| Comprehension: | ||
| Read the following passage and answer the questions. Let us begin by asking what the historian in practice does when he is confronted by the necessity of assigning causes to events. The first characteristic of the historian’s approach to the problem of cause is that he will commonly assign several causes to the same event. Marshall the economist once wrote that ‘people must be warned off by every possible means from considering the action of any one cause… without taking account of the others whose effects are commingled with it ‘. The examination candidate who, in answering the question ‘Why did revolution break out in Russia in 1917?’, offered only one cause, would be lucky to get a third class. The historian deals in a multiplicity of causes. If he were required to consider the causes of the Bolshevik revolution, he might name Russia’s successive military defeats, the collapse of the Russian economy under pressure of war, the effective propaganda of the Bolsheviks, the failure of the Tsarist government to solve the agrarian problem, the concentration of an impoverished and exploited proletariat in the factories of Petrograd, the fact that Lenin knew his own mind and nobody on the other side did – in short, a random jumble of economic, political, ideological, and personal causes, of long-term and short-term causes. But this brings us at once to the second characteristic of the historian’s approach. The candidate who, in reply to our question, was content to set out one after the other a dozen causes of the Russian revolution and leave it at that, might get a second class, but scarcely a first; ‘well-informed, but unimaginative’ would probably be the verdict of the examiners. The true historian, confronted with this list of causes of his own compiling, would feel a professional compulsion to reduce it to order, to establish some hierarchy of causes which would fix their relation to one another, perhaps to decide which cause, or which category of causes, should be regarded ‘in the last resort’ or ‘in the final analysis’ (favourite phrases of historians) as the ultimate cause, the cause of all causes. This is his interpretation of his theme; the historian is known for the causes which he invokes. | ||
| SubQuestion No : 50 | ||
| Q.50 | Which of the given statements are true in the context of the passage? I. A true historian would feel but should not establish a hierarchy of causes. II. A historian aims at subjective evaluation of history. III. Bolshevik Revolution was a result of multiple causes. iv. The true historian would place the various causes in hierarchical order. | |
| Ans | 1. Only II | |
| 2. Only III and IV | ||
| 3. Only II, III and IV | ||
| 4. Only I, II and III | ||
Correct Ans Provided: 2