Step 1: Extract claims about "memory's truth."
The passage stresses that memory selects, eliminates, alters, exaggerates, minimizes, glorifies, vilifies and finally creates its own reality. This presents truth as constructed by memory and therefore fallible and slanted. $\Rightarrow$ Matches (C).
Step 2: Observer–dependence.
"No sane human being ever trusts someone else's version more than his own" implies truth varies with the observer and is thus contingent and partial. $\Rightarrow$ Matches (D).
Step 3: Why (A) and (B) do not follow.
(A) & (B) appeal to empiricism/sense verification, but the passage neither mentions empirical testing nor sensory verification as criteria of truth; it focuses on memory's constructive, subjective nature. Hence they are not supported. \[ \boxed{\text{Therefore, (C) and (D) only.}} \]
Here are two analogous groups, Group-I and Group-II, that list words in their decreasing order of intensity. Identify the missing word in Group-II.
Abuse \( \rightarrow \) Insult \( \rightarrow \) Ridicule
__________ \( \rightarrow \) Praise \( \rightarrow \) Appreciate
In the following figure, four overlapping shapes (rectangle, triangle, circle, and hexagon) are given. The sum of the numbers which belong to only two overlapping shapes is ________