History, asked by leela638056, 10 months ago

Anybody do this....​

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Answered by komal10381
4

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(A) Both the Assertion and the Reason are correct and the Reason is the correct explanation of the Assertion.

(B) The Assertion and the Reason are correct but the Reason is not the correct explanation of the Assertion.

(C) Our Assertion is true but the Reason is false.

(D) The statement of the Assertion is false but the Reason is true.

(E) Both the statements are false.

Example 1: Assertion: All the crow species are entirely black in colour.

Reason: The colour of the crows is a biological adaptation.

Answer: Well the most rookie mistake that people make is this. They argue that if the assertion and the reason sound similar, the option must be A. In other words, the reason must be the correct explanation of the assertion. Let us first check the statements. The first statement presents a strong opinion or in other words, a blanket opinion. Such opinions are often not correct. For example, if someone says that all insects are small, the statement is incorrect. rather if you say insects are small, the statement is genuine.

Assertion and Reason

Similarly to say that all crows are black is not correct as there are species of the common crow, that are grey in colour. So the assertion is not right. The rea

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