Final Answer:
1. False cause: Okinawa’s population is not 100,000; it’s much larger (~1.4 million), so the “three times more” comparison is wrong.
2. False cause: Intelligence ≠ species-level superiority; this confuses “man” (humans) with males only, and wrongly assumes men > women.
3. False cause: Being the *best* flute player she’s heard doesn’t mean objectively best—bias and limited experience make this a hasty generalization.
4. False cause: Assuming the fall *only* happened because of distraction ignores other possible causes (e.g., slippery stairs); it’s a false cause fallacy.
5. False cause: The dog relaxed *while* watching the movie, but that doesn’t prove the movie caused relaxation—it could be coincidence or the disc case, not the content.
6. False cause: Assuming *any one* would sign “immediately” ignores individual differences; it’s an overgeneralization from a small group.
7. False cause: One person’s poor golf skills and rumored cheating don’t logically disprove being a good doctor—irrelevant traits are wrongly linked.
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Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of fallacies worksheet.