CAT 2021 VARC Slot 2 | Previous Year CAT Paper
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Answer the next 4 questions based on the passage given below.
I have elaborated . . . a framework for analyzing the contradictory pulls on [Indian] nationalist ideology in its struggle against the dominance of colonialism and the resolution it offered to those contradictions. Briefly, this resolution was built around a separation of the domain of culture into two spheres—the material and the spiritual. It was in the material sphere that the claims of Western civilization were the most powerful. Science, technology, rational forms of economic organization, modern methods of statecraft—these had given the European countries the strength to subjugate the non-European people . . . To overcome this domination, the colonized people had to learn those superior techniques of organizing material life and incorporate them within their own cultures. . . . But this could not mean the imitation of the West in every aspect of life, for then the very distinction between the West and the East would vanish—the self-identity of national culture would itself be threatened. . . .
The discourse of nationalism shows that the material/spiritual distinction was condensed into an analogous, but ideologically far more powerful, dichotomy: that between the outer and the inner. . . . Applying the inner/outer distinction to the matter of concrete day-to-day living separates the social space into ghar and bāhir, the home and the world. The world is the external, the domain of the material; the home represents one’s inner spiritual self, one’s true identity. The world is a treacherous terrain of the pursuit of material interests, where practical considerations reign supreme. It is also typically the domain of the male. The home in its essence must remain unaffected by the profane activities of the material world—and woman is its representation. And so one gets an identification of social roles by gender to correspond with the separation of the social space into ghar and bāhir. . . .
The colonial situation, and the ideological response of nationalism to the critique of Indian tradition, introduced an entirely new substance to [these dichotomies] and effected their transformation. The material/spiritual dichotomy, to which the terms world and home corresponded, had acquired . . . a very special significance in the nationalist mind. The world was where the European power had challenged the non-European peoples and, by virtue of its superior material culture, had subjugated them. But, the nationalists asserted, it had failed to colonize the inner, essential, identity of the East which lay in its distinctive, and superior, spiritual culture. . . . [I]n the entire phase of the national struggle, the crucial need was to protect, preserve and strengthen the inner core of the national culture, its spiritual essence. . . .
Once we match this new meaning of the home/world dichotomy with the identification of social roles by gender, we get the ideological framework within which nationalism answered the women’s question. It would be a grave error to see in this, as liberals are apt to in their despair at the many marks of social conservatism in nationalist practice, a total rejection of the West. Quite the contrary: the nationalist paradigm in fact supplied an ideological principle of selection.
Which one of the following best describes the liberal perception of Indian nationalism?
- A.
Indian nationalism’s sophistication resided in its distinction of the material from the spiritual spheres.
- B.
Indian nationalist discourses provided an ideological principle of selection.
- C.
Indian nationalist discourses reaffirmed traditional gender roles for Indian women.
- D.
Indian nationalism embraced the changes brought about by colonialism in Indian women’s traditional gender roles.
Answer: Option C
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Explanation :
According to the author in the last paragraph - The liberal perception, has error in it, suggesting that their perception that there was social conservatism in nationalist practice, is incorrect.
Option (c) reflects social conservatism as it talks of reaffirming traditional gender roles for Indian women.
No other option talks about social conservatism in it.
Hence, option (c).
Workspace:
Which one of the following, if true, would weaken the author’s claims in the passage?
- A.
The colonial period saw the hybridisation of Indian culture in all realms as it came in contact with ritish/European culture.
- B.
Forces of colonial modernity played an important role in shaping anti-colonial Indian nationalism.
- C.
Indian nationalists rejected the cause of English education for women during the colonial period.
- D.
The Industrial Revolution played a crucial role in shaping the economic prowess of Britain in the century
Answer: Option A
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Explanation :
The passage talks states that Indian nationalist borrowed from the material sphere, not the spiritual sphere.
Option (a) states - "there was hybridization of Indian culture in all spheres". This weakens the author's claims in the passage.
Hence, option (a).
Workspace:
On the basis of the information in the passage, all of the following are true about the spiritual/material dichotomy of Indian nationalism EXCEPT that it:
- A.
constituted the premise of the ghar/bāhir dichotomy.
- B.
represented a continuation of age-old oppositions in Indian culture.
- C.
helped in safeguarding the identity of Indian nationalism.
- D.
was not as ideologically powerful as the inner/outer dichotomy.
Answer: Option B
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Explanation :
Option (a) is actually the theme of the passage and hence is eliminated.
Option (b) is not mentioned in the passage.
Option (c) is mentioned in the second last paragraph.
Option (d) can be verified from the first sentence of the second paragraph.
Hence, option (b).
Workspace:
Which one of the following explains the “contradictory pulls” on Indian nationalism?
- A.
Despite its spiritual superiority, Indian nationalism had to fight against colonial domination.
- B.
Despite its scientific and technological inferiority, Indian nationalism had to fight against colonial domination.
- C.
Despite its fight against colonial domination, Indian nationalism had to borrow from the coloniser in the spiritual sphere.
- D.
Despite its fight against colonial domination, Indian nationalism had to borrow from the coloniser in the material sphere.
Answer: Option D
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Explanation :
The passage starts by describing the 'contradictory pulls' on Indian nationalist ideology.
West dominated in science, technology, economic organization and modern methods of statecraft. To overcome this domination, instead of fighting the colonialists on this front, colonized people 'had to learn those superior techniques of organizing material life and incorporate them within their own cultures'.
In other words, despite its fight against colonial domination, Indian nationalism had adopted Western ideas in the material sphere.
Hence, option (d).
Workspace:
Answer the next 4 questions based on the passage given below.
It has been said that knowledge, or the problem of knowledge, is the scandal of philosophy. The scandal is philosophy’s apparent inability to show how, when and why we can be sure that we know something or, indeed, that we know anything. Philosopher Michael Williams writes: ‘Is it possible to obtain knowledge at all? This problem is pressing because there are powerful arguments, some very ancient, for the conclusion that it is not . . . Scepticism is the skeleton in Western rationalism’s closet’. While it is not clear that the scandal matters to anyone but philosophers, philosophers point out that it should matter to everyone, at least given a certain conception of knowledge. For, they explain, unless we can ground our claims to knowledge as such, which is to say, distinguish it from mere opinion, superstition, fantasy, wishful thinking, ideology, illusion or delusion, then the actions we take on the basis of presumed knowledge – boarding an airplane, swallowing a pill, finding someone guilty of a crime – will be irrational and unjustifiable.
That is all quite serious-sounding but so also are the rattlings of the skeleton: that is, the sceptic’s contention that we cannot be sure that we know anything – at least not if we think of knowledge as something like having a correct mental representation of reality, and not if we think of reality as something like things-as-they-are-in-themselves, independent of our perceptions, ideas or descriptions. For, the sceptic will note, since reality, under that conception of it, is outside our ken (we cannot catch a glimpse of things-in-themselves around the corner of our own eyes; we cannot form an idea of reality that floats above the processes of our conceiving it), we have no way to compare our mental representations with things-asthey-are-in-themselves and therefore no way to determine whether they are correct or incorrect. Thus the sceptic may repeat (rattling loudly), you cannot be sure you ‘know’ something or anything at all – at least not, he may add (rattling softly before disappearing), if that is the way you conceive ‘knowledge’.
There are a number of ways to handle this situation. The most common is to ignore it. Most people outside the academy – and, indeed, most of us inside it – are unaware of or unperturbed by the philosophical scandal of knowledge and go about our lives without too many epistemic anxieties. We hold our beliefs and presumptive knowledges more or less confidently, usually depending on how we acquired them (I saw it with my own eyes; I heard it on Fox News; a guy at the office told me) and how broadly and strenuously they seem to be shared or endorsed by various relevant people: experts and authorities, friends and family members, colleagues and associates. And we examine our convictions more or less closely, explain them more or less extensively, and defend them more or less vigorously, usually depending on what seems to be at stake for ourselves and/or other people and what resources are available for reassuring ourselves or making our beliefs credible to others (look, it’s right here on the page; add up the figures yourself; I happen to be a heart specialist).
The author of the passage is most likely to support which one of the following statements?
- A.
The actions taken on the basis of presumed knowledge are rational and justifiable if we are confident that that knowledge is widely held.
- B.
For the sceptic, if we think of reality as independent of our perceptions, ideas or descriptions, we should aim to know that reality independently too.
- C.
The scandal of philosophy is that we might not know anything at all about reality if we think of reality as independent of our perceptions, ideas or descriptions.
- D.
The confidence with which we maintain something to be true is usually independent of the source of the alleged truth.
Answer: Option C
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Explanation :
Option (a) is wrong as it is clearly mentioned in the first paragraph - "the actions we take on the basis of presumed knowledge ... will be irrational and unjustifiable"
Option (b): According to the passage, the sceptic questions our ability to know ‘reality’ defined as things-as-they- are-in-themselves, independent of our perceptions, ideas or descriptions because ‘it floats above the processes of our conceiving it‘. Option (a) states that the sceptic would advocate knowing reality independently which is not correct.
Option (c) is correct.
Option (d) goes against the last paragraph of the passage - "We hold our beliefs and presumptive knowledges more or less confidently, usually depending on how we acquired them.."
Hence, option (c).
Workspace:
“. . . we cannot catch a glimpse of things-in-themselves around the corner of our own eyes; we cannot form an idea of reality that floats above the processes of our conceiving it . . .” Which one of the following statements best reflects the argument being made in this sentence?
- A.
If the reality of things is independent of our eyesight, logically we cannot perceive our perception.
- B.
Our knowledge of reality cannot be merged with our process of conceiving it.
- C.
Our knowledge of reality floats above our subjective perception of it.
- D.
If the reality of things is independent of our perception, logically we cannot perceive that reality.
Answer: Option D
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Explanation :
Second paragraph states - "we cannot form an idea of reality that floats above the processes of our conceiving it’
The argument being made here is that if reality is independent of our perceptions, then it is clearly out of our scope of understanding, as it exists outside our ability to conceive or perceive it.
Hence, option (d).
Workspace:
The author discusses all of the following arguments in the passage, EXCEPT:
- A.
philosophers maintain that the scandal of philosophy should be of concern to everyone.
- B.
sceptics believe that we can never fully know anything, if by “knowing” we mean knowledge of a reality that is independent of the knower.
- C.
the best way to deal with scepticism about the veracity of knowledge is to ignore it.
- D.
if we cannot distinguish knowledge from opinion or delusion, we will not be able to justify our actions.
Answer: Option C
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Explanation :
Option (a) has been discssued in first paragraph - "...While it is not clear that the scandal matters to anyone but philosophers, philosophers point out that it should matter to everyone..."
Option (b) has been discussed in second paragraph - "...the sceptic’s contention that we cannot be sure that we know anything – at least not if we think of knowledge as something like having a correct mental representation of reality..."
Option (c): Although author argues that ignoring scepticism about the veracity of knowledge is 'one of the ways', it is not necessarily the best way accoring to the author. Hence, option (c) is not discussed in the passage.
Option (d) is discussed in first paragraph - "...unless we can ground our claims to knowledge as such, which is to say, distinguish it from mere opinion, superstition, fantasy, wishful thinking, ideology, illusion or delusion..."
Hence, option (c).
Workspace:
According to the last paragraph of the passage, “We hold our beliefs and presumptive knowledges more or less confidently, usually depending on” something. Which one of the following most broadly captures what we depend on?
- A.
All of the options listed here.
- B.
How we come to hold them; how widely they are held in our social circles.
- C.
How much of a stake we have in them; what resources there are to support them.
- D.
Remaining outside the academy; ignoring epistemic anxieties.
Answer: Option B
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Explanation :
The third paragraph of the passage states = "We hold our beliefs and presumptive knowledges more or less confidently, usually depending on how we acquired them (I saw it with my own eyes; I heard it on Fox News; a guy at the office told me) and how broadly and strenuously they seem to be shared or endorsed by various relevant people: experts and authorities, friends and family members, colleagues and associates". Hence, option (b).
Option (c) relates to factors based on which we examine or defend our convictions.
Option (d) does not relate to the question.
Hence, option (b).
Workspace:
Answer the next 4 questions based on the passage given below.
Many people believe that truth conveys power. . . . Hence sticking with the truth is the best strategy for gaining power. Unfortunately, this is just a comforting myth. In fact, truth and power have a far more complicated relationship, because in human society, power means two very different things.
On the one hand, power means having the ability to manipulate objective realities: to hunt animals, to construct bridges, to cure diseases, to build atom bombs. This kind of power is closely tied to truth. If you believe a false physical theory, you won’t be able to build an atom bomb. On the other hand, power also means having the ability to manipulate human beliefs, thereby getting lots of people to cooperate effectively. Building atom bombs requires not just a good understanding of physics, but also the coordinated labor of millions of humans. Planet Earth was conquered by Homo sapiens rather than by chimpanzees or elephants, because we are the only mammals that can cooperate in very large numbers. And large-scale cooperation depends on believing common stories. But these stories need not be true. You can unite millions of people by making them believe in completely fictional stories about God, about race or about economics. The dual nature of power and truth results in the curious fact that we humans know many more truths than any other animal, but we also believe in much more nonsense. . . .
When it comes to uniting people around a common story, fiction actually enjoys three inherent advantages over the truth. First, whereas the truth is universal, fictions tend to be local. Consequently if we want to distinguish our tribe from foreigners, a fictional story will serve as a far better identity marker than a true story. . . . The second huge advantage of fiction over truth has to do with the handicap principle, which says that reliable signals must be costly to the signaler. Otherwise, they can easily be faked by cheaters. . . . If political loyalty is signaled by believing a true story, anyone can fake it. But believing ridiculous and outlandish stories exacts greater cost, and is therefore a better signal of loyalty. . . . Third, and most important, the truth is often painful and disturbing. Hence if you stick to unalloyed reality, few people will follow you. An American presidential candidate who tells the American public the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth about American history has a 100 percent guarantee of losing the elections. . . . An uncompromising adherence to the truth is an admirable spiritual practice, but it is not a winning political strategy. . . .
Even if we need to pay some price for deactivating our rational faculties, the advantages of increased social cohesion are often so big that fictional stories routinely triumph over the truth in human history. Scholars have known this for thousands of years, which is why scholars often had to decide whether they served the truth or social harmony. Should they aim to unite people by making sure everyone believes in the same fiction, or should they let people know the truth even at the price of disunity?
The author implies that, like scholars, successful leaders:
- A.
use myths to attain the first type of power.
- B.
today know how to create social cohesion better than in the past.
- C.
need to leverage both types of power to remain in office.
- D.
know how to balance truth and social unity.
Answer: Option D
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Explanation :
In the last paragraph, the author suggests "...the advantages of increased social cohesion are often so big that fictional stories routinely triumph over the truth in human history’ and that this is ‘why scholars often had to decide whether they served the truth or social harmony...".
This implies that scholars had to find balance between truth and social harmony.
Therefore, option (d) is correct.
It is not mentioned that scholars chose myth over truth, hence option (a) is eliminated.
No comparision of past and present is made in the passage, hence option (b) is eliminated.
Option (c) is far-fetched and hence can also be eliminated.
Hence, option (d).
Workspace:
Regarding which one of the following quotes could we argue that the author overemphasises the importance of fiction?
- A.
“On the one hand, power means having the ability to manipulate objective realities: to hunt animals, to construct bridges, to cure diseases, to build atom bombs.”
- B.
"In fact, truth and power have a far more complicated relationship, because in human society, power means two very different things."
- C.
“Hence sticking with the truth is the best strategy for gaining power. Unfortunately, this is just a comforting myth.”
- D.
“. . . scholars often had to decide whether they served the truth or social harmony. Should they aim to unite people by making sure everyone believes in the same fiction, or should they let people know the truth . . .?”
Answer: Option D
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Explanation :
Option (a) and (b) don't mention anything about fiction.
Option (c) is less about overemphasizing fiction than about disparaging the power of truth.
Option (d) overemphasises the power of fiction by relating equating fiction with unity and truth with disunity.
Hence, option (d).
Workspace:
The central theme of the passage is about the choice between:
- A.
stories that unite people and those that distinguish groups from each other.
- B.
attaining social cohesion and propagating objective truth.
- C.
truth and power.
- D.
leaders who unknowingly spread fictions and those who intentionally do so.
Answer: Option B
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Explanation :
"On the one hand, power means having the ability to manipulate objective realities: to hunt animals, to construct bridges, to cure diseases, to build atom bombs." - Truth
"On the other hand, power also means having the ability to manipulate human beliefs, thereby getting lots of people to cooperate effectively." - Fiction
The whole passage is about how power can be attained by two means i.e., Truth or Fiction and the balance between the two.
Hence, option (b).
Workspace:
The author would support none of the following statements about political power EXCEPT that:
- A.
people cannot handle the unvarnished truth, so leaders retain power by deviating from it.
- B.
while unalloyed truth is not recommended, leaders should stay as close as possible to it.
- C.
there are definite advantages to promoting fiction, but there needs to be some limit to a pervasive belief in myths.
- D.
manipulating people’s beliefs is politically advantageous, but a leader who propagates only myths is likely to lose power.
Answer: Option A
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Explanation :
Here we have to select the option which author would support.
Last line of second last paragraph states - "An American presidential candidate who tells the American public the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth about American history has a 100 percent guarantee of losing the elections. An uncompromising adherence to the truth is an admirable spiritual practice, but it is not a winning political strategy."
Hence, option (a).
Workspace:
Answer the next 4 questions based on the passage given below.
It’s easy to forget that most of the world’s languages are still transmitted orally with no widely established written form. While speech communities are increasingly involved in projects to protect their languages – in print, on air and online – orality is fragile and contributes to linguistic vulnerability. But indigenous languages are about much more than unusual words and intriguing grammar: They function as vehicles for the transmission of cultural traditions, environmental understandings and knowledge about medicinal plants, all at risk when elders die and livelihoods are disrupted.
Both push and pull factors lead to the decline of languages. Through war, famine and natural disasters, whole communities can be destroyed, taking their language with them to the grave, such as the indigenous populations of Tasmania who were wiped out by colonists. More commonly, speakers live on but abandon their language in favor of another vernacular, a widespread process that linguists refer to as “language shift” from which few languages are immune. Such trading up and out of a speech form occurs for complex political, cultural and economic reasons – sometimes voluntary for economic and educational reasons, although often amplified by state coercion or neglect. Welsh, long stigmatized and disparaged by the British state, has rebounded with vigor.
Many speakers of endangered, poorly documented languages have embraced new digital media with excitement. Speakers of previously exclusively oral tongues are turning to the web as a virtual space for languages to live on. Internet technology offers powerful ways for oral traditions and cultural practices to survive, even thrive, among increasingly mobile communities. I have watched as videos of traditional wedding ceremonies and songs are recorded on smartphones in London by Nepali migrants, then uploaded to YouTube and watched an hour later by relatives in remote Himalayan villages . . .
Globalization is regularly, and often uncritically, pilloried as a major threat to linguistic diversity. But in fact, globalization is as much process as it is ideology, certainly when it comes to language. The real forces behind cultural homogenization are unbending beliefs, exchanged through a globalized delivery system, reinforced by the historical monolingualism prevalent in much of the West.
Monolingualism – the condition of being able to speak only one language – is regularly accompanied by a deep-seated conviction in the value of that language over all others. Across the largest economies that make up the G8, being monolingual is still often the norm, with multilingualism appearing unusual and even somewhat exotic. The monolingual mindset stands in sharp contrast to the lived reality of most the world, which throughout its history has been more multilingual than unilingual. Monolingualism, then, not globalization, should be our primary concern.
Multilingualism can help us live in a more connected and more interdependent world. By widening access to technology, globalization can support indigenous and scholarly communities engaged in documenting and protecting our shared linguistic heritage. For the last 5,000 years, the rise and fall of languages was intimately tied to the plow, sword and book. In our digital age, the keyboard, screen and web will play a decisive role in shaping the future linguistic diversity of our species.
From the passage, we can infer that the author is in favour of:
- A.
“language shifts” across languages.
- B.
greater multilingualism.
- C.
cultural homogenisation.
- D.
an expanded state role in the preservation of languages.
Answer: Option B
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Explanation :
In the last paragraph, author suggests that "multilingualism can help us live in a more connected world".
Hence, option (b).
Workspace:
We can infer all of the following about indigenous languages from the passage EXCEPT that:
- A.
they are repositories of traditional knowledge about the environment and culture.
- B.
people are increasingly working on documenting these languages.
- C.
their vocabulary and grammatical constructs have been challenging to document.
- D.
they are in danger of being wiped out as most can only be transmitted orally.
Answer: Option C
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Explanation :
Option (a) is mentioned in first paragraph, last line: "They function as vehicles for the transmission of cultural traditions, environmental understandings and knowledge ..."
Option (b) is mentioned in third paragraph.
Option (c) is not mentioned in the passage. The passage mearly suggest that indigenous languages are about much more than unusual words and intriguing grammar: They function as vehicles for the transmission of ... (first paragraph). It doesn't mentioned that grammar is challenging to document.
Option (d) is what the whole passage is about. First paragraph states - "... orality is fragile and contributes to linguistic vulnerability"
Hence, option (c).
Workspace:
The author lists all of the following as reasons for the decline or disappearance of a language EXCEPT:
- A.
the focus on only a few languages as a result of widespread internet use.
- B.
a catastrophic event that entirely eliminates a people and their culture.
- C.
governments promoting certain languages over others.
- D.
people shifting away from their own language to study or work in another language.
Answer: Option A
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Explanation :
Third paragraph states - "Speakers of previously exclusively oral tongues are turning to the web as a virtual space for languages to live on. Internet technology offers powerful ways for oral traditions and cultural practices to survive, even thrive, among increasingly mobile communities."
Widespread use of internet has led to documentation of all kings of languages, hence option (a) contradicts the passage.
Hence, option (a).
Workspace:
The author mentions the Welsh language to show that:
- A.
vulnerable languages can rebound with state effort.
- B.
while often pilloried, globalisation can, in fact, support linguistic revival.
- C.
languages can revive even after their speakers have gone through a “language shift”.
- D.
efforts to integrate Welsh speakers in the English-speaking fold have been fruitless.
Answer: Option C
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Explanation :
Author mentions Welsh language at the end of second paragraph.
Despite it being disparaged by British state, the language rebounded, hence option (a) is incorrect. The Britist state did not support the Welsh language.
Author uses the example of Welsh language to bring forward the idea that languages can bounce back even after they have been ignored by their native speakers. Hence, option (c) is the best possible choice.
Hence, option (c).
Workspace:
The passage given below is followed by four alternate summaries. Choose the option that best captures the essence of the passage.
Biologists who publish their research directly to the Web have been labelled as “rogue”, but physicists have been routinely publishing research digitally (“preprints”), prior to submitting in a peer-reviewed journal. Advocates of preprints argue that quick and open dissemination of research speeds up scientific progress and allows for wider access to knowledge. But some journals still don’t accept research previously published as a preprint. Even if the idea of preprints is gaining ground, one of the biggest barriers for biologists is how they would be viewed by members of their conservative research community.
- A.
One of the advantages of digital preprints of research is they hasten the dissemination process, but these are not accepted by most scientific communities.
- B.
Preprints of research are frowned on by some scientific fields as they do not undergo a rigourous reviewing process but are accepted among biologists as a quick way to disseminate information.
- C.
Compared to biologists, physicists are less conservative in their acceptance of digital pre-publication of research papers, which allows for faster dissemination of knowledge.
- D.
While digital publication of research is gaining popularity in many scientific disciplines, almost all peer-reviewed journals are reluctant to accept papers that have been published before.
Answer: Option C
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Explanation :
Option (a) is incorrect since it mentions that most scientific communities do not accept preprints. This is not mentioned in the passage. This passage brings out the distinction between the attitudes of physicists and biologists with regards to "publishing research digitally". While the former have been publishing research digitally, the latter have not been very open to it.
Option (b) is incorrect as it contradicts the passage by stating that biologists accept the practice of preprint.
Option (c) best captures the essence of the passage.
Option (d) doen't bring out the distinction between biologists and physicists as mentioned in the passage.
Hence, option (c).
Workspace:
The four sentences (labelled 1, 2, 3, 4) below, when properly sequenced would yield a coherent paragraph. Decide on the proper sequencing of the order of the sentences and key in the sequence of the four numbers as your answer:
- But today there is an epochal challenge to rethink and reconstitute the vision and practice of development as a shared responsibility – a sharing which binds both the agent and the audience, the developed world and the developing, in a bond of shared destiny.
- We are at a crossroads now in our vision and practice of development.
- This calls for the cultivation of an appropriate ethical mode of being in our lives which enables us to realize this global and planetary situation of shared living and responsibility.
- Half a century ago, development began as a hope for a better human possibility, but in the last fifty years, this hope has lost itself in the dreary desert of various kinds of hegemonic applications.
Answer: 2413
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Explanation :
Sentence 2 introduces the main idea of the passage i.e., 'development' and hence should be the first sentence of the passage.
Sentence 4 explaines what development is and its history while setence 1 tells us about the present vision and practice of development. Hence 41 forms a pair.
Sentence 3 concludes the passage by telling us future course of action.
Hence, 2413.
Workspace:
The four sentences (labelled 1, 2, 3 and 4) below, when properly sequenced would yield a coherent paragraph. Decide on the proper sequencing of the order of the sentences and key in the sequence of the four numbers as your answer:
- The US has long maintained that the Northwest Passage is an international strait through which its commercial and military vessels have the right to pass without seeking Canada’s permission.
- Canada, which officially acquired the group of islands forming the Northwest Passage in 1880, claims sovereignty over all the shipping routes through the Passage.
- The dispute could be transitory, h owever, as scientists speculate that the entire Arctic Ocean will soon be ice-free in summer, so ship owners will not have to ask for permission to sail through any of the Northwest Passage routes.
- The US and Canada have never legally settled the question of access through the Passage, but have an agreement whereby the US needs to seek Canada’s consent for any transit.
Answer: 2143
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Explanation :
The main idea is that of the Northwest Passage which is introduced in statement 2. Hence, statement 2 is the opening statement of the passage.
Statement 1 follows statement 2 as it introduces the conflict between US and Canada over the Northwest Passage.
Statement 4 provides further details about the dispute.
Staement 3 is the best concluding statement as it gives a solution of the previously mentioned dispute.
Hence, 2143.
Workspace:
The passage given below is followed by four alternate summaries. Choose the option that best captures the essence of the passage.
Creativity is now viewed as the engine of economic progress. Various organizations are devoted to its study and promotion; there are encyclopedias and handbooks surveying creativity research. But this proliferating success has tended to erode creativity’s stable identity: it has become so invested with value that it has become impossible to police its meaning and the practices that supposedly identify and encourage it. Many people and organizations committed to producing original thoughts now feel that undue obsession with the idea of creativity gets in the way of real creativity
- A.
The industry that has built up around researching what comprises and encourages creativity has destroyed the creative process itself.
- B.
Creativity has proliferated to the extent that is no longer a stable process, and its mutating identity has stifled the creative process.
- C.
The value assigned to creativity today has assumed such proportions that the concept itself has lost its real meaning and this is hampering the engendering of real creativity.
- D.
The obsession with original thought, how it can be promoted and researched, has made it impossible for people and organizations to define the concept anymore.
Answer: Option C
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Explanation :
The passage tells us about how excessive obsession with defining creativity has led to hampering the way of real creativity.
Option (a): The passage doesn't indicated that the process of creativity is destroyed.
Option (b): It is the obsession with defining creativity that has led to stifled creative process, not the creativity itself.
Option (c) best captures the essence of the passage.
Option (d): While the paragraph talks about the obsession with the idea of creativity and how that is hampering creativity, option (d) talks of the obsession with 'original thought' making it difficult to define the concept.
Hence, option (c).
Workspace:
The four sentences (labelled 1, 2, 3 and 4) below, when properly sequenced would yield a coherent paragraph. Decide on the proper sequencing of the order of the sentences and key in the sequence of the four numbers as your answer:
- Look forward a few decades to an invention which can end the energy crisis, change the global economy and curb climate change at a stroke: commercial fusion power.
- To gain meaningful insights, logic has to be accompanied by asking probing questions of nature through controlled tests, precise observations and clever analysis.
- The greatest of all inventions is the über-invention that has provided the insights on which others depend: the modern scientific method.
- This invention is inconceivable without the scientific method; it will rest on the application of a diverse range of scientific insights, such as the process transforming hydrogen into helium to release huge amounts of energy.
Answer: 3214
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Explanation :
The main theme across all the statements is the greatest invention ever which is 'the modern scientific method'.
Statement 3 introduces the theme of the passage and hence is the opening statement.
Statement 2 explains what 'modern scientic method' is and hence follows statement 3.
Statement 1 and 4 form a pair. They explain us how 'modern scientific method' can be applied.
Hence, 3214.
Workspace:
The passage given below is followed by four alternate summaries. Choose the option that best captures the essence of the passage.
The unlikely alliance of the incumbent industrialist and the distressed unemployed worker is especially powerful amid the debris of corporate bankruptcies and layoffs. In an economic downturn, the capitalist is more likely to focus on costs of the competition emanating from free markets than on the opportunities they create. And the unemployed worker will find many others in a similar condition and with anxieties similar to his, which will make it easier for them to organize together. Using the cover and the political organization provided by the distressed, the capitalist captures the political agenda.
- A.
An unlikely alliance of the industrialist and the unemployed happens during an economic downturn in which they come together to unite politically and capture the political agenda.
- B.
In an economic downturn, the capitalists use the anxieties of the unemployed and their political organisation to set the political agenda to suit their economic interests.
- C.
An economic downturn creates competition because of which the capitalists capture the political agenda created by the political organisation provided by the unemployed.
- D.
The purpose of an unlikely alliance between the industrialist and the unemployed during an economic downturn is to stifle competition in free markets.
Answer: Option B
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Explanation :
The paragraph suggests that an economic downturn leads to rising costs due to free market which leads to capitalist finding an ally with the distressed unemployed workers and use the cover and the political organization provided by them to capture the political agenda.
Option (a) hints that the political agenda is captured by both capitalist as well as the unemployed, which is not mentioned in the passage. Only the capitalist captures the agenda.
Option (b) This is what the passage states.
Option (c) It is the capitalist who sets up the political agenda using unemployed as cover. The unemployed do not create the political agenda.
Option (d) The does not mention anything about stifling the competition.
Workspace:
Five jumbled up sentences, related to a topic, are given below. Four of them can be put together to form a coherent paragraph. Identify the odd one out and key in the number of the sentence as your answer:
- The care with which philosophers examine arguments for and against forms of biotechnology makes this an excellent primer on formulating and assessing moral arguments.
- Although most people find at least some forms of genetic engineering disquieting, it is not easy to articulate why: what is wrong with re-engineering our nature?
- Breakthroughs in genetics present us with the promise that we will soon be able to prevent a host of debilitating diseases, and the predicament that our newfound genetic knowledge may enable us to enhance our genetic traits.
- To grapple with the ethics of enhancement, we need to confront questions that verge on theology, which is why modern philosophers and political theorists tend to shrink from them.
- One argument is that the drive for human perfection through genetics is objectionable as it represents a bid for mastery that fails to appreciate the gifts of human powers and achievements.
Answer: 1
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Explanation :
While the main theme of statements 2 to 5 is a very specific area of genetic engineering, statement 1 focuses on broader topic of biotechnology.
Hence, 1.
Workspace:
Five jumbled up sentences, related to a topic, are given below. Four of them can be put together to form a coherent paragraph. Identify the odd one out and key in the number of the sentence as your answer:
- It has taken on a warm, fuzzy glow in the advertising world, where its potential is being widely discussed, and it is being claimed as the undeniable wave of the future.
- There is little enthusiasm for this in the scientific arena; for them marketing is not a science, and only a handful of studies have been published in scientific journals.
- The new, growing field of neuromarketing attempts to reveal the inner workings of consumer behaviour and is an extension of the study of how choices and decisions are made.
- Some see neuromarketing as an attempt to make the "art" of advertising into a science, being used by marketing experts to back up their proposals with some form of real data.
- The marketing gurus have already started drawing on psychology in developing tests and theories, and advertising people have borrowed the idea of the focus group from social scientists.
Answer: 5
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Explanation :
The main idea of most of the sentences is neuromarketing except statement 5 which focuses on how marketers and advertisers have started drawing on science/scientific methods in developing tests and theories.
The correct sequence of statements will be 3412.
Hence, 5.
Workspace:
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