Q1.
1. What do you think Fred Campbell's reaction might have been when he read the letter?
2. What did Albert Einstein mean when he wrote the pursuit of science leads to a
religious feeling of a special sort, which is surely quite different from the religiosity
of someone more naive? Do you agree with this view? Share your views in class.
chap-Three letters
Q2. Does the copper wire in the poem take pride in its work? is copper wire complaining about being overburdened? Give reason for your answer.
poem-Under telephone pole
correct answer will be appreciated
Answers
Answered by
1
Explanation:
Hindi hole Universal Princeton want to become a maths teacher because he is the intelligent boy in the all over the world to do the message you also find the you also find the formula of EMC Square
Answered by
5
Answer the following
Explanation:
- On 4th May 1925, a year after being released from prison, Gandhi got a letter from 15-yr old Fred Campbell of Kansas City who asked Gandhiji why did he hate the British. Gandhiji replied to this teenager which shows Gandhi’s willingness to take his precious time to write to a foreign teenager.
- Seeing this, Fred Campbell perhaps would have admired Gandhiji for his values, principles and realised that Gandhiji believed in harmony of all religions, castes, origins and religion. That Gandhiji never disliked the British was upset with their bad system of ruling India. Reading Gandhiji's letter, Fred Campbell must have felt guilty that he had wrongly accused Gandhiji of spreading hatred amongst people against the British.
- He would have been highly appreciative of the fact that Gandhiji believed in loving people irrespective of their faults; however he did not blindly love such people or shut his eyes to the British's atrocities. Fred Campbell may have wanted to be like Gandhiji after reading this
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- A young girl named Phyllis penned an inquisitive and a polite note to the great physicist Albert Einstein asking whether Scientist prayed. For which Albert Einstein replied "wrote the pursuit of science leads to a religious feeling of a special sort, which is surely quite different from the religiosity of someone more naive" Which means, that scientists agree that any case, including human affairs, is attributable to nature's laws.
- Nevertheless, a physicist should not be willing to assume that prayer, that is, by a supernaturally expressed desire, would affect the course of events. Nevertheless, Albert Einstein said that we must recognize the imperfection of our true knowledge of these powers, and the the belief in the existence of a final, eternal spirit must inevitably depend on a kind of faith.
- Also with the technological advances of today, this conviction remains commonly kept. Yet he also claimed that anyone who is deeply interested with science is persuaded that in the laws of the universe a force reveals itself, something which is far greater than that of mankind. This adds that pursuit of science results in a religious experience of a particular nature which is definitely somewhat distinct from the religious essence of someone more naive.
- Yes, I do agree with Einstein's views. Even though the letter does not tell much about Einstein's personal opinion/views on religion, he brilliantly manages to capture the sublime sense of wonder which science can invoke (bring to mind) in such a way that it is possible to describe as "religious".
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- In this poem Under a Telephone Pole by Carl Sandburg the copper wire takes pride in his work and he is not complaining about being overburdened. The copper wire is just expressing the way he slogs day and night to let people communicate from the ease of their home.
- While the copper wire is not complaining, he wants possibly people to take note of his efforts and appreciate that efforts, since people give importance only to telephone instrument they communicate with and none is bothered about the copper wire that is connected to the telephone that actually helps in the transmission of the communication.
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