English, asked by pankajsinghal027, 10 months ago

Q.1
Explain with reference to the context one of the following
passages :-
(a) Absent-mindedness of this kind seems to me all but a
virtue. The absent minded man is often a man who is making
the best of the life and there fore has no time to remember
the mediocre who would have trusted Socrates or coleridge
to post a letter? They had souls above such things.​

Answers

Answered by anamkhurshid29
6

HEYA MATE YOUR ANSWER IS

who is making

the best of the life and there fore has no time to remember

the mediocre who would have trusted Socrates or coleridge

to post a letter? They had souls above such things.

HOPE THIS HELPS ❤️

PLEASE MARK AS BRAINLIEST ❤️❤️

Answered by vinod04jangid
0

Answer:

A list of articles lost by train commuters and now sold at London's main station has been published, and many people who have read it have been amazed by the absurdity of some of their colleagues. If statistical records were found on this subject, however, I doubt it would have been found that irrationality is common. The effectiveness of the human memory impairs my miracle. Modern man even remembers phone numbers. He remembers the addresses of his friends. He remembers the days of good harvest.

Explanation:

She remembers appointments for lunch and dinner. His memory is full of the names of players and cricket players and soccer players and killers. He can tell you what the weather was like last August and the name of a provincial hotel where he had a great meal during the summer. In her normal life, she also remembers almost everything she was expected to remember. How many men all over London forgot their one dress when they got dressed in the morning? Not one percent. Probably not one in ten thousand. How many of them forgot to close the front door when they left the house? Little by little. So it goes on all day, almost everyone remembers doing the right things at the right time until bedtime, and the average man rarely forgets to turn off the lights before going upstairs.

There are, it must be acknowledged, some things about memory that work less than normal. It is only a man who follows the path, I think, who can always remember to take the medicine given to him by his doctor. This is very surprising because the drug should be one of the easiest things to remember. As a rule, it should be taken early, or after a meal and the meal itself should be your memorial. The fact remains, however, that few but giants remember to take their medication regularly. Some psychologists tell us that we forget things because we want to forget them, and it is probably because we do not like pills and pots; that most people fail to remember them at set times.

#SPJ3

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