Read the following introduction to a website titled The Truth about Tarantulas. What is the most logical conclusion you can make
about the credibility of this source? I hate tarantulas. They are very scary spiders. My cousin had one the size of a CD. I think it's their hair that makes them extra creepy. Tarantulas spend most of their time hiding when they are not hunting. Both of those habits make me nervous. Here are eight facts—one for each leg on the poisonous little monsters. The author has created this website to inform, so the facts the website provides should be reliable. The author hates tarantulas, so the information the website provides may be biased against them. The author uses the word truth in the website title, so the information should be credible. The author has encountered a tarantula before and thus knows more than the average person.
What the author says about their experience is correct and true. And so you can be sure that what the author is saying about their experience is true. But the opinion that they give in the experience is biased and is not true for everyone. So the answer is that the experience is true and credible, but the opinions in the experience are not true for everyone.