NTA-NET (UGC-NET) Paper-I (in English): Questions 2450 - 2453 of 6173

Choose Programs:

📹 Video Course 2024 (165 Lectures [89 hrs : 1 mins]): Offline Support

Rs. 550.00 -OR-

1 Month Validity (Multiple Devices)

Preview All LecturesDetails

⏳ 🎯 Online Tests (35 Tests [50 questions each]): NTA Pattern, Analytics & Explanations

Rs. 1300.00 -OR-

3 Year Validity (Multiple Devices)

Sample TestsDetailsSee Demo

🎓 Study Material (670 Notes): 2024-2025 Syllabus

Rs. 700.00 -OR-

3 Year Validity (Multiple Devices)

Topic-wise Notes & SampleDetails

🎯 6173 MCQs (& PYQs) with Full Explanations (2024-2025 Exam)

Rs. 800.00 -OR-

3 Year Validity (Multiple Devices)

CoverageDetailsSample Explanation

📚 Postal Course for Paper-1: Notes + Questions + Explanations

Books Posted Right to Your Home

View Sample and Buy now!

Help me Choose & Register (Watch Video) Already Subscribed?

Question 2450

Question MCQ▾

“Crab apple is looks like regular red apple but it is small and longer stem” – is example of which perception

Choices

Choice (4)Response

a.

upamana

b.

pratyaksh

c.

anupalabddhi

d.

shabda

Edit

Passage

Read the following passage carefully and answer questions:

Traditional Indian Values must be viewed both from the angle of the individual and from that of the geographically delimited agglomeration of peoples or groups enjoying a common system of leadership which we call the ‘State’ . The Indian ‘State՚s’ special feature is the peaceful, or perhaps mostly peaceful, co-existence of social groups of various historical provenances which mutually adhere in a geographical, economic, and political sense, without ever assimilating to each other in social terms, in ways of thinking, or even in language. Modern Indian law will determine certain rules, especially in relation to the regime of the family, upon the basis of how the loin-cloth is tied, or how the turban is worn, for this may identify the litigants as members of a regional group, and therefore as participants in its traditional law, though their ancestors left the region three or four centuries earlier. The use of the word ‘State’ above must not mislead us. There was no such thing as a conflict between the individual and the State, atleast before foreign governments became established, just as there was no concept of state ‘sovereignty’ or of any church-and-state dichotomy. Modern Indian ‘secularism’ has an admittedly peculiar feature: It requires the state to make a fair distribution of attention and support amongst all religions. These blessed aspects of India՚s famed tolerance (Indian kings so rarely persecuted religious groups that the exceptions prove the rule) at once struck Portuguese and other European visitors to the West Coast of India in the sixteenth century, and the impression made upon them in this and other ways gave rise, at one remove, to the basic constitution of Thomas Moore՚s Utopia. There is little about modern India that strikes one at once as Utopian: but the insistence upon the inculcation of norms, and the absence of bigotry and institutionalized exploitation of human or natural resources, are two very different features which link the realities of India and her tradition with the essence of all Utopians.

Question 2451 (1 of 5 Based on Passage)

Appeared in Year: 2018

Question MCQ▾

Which of the following is a special feature of the Indian State? (TN Paper 1)

Choices

Choice (4)Response

a.

Social integration of all groups.

b.

Peaceful co-existence of social groups of different historical provenances attached to each other in a geographical, economic and political sense.

c.

Peaceful co-existence of people under a common system of leadership.

d.

Cultural assimilation of all social groups.

Edit

Question 2452 (2 of 5 Based on Passage)

Appeared in Year: 2018

Question MCQ▾

The author uses the word ‘State’ to highlight (TN Paper 1)

Choices

Choice (4)Response

a.

Absence of conflict between the state and the individuals upto a point in time.

b.

Antagonistic relationship between the state and the individual throughout the period of history.

c.

Dependence on religion.

d.

The concept of state sovereignty.

Edit

Question 2453 (3 of 5 Based on Passage)

Appeared in Year: 2018

Question MCQ▾

Which one is the peculiar feature of modern Indian ‘Secularism’ ? (TN Paper 1)

Choices

Choice (4)Response

a.

Total indifference to religion

b.

Disregard for social law

c.

No space for social identity

d.

No discrimination on religious considerations

Edit