List of top Questions asked in CUET (PG)

Vidyasagar's contribution to the making of modern India is many sided. He evolved a new methodology of teaching Sanskrit. He wrote a Bengali primer which is used till this day. His writings helped in the evolution of a modern prose style in Bengali. He opened the gates of the Sanskrit college to non-brahmin students for he was opposed to the monopoly of Sanskrit studies that the priestly caste was enjoying at the time. He was determined to break the priestly monopoly of scriptural knowledge. To free Sanskrit studies from the harmful effects of self-imposed isolation, he introduced the study of Western thought in the Sanskrit College. He also helped found a college which is now named after him.
Above all Vidyasagar is remembered gratefully by his countrymen for his contribution to the uplift of India's downtrodden womanhood. Here he proved a worthy successor to Rammohun Roy. He waged a long struggle in favour of widow remarriage. His humanism was aroused to the full by the sufferings of the Hindu widows. To improve their lot he gave his all and virtually ruined himself. In 1855, he raised his powerful voice, backed by the weight of immense traditional learning, in favourof window remarriage. Soon a powerful movement in favour of widow remarriage was started which continues till this day. Later in 1855, a large number of petitions from Bengal, Madras, Bombay, Nagpur and other cities of India were presented to the government asking it to pass an act legalising the remarriage of widows. This agitation was successful and such a law was enacted.
The first lawful Hindu widow remarriage among the upper castes in our country was celebrated in Calcutta on 7 December 1856 under the inspiration and supervision of Vidyasagar. Widows of many other castes in different parts of the country already enjoyed this right under customary law.
Read the passage carefully and answer the question that follows.
Lizard island is only 30km off the far North Queensland coast and 250km north of Cairns, the northern-most city in north-eastern Australia. The 1,012-hectare island is spectacularly rugged with vegetation ranging from grassland to rainforest and encompassing pandanus swamp, eucalypt woodland and mangroves. The most recent discoverers of this island were Sir Sydney Williams and another north Queensland businessmen, Mr. John Wilson, now a Brisbane share-broker. For several years from 1968, they camped on lizard island for annual fishing holidays and in 1974, after obtaining a Queensland government lease with other businessmen, built four cabins for guests. In the next step of development in 1978, they raised the number of bungalows to eight, then to fifteen in 1982, and in 1984, ultimately the complex was bought by the Queensland State Government Insurance office.
The island is consistently visited by those who seem to be quite carefull about their health. Each has all the facilities expected in such an elegant resort including well-stocked minibar. It is because of this that Australian Prime Ministers for a decade or so have taken heed, as they constantly retreat to this island to rest, relax and lick the wounds of office. Since this island attracts people from all over the world, most of the time it remains packed. One of the island resort's founders, Queensland aviation pioneer, Sir Sydney Williams, affirms that a sturdy Arab Sheikh once came ashore from a chartered luxury yacht and tried to book a suite for the night. When told the place was full he hastily produced a cheque book and offered to buy it.
Why aircraft lessors' woes may lead to costlier flights New Delhi: Record high airfares hurting passengers could rise even further following yet another instance of foreign lessors facing roadblocks in repossessing their aircraft from a troubled Indian carrier. Leasing aircraft could cost 20-25% more for startups and financially weak Indian carriers after the Go First case where lessors are now barred from taking their planes back for at least six months unless the NCLAT gives them some relief people in the know said. Only Indigo and Tata group carriers led by air India could be spared this increased cost as they are good credit for lessors lease rentals account for 10-12% of an airline's operating cost. A 20-25% increase in lease rentals will mean overall cost rising by 2-3% which will have to reflect in ticket prices. Except AI and Indigo it will be very challenging for other airlines, including startups. NCLT has directed go first erstwhile board to deposit Rs.5 crore with the resolution professional while the 55 aircraft currently with the airline are worth over $2.5 billion," said an industry veteran. Now at the first sign of trouble in an Indian carrier lessors will line up to responses planes to avoid such a scenario where an airline uses the IBC route to escape de-registration of aircraft said another official. In the past also, lessors faced trouble in getting planes back from airlines such as jet and kingfisher that went bust, with aircraft stuck with the later being sold as scrap after rotting away at Indian airports. Meanwhile Go's new management will have to satisfy DGCA that it has the resources to safely operate flights in term of money manpower and machines.
US engine co PW hits back at Go First, blames 'financial mismanagement'. Go First may have blamed Pratt & Whitney (PW) for its troubles but the US aerospace major has hit back at the airline. "Go First is seeking to jump the line for engines over other customers worldwide. Airline customers, who have been in good financial standing and compliant with contracts, should not be made to suffer due to the financial mismanagement and contractual violations of one particular airline," said sources. Over 50 airbus A320neos of Go and Indigo are grounded due to PW engines. Asked about these planes, a PW spokesperson said "Expect supply chain to stabilize throughout 2023...."
Read the passage and answer the next five question by choosing the correct option:
Dealing with teenage offspring can be exasperating, because they come up with the darndest questions: "Why should I be good when being bad appears to be more beneficial"?
One must then attempt to untangle deep issues of history, philosophy and evolutionary biology, in order to answer that question convincingly and correctly. In today's world of power-crazy the billionaires and an over-supply of despots, can one even fault the youngster for asking?
Thankfully, science has shown, over and over, that in the long run, it is more beneficial for the individual to be good. One such batch of studies comes to us from Daher Keltner, a professor of psychology at university of California, Berkeley, and founder-director of the Greater Good Science Center, founded in 2001. For decades, he and his team of researcher's have been studying are origins and evolution of good in human beings. In one such project, they studied the brains of people who engaged in acts of altruism, and discovered that such acts activate the same circuits that respond to receiving a gift. Evidence collected over years also has it that people who engage in acts of altruism live longer.
Keltner distils some of these findings in his book, Born to be Good (2009), which I am hoping my young ones can take time away from their Reels in order to read.
The whys are not all clear yet. But other contemporary studies support the Center's findings. Humans do good because it makes them feel good.
Where does the desire to do good come from? It is an evolved trait. Altruism is the willingness to do something that confers an advantage on others, even if the outcome may result in a disadvantage for oneself.
There is a school of thought that argues that all altruism is really self-interest in disguise. The writer and philosopher Ayn Rand believed that any behaviour that benefits others is ultimately motivated by a desire for personal gain, whether material, emotional or psychological. The evolutionary biologistiour was ultimately motivated by the desire to pass on one's genes. Since this meant that humans had to (and have to) sometimes simulate altruism, that is what we learnt to do.
These arguments fail to explain genuine altruism. Why do whistle-blowers expose corruption at great personal cost? Or protesters fight for a cause when it can, and often does. cost them years or more behind bars?
Perhaps one of the most compelling arguments against Rand and Dawkins emerges from the pages of Matt Ridley's the Origins of Virtue (1996). While Ridley concedes that self- interest is a strong motivator, he belives that individuals figured out early on that it felt better to cooperate, and yielded better results for the group. And so it is that we evolved to be kind, empathetic, even selfless.
How do we know that this was an 3evolution? Because many anthropologists date civilization not to the first settlements or agriculture or art, but to the first healed femur. At some point, prehistoric humans decided they would no longer leave the seriously wounded behind. They would find the time and resources to care for them, even though there was no material benefit involved. In Ridley calls this "reciprocal altruism".
In this form of cooperation, individuals help each other with the expectation that the favour will be returned, if needed. From that idea, we can trace the evolution of ideas of community, and wider social progress. It is the foundation on which cultures and even economic frameworks continue to be built.
For the young ones who believe "good" is the old way and doing what suits on best is the need of today. I would argue that is not adapting, it's succumbing to a series of short-term goals guaranteed to provide dwindling levels of satisfaction. It has always been tempting, and often more immediately beneficial, to be selfish. We would have been a short-lived species if we'd all sought only to please ourselves.