Asked by LOL

Which statement primarily appeals to logos, or reason, to support the position that doctored photos of celebrities promote unrealistic beauty standards?
Most celebrities are already uncommonly good-looking, so editing their photographs to hide any perceived imperfections serves to promote an even more unrealistic standard of beauty.
Jo Swinson, a former member of the British parliament, has shown how important this issue is by campaigning against the unrealistic depiction of women in advertisements.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
The first statement. It uses a logical premise (celebrities are already unusually attractive) and a causal inference (editing them increases the gap between real people and media images), so it appeals to logos. The second appeals to authority/ethos (referencing Jo Swinson).