multiple choice question\nwhat principle can help you differentiate factual claims from opinions?\n\nfactual…

multiple choice question\nwhat principle can help you differentiate factual claims from opinions?\n\nfactual claims may be true or false; all opinions are false.\nit is easy to differentiate factual claims from opinions when you feel strongly about something.\neverything is an opinion until it is proven to be a fact.\njust because you agree with something does not make it a fact.
Answer
Brief Explanations:
- The first option is wrong because opinions are not inherently false; they are subjective judgments, not statements with a true/false verifiable status.
- The second option is incorrect because personal feelings do not help objectively differentiate facts and opinions; bias from strong feelings can cloud this distinction.
- The third option is wrong because factual claims have a verifiable true/false status regardless of whether they have been proven yet, they are not "opinions" before proof.
- The fourth option is correct: facts are verifiable statements of truth, while agreement or disagreement (a subjective reaction) does not change whether a claim is factual.
Answer:
D. Just because you agree with something does not make it a fact.