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UPSC CSE Prelims Paper 2 CSAT Question Paper (June 02, 2019);

UPSC CSE Prelims Paper 2 CSAT was conducted on June 2, 2019, as part of the three-stage selection process: Prelims, Mains, and Interview. The eligibility criteria required candidates to have a bachelor’s degree from a recognized university and meet the age limit of 21 to 32 years (with relaxations for reserved categories). The Prelims stage consisted of GS Paper 1 (merit-based) and CSAT (qualifying, 33% required), with 1/3rd negative marking. 

Free
UPSC CSE 2019 (Prelims) CSAT Previous Year Paper (02-Jun-2019)
120 Minutes
80 Questions
200 Marks
English, Hindi
Showing 1 - 5 of 80 questions
Page 1 of 16

Q3.

Read the following passages and answer the question, Your answers to these items should be based on the passages only.

Education plays a great transformative role in life, particularly so in this rapidly changing and globalizing world. Universities are the custodians of the intellectual capital and promoters of culture and specialized knowledge. Culture is an activity of thought, and receptiveness to beauty and human feelings. A merely well-informed man is only a bore on God’s earth. What we should aim at is producing men who possess both cultural and expert knowledge. Their expert knowledge will give them a firm ground to start from and their culture will lead them as deep as philosophy and as high as art. Together it will impart meaning to human existence.

On the basis of the above passage, the following assumptions have been made:

1. A society without well-educated people cannot be transformed into a modern society.

2. Without acquiring culture, a person's education is not complete.

Which of the above assumptions is/are valid?

Q4.

Read the following passages and answer the question, Your answers to these items should be based on the passages only.

Soil, in which nearly all our food grows, is a living resource that takes years to form. Yet it can vanish in minutes. Each year 75 billion tonnes of fertile soil is lost to erosion. That is alarming and not just for food producers. Soil can trap huge quantities of carbon dioxide in the form of organic carbon and prevent it from escaping into the atmosphere.

On the basis of the above passage, the  following assumptions have been made:

1. Large scale soil erosion is a major reason for widespread food insecurity in the world.

2. Soil erosion is mainly anthropogenic.

3. Sustainable management of soils helps in combating climate change.

Which of the above assumptions is/are valid?

Q5.

Read the following passages and answer the question, Your answers to these items should be based on the passages only.

Inequality is visible, even statistically measurable in many instances, but the economic power that drives it is invisible and not measurable. Like the force of gravity, power is the organising principle of inequality, be it of income, or wealth, gender, race, religion and region. Its effects are seen in a pervasive manner in all spheres, but the ways in which economic power pulls and tilts visible economic variables remain invisibly obscure.

On the basis of the above passage, the following. assumptions have been made:

1. Economic power is the only reason for the existence of inequality in a society.

2. Inequality of different kinds, income, wealth, etc. reinforces power.

3. Economic power can be analysed more through its effects than by direct empirical methods.

Which of the above assumptions is/are valid?

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