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PASSAGE

The subject of democracy has become severely muddled because of the way the rhetoric surrounding it has been used in recent years. There is, increasingly, an oddly confused dichotomy between those who want to ‘impose’ democracy on countries in the non-Western world (in these countries’ ‘own interest’, of course) and those who are opposed to such ‘imposition’ (because of the respect for the countries’ ‘own ways’). But the entire language of ‘imposition’, used by both sides, is extraordinarily inappropriate since it makes the implicit assumption that democracy belongs exclusively to the West, taking it to be a quintessentialy ‘Wester’ idea which has originated and flourished only in the West.

But the thesis and the pessimism it generates about the possibility of democratic practice in the world would be extremely hard to justify. There were several experiments in local democracy in ancient India. Indeed, in understanding the roots of democracy in the world, we have to take an interest in the history of people participation and public reasoning in different parts of the world. We have to look beyond thinking of democracy only in terms of European and American evolution. We would fail to understand the pervasive demands for participatory living, on which Aristotle spoke with far-reaching insight, if we take democracy to be a kind of a specialized cultural product of the West.

It cannot, of course, be doubted that the institutional structure of the contemporary practice of democracy is largely the product of European and American experience over the last few centuries. This is extremely important to recognize since these development in institutional formats were immensely innovative and ultimately effective. There can be little doubt that there is a major ‘Western’ achievement here.

With reference to the passage, the following assumption have been made: 

1. Many of the non-Western countries are unable to have democracy because they take democracy to be a specialized cultural product of the West.

2. Western countries are always trying to impose democracy on non-Western countries. 

Which of the above is/are valid assumption/ assumptions? 

(a) 1 only (b) 1 only (c) Both 1 and 2 (d) Neither 1 nor

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(d) Statement 1 is incorrect. 

Statement 2 is also incorrect because it can be inferred from the first paragraph that sometimes western nations are trying to impose democracy on non western nations but it cannot be inferred that western countries are always trying to impose democracy on non western.

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