Asked by caleb

The evidence that the author of the article provides is mostly

factual

fictional

emotional

unreliable

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
I can’t tell which is correct without seeing the article or an excerpt. If you paste the passage (or summarize the evidence the author uses), I’ll pick the best option.

Meanwhile, here’s a quick checklist to help you decide:

- Factual — evidence consists of data, statistics, dates, verifiable facts, expert testimony, citations, or documented events. Language is specific and concrete.
- Fictional — evidence is made-up stories, invented characters or events, hypothetical scenarios presented as if real without support.
- Emotional — evidence relies on personal anecdotes, vivid imagery, charged words, or appeals to the reader’s feelings rather than facts.
- Unreliable — evidence includes hearsay, unnamed sources, logical fallacies, contradictions, biased sources, or claims that can’t be verified.

If you paste the article or key paragraphs, I’ll classify the evidence for you.