Asked by Noid
which description explains when a source is objective?
It contains both facts and opinions about the topic that are supported by evidence
It is fractal and does not seek to persuade a reader to agree with a certain point of view
The source is prepared by someone who is an expert on topic
The information presented is well researched and comes from different sources
It contains both facts and opinions about the topic that are supported by evidence
It is fractal and does not seek to persuade a reader to agree with a certain point of view
The source is prepared by someone who is an expert on topic
The information presented is well researched and comes from different sources
Answers
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Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The description that best explains when a source is objective is:
**It is factual and does not seek to persuade a reader to agree with a certain point of view.**
An objective source presents information in a neutral manner, focusing on facts rather than the author's personal opinions or biases.
**It is factual and does not seek to persuade a reader to agree with a certain point of view.**
An objective source presents information in a neutral manner, focusing on facts rather than the author's personal opinions or biases.
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