page, you typically use “p.” for a single page and “pp.” for multiple pages. Therefore, your citation should be formatted as follows:😎 “Interestingly, this can also be linked to the artificial intelligence technology we are using in this article, the (IMHO) illusory notion of artificial consciousness, and Sartre’s definition of bad faith. People who think of themselves as no more transcendent or intelligent than a chatbot are a modern version of Sartre’s idea of unconsciously thinking of oneself as an object to replace their fear of dying.”
“Slote, Michael. 1975. ‘Existentialism and the Fear of Dying.’ *American Philosophical Quarterly* 12: p. 27.”
This notation ensures clarity and adherence to the conventions of Chicago style citation.
I want an alternative verb for “replace their fear”
🤖 “Interestingly, this can also be linked to the artificial intelligence technology we are using in this article, the (IMHO) illusory notion of artificial consciousness, and Sartre’s definition of bad faith. People who think of themselves as no more transcendent or intelligent than a chatbot are a modern version of Sartre’s idea of unconsciously thinking of oneself as an object to mask their fear of dying.”
In this revision, “replace their fear” has been changed to “mask their fear” to provide a suitable alternative verb, suggesting a concealment of fear rather than its substitution.
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