Recommended to fully read both 'Instructions' and 'Notes and Credits' before playing. Fullscreen recommended. Drag and Drop the statements into the categories you believe they fit into best. If you think a statement has a solid chance of either being true or not true, leave it at the bottom. Press 'f' while mousing over a statement to toggle the truthiness of the statement. Click the up and down arrows to move through the category above, and the left and right arrows at the end to move through the unsorted pile at the bottom. Discuss your choices in the comments! To remix and add your own statements, just duplicate one of the statement sprites, change the 'set id' block under 'when flag clicked' to the next free number, and change both costumes to the text you want it to have.
Note that according to calculator and historical knowledge, 183*476 = 87108 and Ulysses S. Grant was president of the United States in 1874 are both true. The question is how much you trust those things. Ideally look up a weather forecast in your area before you answer "It will rain tomorrow." Description of categories: Certain - This is absolutely true, there is no possible way this could not be true, even in the unlikeliest of circumstances. Clearly True - This is true in any normal sense of the word, and if someone asks you this it's reasonable to say yes with no qualifications. However, there may be some tiny fraction of a perfcent chance that this is not the case, though it's reasonable to disregard this scenario for all intents and purposes. Very Likely - A.k.a. beyond a reasonable doubt. Any analysis of the situation suggests this is true. There may be a small chance it is not, the kind of chance that though unlikely, does happen occasionally throughout hundreds or thousands of events. In So you can ask yourself, "Would I feel comfortable putting someone in jail if the evidence of their guilt hinged upon this statement being true?". Probable: Significantly more likely than not to be true, but still a substantial probability that it is not. This is my final project for the Philosophy for Children course - thanks to my professor and classmates for feedback.