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.
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.
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