CAT RC Questions | CAT RC Based on Humanities questions

Comprehension

If western civilization is in a state of permanent crisis, it is not far fetched to suggest that there may be something wrong with its education. No civilizations, I am sure, has devoted more energy and resources to organized eduction, and if we believe in nothing else, we certainly believe that education is, or should be, the key to everything. In fact, the belief in eduction is so strong that we treat it as the residual legatee of all our problems. If the nuclear age brings new danger: if the advance of genetic engineering opens the doors to new abuses; if commercialism brings new temptations the answer must be more and better education. The modern way of life is becoming ever more complex: this means that everybody must become more highly educated . ‘By 1984,’ it was said recently, ‘ it will be desirable that the most ordinary of men is not embarrassed by the use of a logarithm table, the elementary concepts of the calculus, and by the definitions and uses of such words as electron, coulomb, and volt. He should further have become able not only to handle a pen, pencil, and ruler but also a magnetic tape, value, and transistor. The improvement of communications between individuals and groups depends on it.’ Most of all, it appears, the international situation calls for prodigious educational efforts. The classical statement on this point was delivered by Sir Charles (now Lord) Snow in his ‘Red Lecture’ some years ago: ‘To say that we must educate ourselves or perish, is a little more melodramatic than the facts warrant. To say we have to educate ourselves or watch a steep decline in our lifetime, is about right.’ According to Lord Snow, the Russians are apparently doing much better than anyone else and will ‘have a clear edge’, ‘unless and until the Americans and we educate ourselves both sensibly and imaginatively’,

Lord Snow, it will be recalled , talked about ‘ The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution’ and expressed his concern that ‘the intellectual life of the whole of western society is increasingly being split into two polar concern that ‘the intellectual life of the whole of western society is increasingly being split into two polar groups--- At one pole we have the literary intellectuals... At the other the scientists . ‘He deplores the ‘gulf of mutual incomprehension between these two groups and wants it bridged. It is quiet clear how he thinks this ‘bridging’ operation is to be done ; the aims of his educational policy would be, first to get as many ‘alpha-plus scientists as the country can throw up second, to train ‘a much larger stratum of alpha professionals’ to do the supporting research, high class design and development; third, to train ‘thousands upon thousands’ of other scientists and engineers ; and finally, to train ‘politicians, administrators, and entire community, who know, enough science to have a sense of what the scientists are talking about’. If this fourth and last group can at least be educated enough to’ have sense’ of what the real people the scientists and engineers, are talking about, so Lord Snow seems to suggest, the gulf of mutual incomprehension between the ‘Two Cultures’ may be bridged.

These ideas on education which are by no means unrepresentative of our times, leave one within the uncomfortable feeling that ordinary people, including politicians, administrators, and so forth, are really not much use: they have failed to make the grade : but at least, they should be educated enough to have a sense of what is going on, and to know what the scientists mean when they talk to quote Lord Snow’s example about the Second Law of Thermodynamics. If is an uncomfortable feeling, because the scientists never tire of telling us that the fruits of their labours are ‘neutral’: whether they enrich humanity or destroy it depends on how they are used . And who is to decide how they are used ? There is nothing in the training of scientists and engineers to enable them to take such decisions, or else, what becomes of the neutrality of science ?

If so much reliance is today being placed in the power of education to enable ordinary people to cope with the problems thrown up by scientific and technological progress then there must be something more to education than Lord snow suggests . Science and engineering produce ‘know-how’; is one more a culture than a piano is music Can education help us to finish the sentence, to turn the potentiality into a reality to the benefit of man ?

To do so, the task of education would be, first and foremost the transmission of idea of value, of what to do with our live. There is no doubt also the need to transmit know-how but this must take second place, for it is obviously somewhat foolhardy to put great powers into the hands of people without making sure that they have a reasonable idea of what to do with the. At present, there can be little doubt that the whole of mankind is in mortal danger, not because we are short of scientific and technological know-how, but because we tend to use it destructively, without wisdom. More education can help us only if it produces more wisdom.

The essence of education, I suggested, is the transmission of values do not help us to pick our way through life unless they have become our own, a part, so to say, of our mental make-up. This means that they are the very instruments through which we like at interpret, and experience the world. When we think, we do not just think: we think with ideas. Our mind is not a blank, a tabula rasa. When we begin to think we can do so only because our mind is already filled with all sorts of ideas with which to think. All through our youth and adolescence, before the conscious and critical mind begins to act as a sort of censor and guardian at the threshold, ideas seep into our mind, vas hosts and multitudes of them. These Years are, one might say, our Dark Ages during which we are nothing but inheritors it is only in later that we can gradually learn to sort out our inheritance.

First of all, there is language, Each word is an idea. If the language which seeps into us during our Dark Ages is English, our mind is thereby furnished by a set of ideas which is significantly different from the set represented by Chinese, Russian, German, or even American. Next to world, there are the rules of putting them together: grammar, another bundle of ideas, the study of which has fascinated some modern philosophers to such and extent that they thought they could reduce the whole of philosophy to a study of grammar.

All philosophers and others have always paid a great deal of attention to ideas seen as the result of thought and observation; but in modern times all too little attention has been paid to the study of the ideas which form the very instruments by which thought and observation proceed. On the basis of experience and conscious thought small ideas my easily be dislodged, but when it comes to bigger, more universal, or more subtle ideas it may not be so easy to change them. Indeed, it is often difficult to become aware of them, as they are the instruments and not the results of our thinking just as you can see what is outside you, but cannot easily see that with which you see, the eye itself. And even when one has become aware of then it is often impossible to judge them on the basis of ordinary experience.

We often notice the existence of more or less fixed ideas in other people’s minds-ideas with which they think without being aware of doing so. We then call them prejudices, which is logically quite correct because they have merely seeped to the mind and are in no way the result of judgement. But the word prejudice is generally applied to ideas that are patently erroneous and.

Recognizable as such by anyone except the prejudiced man, most of the ideas with which we think are not of that kind at all. To some of them, like those incorporated in words and grammar, the notions of truth or error cannot even be applied, others are quite definitely not prejudices but the result of a judgement; others again are tacit assumptions or presuppositions which may be very difficult to recognise.

I say, therefore, that we think with or through ideas and that what we call thinking is generally the application of pre-existing ideas to a given situation or set of facts. When we think about say the political situation we apply to that situation our political ideas, more or less systematically, and attempt to make that situation ‘intelligible’ to ourselves by means of these ideas. Similarly everywhere else. Some of the ideas of value, that is to say, we evaluate the situation in the light of our value-ideas.

The way in which we experience and interpret the world obviously depends very much indeed on kind of ideas that fill our minds. If they are mainly small, weak superficial, and incoherent, life will appear insipid, uninteresting, petty and chaotic. It is difficult to bear the resultant feeling of emptiness, and the vacuum of our minds may only too easily be filled by some big, fantastic notion-political or otherwise-which suddenly seem to illumine everything and to give meaning an purpose to our existence. It needs no emphasis that herein lies one of the great danger of our time.

When people ask of education they normally mean something more than mere training, something more than mere knowledge of facts, and something more than a mere diversion. May be they cannot themselves formulate precisely what they are looking for ; but I think what they are really looking for is ideas that could make the world, and their won lives, intelligible to them. When a thing is intelligible you have a sense of participation; when a things unintelligible you have a sense of estrangement. ‘Well, I don’t know’, you hear people say, as an impotent protest against the unintelligibility of the world as they meet it. If the mind cannot bring to the world a set -or, shall we say, a tool-box of powerful ideas, the world must appear to it as a chaos, a mass of unrelated phenomena, of meaningless events. Such a man is like a person in a strange land without any signs of civilization, without maps or signposts or indicators of any kind. Nothing has any meaning to him; nothing can hold his vital interest; he has no means of making anything intelligible to himself.

CAT/1998

Question . 231

The writer’s contention in the passage is that the crisis in western civilizations can be explained by

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Explanatory Answer

Method of solving this CAT RC Question from RC Based on Humanities question

(a) is the correct option, as it can be inferred from the first line of para 1.