Structure and organization of texts help readers understand what's most important by grouping related information together. Headings, subheadings, chapter titles, highlighted vocabulary
The evidence in the excerpt that supports Schwartz's claim is:
- "But after all that, 13 percent of adult Americans say they would absolutely refuse to even try recycled water, according to a recent study in the journal Judgment and Decision Making."
- "'A small minority of people are very offended by this, and can slow it down or stop it because of legal and political forces,' said Paul Rozin, a psychology professor at the University of Pennsylvania who studies revulsion and a co-author of the study."
- "Opponents of reusing water have long had the upper hand, said Paul Slovic, a professor of psychology at the University of Oregon, because of the 'branding problem.'"
<h3>What is the claim in the passage?</h3>
The claim in this passage is that the opponents of water recycling dissent from it because of the problem of branding.
In the quotes cited above, we can see that 13% of adults in America have this view. The other pieces of evidence mention the small minority of opponents who also hold the same view.
Learn more about the claim of a text here:
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A. If Henry goes to the library, the world is a better place.
Answer:
Factual evidence was used to appeal to logic.
Explanation:
The absence of options makes this question a dicey one but based on previous experience with this question, I'll answer what I know.
Take the Tortillas Out of Your Poetry is a book by Rudolfo Anaya.
In this excerpt, Anaya gives an example of the censorship that his book had to endure.
He gave an account of how a high school class took the books outside and saw that they were burned as shown here: "...and a school board member was quoted as saying: “We took the books out and personally saw that they were burned.”"
This is an appeal to the reader's sense of logic because it uses concrete evidence to sustain the argument.