There is a natural tendency in very animate being to resent restrictions. If you block the growth of a plant, it will try to pierce through the blockade. If you enclose a worm or fish in a glass jar, you will find it restlessly moving hither and thither to find a way out. Similarly, if you confine a bird or an animal in a cage or a room, you will find it constantly trying to break through the cage or the room in a fit of escape. Only when it gets tired or identifies itself with the environment of the prison, will it sit silent. Thus, the urge to be free is inborn in all animate beings. It gets suppressed only on its identification with the situation. The urge to be free is also present in inanimate objects but it is latent and ultimately gets fulfilled. It is for this reason that matter constantly changes its shape. The change is in a way a fulfillment of that urge.

1.       The natural tendency among the living beings is to

a.         Submit to the circumstances              

b.         Strive for freedom

c.         Place restrictions in the way of others            

d.         Create blockades

2.       A worm in a glass jar first tries to

a.         Adjust itself

b.         Break the jar

c.         Move out of it

d.         Ignore the change

3.       An animal will sit quietly in a cage after it has

a.         Eaten well                                       

b.         Struggled enough

c.         Identified itself with the changed circumstances

d.         Given up hope of freedom

4.       Matter constantly changes its shape because it

a.         Is inanimate                                     

b.         Also has an urge to be free

c.         Is moulded into different shapes by men           

d.         Has no soul