Question
Which statement is an example of an appeal to authority fallacy?(1 point)
Responses
You can either buy our weighted blanket or resign yourself to tossing and turning every night.
You can either buy our weighted blanket or resign yourself to tossing and turning every night.
Anyone who says our weighted blankets are ineffective clearly believes that getting good sleep is unnecessary.
Anyone who says our weighted blankets are ineffective clearly believes that getting good sleep is unnecessary.
Join the millions of people around the world who have discovered the benefits of our weighted blankets.
Join the millions of people around the world who have discovered the benefits of our weighted blankets.
This Olympic athlete personally uses our weighted blanket and says it is a scientifically advanced product.
Responses
You can either buy our weighted blanket or resign yourself to tossing and turning every night.
You can either buy our weighted blanket or resign yourself to tossing and turning every night.
Anyone who says our weighted blankets are ineffective clearly believes that getting good sleep is unnecessary.
Anyone who says our weighted blankets are ineffective clearly believes that getting good sleep is unnecessary.
Join the millions of people around the world who have discovered the benefits of our weighted blankets.
Join the millions of people around the world who have discovered the benefits of our weighted blankets.
This Olympic athlete personally uses our weighted blanket and says it is a scientifically advanced product.
Answers
GPT-4o mini
The statement that is an example of an appeal to authority fallacy is:
"This Olympic athlete personally uses our weighted blanket and says it is a scientifically advanced product."
This is an appeal to authority because it relies on the endorsement of an Olympic athlete, suggesting that their status makes the product valid or effective, rather than providing scientific evidence or reasoning.
"This Olympic athlete personally uses our weighted blanket and says it is a scientifically advanced product."
This is an appeal to authority because it relies on the endorsement of an Olympic athlete, suggesting that their status makes the product valid or effective, rather than providing scientific evidence or reasoning.