Asked by nope
How are reasons different from evidence?(1 point)
Responses
Reasons tell why something is true, while evidence defends a point of view.
Reasons tell why something is true, while evidence defends a point of view.
Reasons defend an idea as correct, while evidence justifies an idea.
Reasons defend an idea as correct, while evidence justifies an idea.
Reasons assert that an idea is true, while evidence justifies a point of view.
Reasons assert that an idea is true, while evidence justifies a point of view.
Reasons justify a point of view, while evidence supports an idea.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
"Reasons justify a point of view, while evidence supports an idea."
Explanation: reasons are the logical explanations why a claim should be accepted; evidence is the factual data or observations that back it up.
Explanation: reasons are the logical explanations why a claim should be accepted; evidence is the factual data or observations that back it up.
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