+1 vote
in Mathematics by kratos

PASSAGE

A country under foreign domination seeks escape from the present in dreams of a vanished age, and finds consolation in visions of past greatness. That is a foolish and dangerous pastime in which many of us indulge. An equally questionable practice for us in India is to imagine that we are still spiritually great though we have come down in the world in other respects. Spiritual or any other greatness cannot be founded on lack of freedom and opportunity, or on starvation and misery. Many western writers have encouraged that notion that Indians are other-worldly. I suppose the poor and unfortunate in every country become to some extent other-worldly, unless they become revolutionaries, for this world is evidently not meant for them. So also subject peoples.

As a man grows to maturity he is not entirely engrossed in, or satisfied with, the external objective world. He seeks also some inner meaning, some psychological and physical satisfaction. So also with peoples and civilizations as they mature and grow **. Every civilization and every people exhibit these parallel streams of an external life and an internal life. Where they meet or keep close to each other, there is an equilibrium and stability. When they diverge conflict arises and the crises that ** the mind and spirit.**

Consider the following assumptions :

  1. A country under foreign domination cannot indulge in spiritual pursuit.

  2. *** is an impediment in the spiritual pursuit.

  3. Subject peoples may become other-worldly.

With reference to the passage, which of the above assumptions is/are valid ?

(a) 1 and 2 (b) 2 only (c) 2 and 3 (d) 3 only

1 Answer

+2 votes
by kratos
 
Best answer

(c) Only assumptions 2 and 3 are valid as for achieving anything great one has to be free of worries of basic needs and should be mentally as well as physically free.

...