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Verbal Ability Test - 10

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Verbal Ability Test - 10
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  • Question 1
    4 / -1

    Directions For Questions

    Both political and academic efforts to get to grips with terrorism have repeatedly been hung up on the issue of definition, of distinguishing terrorism from criminal violence or military action. Most writers have no trouble compiling a list of legal or other definitions running into dozens, and then adding their own to it. One well-known survey opens with a whole chapter on the issue; another managed to amass over a hundred definitions before concluding that the search for an 'adequate' definition was still on. Why the difficulty? In a word, it is labelling, because 'terrorist' is a description that has almost never been voluntarily adopted by any individual or group. It is applied to them by others, first and foremost by the governments of the states they attack. States have not been slow to brand violent opponents with this title, with its clear implications of inhumanity, criminality, and - perhaps most crucially - lack of real political support. Equally, states find it quite easy to produce definitions of terrorism. The USA, for instance, defines it as 'the calculated use or threat of violence to inculcate fear, intended to coerce or intimidate governments or societies'; the UK as 'the use or threat, for the purpose of advancing a political, religious, or ideological course of action, of serious violence against any person or property'. Having done this, though, they tend to find it harder to specify the behaviour thus indicted; instead they label certain organizations as 'terrorist' and make membership of them an offence. So terrorism appears to be a state of mind rather than an activity.

    The problem here for the detached observer is that state definitions simply assume that the use of violence by 'sub national groups' is automatically illegal. In the state's view, only the state has the right to use force - it has, as academics tend to say, a monopoly on the legitimate use of violence. But outsiders may wonder whether all use of violence by non-state actors is equally unjustifiable, even if it is formally illegal. The very first revolutionary terrorists in the modern age believed themselves justified in opposing with violence a repressive regime in which no freedom of political expression or organization was permitted. And, crucially, many foreign critics of Tsarist Russia - governments included - agreed with them. This has continued to be the case, as when Syria recently, publicly, and embarrassingly refused to endorse the British and American insistence that Arab armed actions against Israel are part of a single global phenomenon of terrorism. Thus arose the notorious adage that 'one person's terrorist is another's freedom fighter'. This relativism is central to the impossibility of finding an uncontentious definition of terrorism. Some writers have suggested that instead of pursuing the will-o'- the-wisp of precise definition (one specialist has recently called terrorism 'a box with a false bottom') it would make more sense to construct a typology of the kinds of actions that are generally seen as 'terrorist'.

    It is certainly the case that many kinds of action repeatedly used by terrorist groups - assassination, kidnapping, hijacking - are seldom if ever used in conventional military Conflicts; they do seem to signal a special type of violence. But any such list soon peters out: too many terrorist actions duplicate either military or criminal acts. In any case, it is, in the end, not so much the actions themselves that are characteristic of terrorism, as their intended political function. To get to the real definition of terrorism we need to unpick its political logic. For the core of nearly all definitions of terrorism - the use of violence for political ends - is too similar to the definition of war to be of much use.

    ...view full instructions

    According to the author, which one of the following, best shows the result of lack of a clear definition of terrorism?

    Solution

    Inability of politicians and academicians to find a solution to counter terrorism.

  • Question 2
    4 / -1

    Directions For Questions

    Both political and academic efforts to get to grips with terrorism have repeatedly been hung up on the issue of definition, of distinguishing terrorism from criminal violence or military action. Most writers have no trouble compiling a list of legal or other definitions running into dozens, and then adding their own to it. One well-known survey opens with a whole chapter on the issue; another managed to amass over a hundred definitions before concluding that the search for an 'adequate' definition was still on. Why the difficulty? In a word, it is labelling, because 'terrorist' is a description that has almost never been voluntarily adopted by any individual or group. It is applied to them by others, first and foremost by the governments of the states they attack. States have not been slow to brand violent opponents with this title, with its clear implications of inhumanity, criminality, and - perhaps most crucially - lack of real political support. Equally, states find it quite easy to produce definitions of terrorism. The USA, for instance, defines it as 'the calculated use or threat of violence to inculcate fear, intended to coerce or intimidate governments or societies'; the UK as 'the use or threat, for the purpose of advancing a political, religious, or ideological course of action, of serious violence against any person or property'. Having done this, though, they tend to find it harder to specify the behaviour thus indicted; instead they label certain organizations as 'terrorist' and make membership of them an offence. So terrorism appears to be a state of mind rather than an activity.

    The problem here for the detached observer is that state definitions simply assume that the use of violence by 'sub national groups' is automatically illegal. In the state's view, only the state has the right to use force - it has, as academics tend to say, a monopoly on the legitimate use of violence. But outsiders may wonder whether all use of violence by non-state actors is equally unjustifiable, even if it is formally illegal. The very first revolutionary terrorists in the modern age believed themselves justified in opposing with violence a repressive regime in which no freedom of political expression or organization was permitted. And, crucially, many foreign critics of Tsarist Russia - governments included - agreed with them. This has continued to be the case, as when Syria recently, publicly, and embarrassingly refused to endorse the British and American insistence that Arab armed actions against Israel are part of a single global phenomenon of terrorism. Thus arose the notorious adage that 'one person's terrorist is another's freedom fighter'. This relativism is central to the impossibility of finding an uncontentious definition of terrorism. Some writers have suggested that instead of pursuing the will-o'- the-wisp of precise definition (one specialist has recently called terrorism 'a box with a false bottom') it would make more sense to construct a typology of the kinds of actions that are generally seen as 'terrorist'.

    It is certainly the case that many kinds of action repeatedly used by terrorist groups - assassination, kidnapping, hijacking - are seldom if ever used in conventional military Conflicts; they do seem to signal a special type of violence. But any such list soon peters out: too many terrorist actions duplicate either military or criminal acts. In any case, it is, in the end, not so much the actions themselves that are characteristic of terrorism, as their intended political function. To get to the real definition of terrorism we need to unpick its political logic. For the core of nearly all definitions of terrorism - the use of violence for political ends - is too similar to the definition of war to be of much use.

    ...view full instructions

    Which of the following does the passage seem to suggest would be the best way to solve the problem of finding a definition of terrorism?

    Solution

    Option a is incorrect because this is not a solution advocated by the author anywhere in the passage. Option b is not the correct option because again this solution is not given anywhere in the passage. Option c is incorrect because according to the author there is a lot of overlapping in actions of terrorists and the military. Option d is the correct option because the following line in the passage supports this view, "it would make more sense to construct a typology of the kinds of actions that are generally seen as 'terrorist'.

  • Question 3
    4 / -1

    Directions For Questions

    Both political and academic efforts to get to grips with terrorism have repeatedly been hung up on the issue of definition, of distinguishing terrorism from criminal violence or military action. Most writers have no trouble compiling a list of legal or other definitions running into dozens, and then adding their own to it. One well-known survey opens with a whole chapter on the issue; another managed to amass over a hundred definitions before concluding that the search for an 'adequate' definition was still on. Why the difficulty? In a word, it is labelling, because 'terrorist' is a description that has almost never been voluntarily adopted by any individual or group. It is applied to them by others, first and foremost by the governments of the states they attack. States have not been slow to brand violent opponents with this title, with its clear implications of inhumanity, criminality, and - perhaps most crucially - lack of real political support. Equally, states find it quite easy to produce definitions of terrorism. The USA, for instance, defines it as 'the calculated use or threat of violence to inculcate fear, intended to coerce or intimidate governments or societies'; the UK as 'the use or threat, for the purpose of advancing a political, religious, or ideological course of action, of serious violence against any person or property'. Having done this, though, they tend to find it harder to specify the behaviour thus indicted; instead they label certain organizations as 'terrorist' and make membership of them an offence. So terrorism appears to be a state of mind rather than an activity.

    The problem here for the detached observer is that state definitions simply assume that the use of violence by 'sub national groups' is automatically illegal. In the state's view, only the state has the right to use force - it has, as academics tend to say, a monopoly on the legitimate use of violence. But outsiders may wonder whether all use of violence by non-state actors is equally unjustifiable, even if it is formally illegal. The very first revolutionary terrorists in the modern age believed themselves justified in opposing with violence a repressive regime in which no freedom of political expression or organization was permitted. And, crucially, many foreign critics of Tsarist Russia - governments included - agreed with them. This has continued to be the case, as when Syria recently, publicly, and embarrassingly refused to endorse the British and American insistence that Arab armed actions against Israel are part of a single global phenomenon of terrorism. Thus arose the notorious adage that 'one person's terrorist is another's freedom fighter'. This relativism is central to the impossibility of finding an uncontentious definition of terrorism. Some writers have suggested that instead of pursuing the will-o'- the-wisp of precise definition (one specialist has recently called terrorism 'a box with a false bottom') it would make more sense to construct a typology of the kinds of actions that are generally seen as 'terrorist'.

    It is certainly the case that many kinds of action repeatedly used by terrorist groups - assassination, kidnapping, hijacking - are seldom if ever used in conventional military Conflicts; they do seem to signal a special type of violence. But any such list soon peters out: too many terrorist actions duplicate either military or criminal acts. In any case, it is, in the end, not so much the actions themselves that are characteristic of terrorism, as their intended political function. To get to the real definition of terrorism we need to unpick its political logic. For the core of nearly all definitions of terrorism - the use of violence for political ends - is too similar to the definition of war to be of much use.

    ...view full instructions

    What seems to be the central idea of the passage?

    Solution

    Option a is incorrect because this is not the central idea of the passage. There are only references to types of terrorist activities. Option c is not correct because again there is only a reference to terrorism and military action. Option d is incorrect because it is only the view of the state that only it can use force and does not form the central idea. Option b is the correct option because the entire passage revolves around the inability of governments to form a consensus on definition of terrorism and thereby not being able to support each other to counter terrorism.

  • Question 4
    4 / -1

    Directions For Questions

    Both political and academic efforts to get to grips with terrorism have repeatedly been hung up on the issue of definition, of distinguishing terrorism from criminal violence or military action. Most writers have no trouble compiling a list of legal or other definitions running into dozens, and then adding their own to it. One well-known survey opens with a whole chapter on the issue; another managed to amass over a hundred definitions before concluding that the search for an 'adequate' definition was still on. Why the difficulty? In a word, it is labelling, because 'terrorist' is a description that has almost never been voluntarily adopted by any individual or group. It is applied to them by others, first and foremost by the governments of the states they attack. States have not been slow to brand violent opponents with this title, with its clear implications of inhumanity, criminality, and - perhaps most crucially - lack of real political support. Equally, states find it quite easy to produce definitions of terrorism. The USA, for instance, defines it as 'the calculated use or threat of violence to inculcate fear, intended to coerce or intimidate governments or societies'; the UK as 'the use or threat, for the purpose of advancing a political, religious, or ideological course of action, of serious violence against any person or property'. Having done this, though, they tend to find it harder to specify the behaviour thus indicted; instead they label certain organizations as 'terrorist' and make membership of them an offence. So terrorism appears to be a state of mind rather than an activity.

    The problem here for the detached observer is that state definitions simply assume that the use of violence by 'sub national groups' is automatically illegal. In the state's view, only the state has the right to use force - it has, as academics tend to say, a monopoly on the legitimate use of violence. But outsiders may wonder whether all use of violence by non-state actors is equally unjustifiable, even if it is formally illegal. The very first revolutionary terrorists in the modern age believed themselves justified in opposing with violence a repressive regime in which no freedom of political expression or organization was permitted. And, crucially, many foreign critics of Tsarist Russia - governments included - agreed with them. This has continued to be the case, as when Syria recently, publicly, and embarrassingly refused to endorse the British and American insistence that Arab armed actions against Israel are part of a single global phenomenon of terrorism. Thus arose the notorious adage that 'one person's terrorist is another's freedom fighter'. This relativism is central to the impossibility of finding an uncontentious definition of terrorism. Some writers have suggested that instead of pursuing the will-o'- the-wisp of precise definition (one specialist has recently called terrorism 'a box with a false bottom') it would make more sense to construct a typology of the kinds of actions that are generally seen as 'terrorist'.

    It is certainly the case that many kinds of action repeatedly used by terrorist groups - assassination, kidnapping, hijacking - are seldom if ever used in conventional military Conflicts; they do seem to signal a special type of violence. But any such list soon peters out: too many terrorist actions duplicate either military or criminal acts. In any case, it is, in the end, not so much the actions themselves that are characteristic of terrorism, as their intended political function. To get to the real definition of terrorism we need to unpick its political logic. For the core of nearly all definitions of terrorism - the use of violence for political ends - is too similar to the definition of war to be of much use.

    ...view full instructions

    Which of the following statements is validated in the passage?

    Solution

    Option a is not correct because according to the passage, "terrorist' is a description that has almost never been voluntarily adopted by any individual or group. It is applied to them by others." This is clearly contradictory to the given statement. Option b is incorrect because the following line in the passage negates the given statement, "So terrorism appears to be a state of mind rather than an activity". Option d is not the correct option because according to the passage the definitions of terrorism and war are similar as shown by the following line in the passage, "For the core of nearly all definitions of terrorism - the use of violence for political ends - is too similar to the definition of war." Option c is the correct option because the following line in the passage supports the given statement, "The very first revolutionary terrorists in the modern age believed themselves justified in opposing with violence a repressive regime in which no freedom of political expression or organization was permitted."

  • Question 5
    4 / -1
    History, if viewed as a repository not merely of anecdotes or chronology, could produce a decisive transformation in the image of science by which we are now possessed. That image has previously been drawn, even by scientists themselves, mainly from the study of finished scientific achievements as these are recorded in the classics and, more recently, in the textbooks from which each new scientific generation learns to practice its trade.
     
    Which of the following best summarises the above paragraph?
    Solution

    Option (b) which states different ways of looking at History can produce altogether different knowledge is true because each and every line of the above paragraph shows how study of History can provide altogether different knowledge. These days history is not mere date wise representation of facts rather it is turning to be scientific in its approach.

  • Question 6
    4 / -1
    History, if viewed as a repository not merely of anecdotes or chronology, could produce a decisive transformation in the image of science by which we are now possessed. That image has previously been drawn, even by scientists themselves, mainly from the study of finished scientific achievements as these are recorded in the classics and, more recently, in the textbooks from which each new scientific generation learns to practice its trade.
     
    Which of the following statements is the author most likely to agree with?
    Solution

    The author agrees with option (a), the reason being study of history has turned to be scientific in approach and it is no more a chronological presentation of historic events.

  • Question 7
    4 / -1
    The Yoga system is divided into two principal parts -- Hatha and Raja Yoga. Hatha Yoga deals principally with the physiological part of man with a view to establish his health and train his will. The processes prescribed to arrive at this end are so difficult that only a few resolute souls go through all the stages of its practice. Many have failed and some have died in the attempt. It is therefore strongly denounced by all the philosophers. The most illustrious Shankaracharya has remarked in his treatise called Aparokshanubhuti that "the system of Hatha Yoga was intended for those whose worldly desires are not pacified or uprooted.”
     
    Which one of the following, if true, most substantially strengthens the idea given in the passage?
    Solution

    The passage clearly emphasizes that practising HathaYoga is really difficult and only a few resolute souls go through all the stages of its practice (refer sentence 3). So E strengthens the idea of the passage. C and D are out of context as the passage doesn't talk about Yoga schools teaching Raja Yoga. A and B are also out of context as they restrict themselves to people in a given ashram.

  • Question 8
    4 / -1
    The Yoga system is divided into two principal parts -- Hatha and Raja Yoga. Hatha Yoga deals principally with the physiological part of man with a view to establish his health and train his will. The processes prescribed to arrive at this end are so difficult that only a few resolute souls go through all the stages of its practice. Many have failed and some have died in the attempt. It is therefore strongly denounced by all the philosophers. The most illustrious Shankaracharya has remarked in his treatise called Aparokshanubhuti that "the system of Hatha Yoga was intended for those whose worldly desires are not pacified or uprooted.”
     
    Which of the following option best summarises Shankaracharya's comments on Hatha Yoga ?
    Solution

    The last sentence, "the system of Hatha.......or uprooted," clearly mentions that Hatha Yoga is for those who cannot control their desires easily. B, C and D are clearly out of context and can be ruled out. Again in E, the adjective 'strong' before worldly desires makes it an inappropriate choice. Among 'for those who cannot control their desires easily' and 'ill-suited for those with strong worldly desires' the earlier one is more appropriate.

  • Question 9
    4 / -1

    For many years, skeptics scoffed at the idea that plants respond to environmental stimuli other than those that directly affect the process of photosynthesis. Recent studies, however, offer contradictory evidence that seems to suggest that music, for instance, can have a direct and positive effect on plant development. Plants that were kept in the presence of music during the first six weeks of development grew considerably faster and showed fewer signs of disease than those plants developed in silence. The "music-advantaged" plants were also 35 percent more likely to survive the process of transplantation initially than were the "music-disadvantaged" plants.

    Which one of the following is an assumption upon which the above argument is based?

    Solution

    This is definitely an assumption. Make this choice false– that would happen to the argument if music damaged the photosynthetic ability of plants? The argument would crumble. So it's the answer.

  • Question 10
    4 / -1

    For many years, skeptics scoffed at the idea that plants respond to environmental stimuli other than those that directly affect the process of photosynthesis. Recent studies, however, offer contradictory evidence that seems to suggest that music, for instance, can have a direct and positive effect on plant development. Plants that were kept in the presence of music during the first six weeks of development grew considerably faster and showed fewer signs of disease than those plants developed in silence. The "music-advantaged" plants were also 35 percent more likely to survive the process of transplantation initially than were the "music-disadvantaged" plants.

    A logical critique of the study cited above would most likely raise which one of the following questions?

    Solution

    Do we know for sure that all the conditions of the experiment other than music were identical? If not, the results are garbage.

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