BLA1398

7. Correlation is not causation.
Correlation does not imply causation. It means that just because two things correlate, it doesn't necessarily mean that one causes the other. Correlations between two things can be caused by a third factor that affects both of them. As an example, you might see a strong correlation between those people who wear XXXL size clothing and incidents of heart disease, but wearing XXXL size clothing doesn't cause heart disease, but they are linked by their common cause, that is obesity.

8. More of something good isn't always better.
More is not necessarily better. As an example I want to bring up a digital camera with all the marketing hype about higher megapixels in digital cameras that makes them more expensive. The number of megapixels allows you to make a clear and bigger print. But the size of the sensor is what makes the resolution of any camera better, not the number of pixels crammed into the sensors surface.

10. Lack of evidence doesn't mean it's false.
If one can't provide evidence to support the claim, it doesn't necessarily mean the claim is false, but evidence is required to know it's true. Without any evidence, it's just a matter of opinion. There is a God because it says so in the Bible. We believe God is real because of it, but this is an example of invalid logic. Who has proved that the Bible is not fiction and God is real? Logic is like an Atheist, and if things not proved by demonstration or logic itself, and if it has not been proved, it is not tested, so can be said to be unproven. But inability to prove something doesn't make it false because we can't prove otherwise.