Answer and Explanation:
Hamlet is, in fact, going crazy. This madness is the result of the environment in which he lives and the lack of proactivity with which he faces the situations to which he is subjected. Hamlet's initiative in pretending to be crazy is a good departure from the real madness he presents, we can see that, due to Hamlet's contradiction in acting after a lot of reflection, or acting in full impulse causing disastrous results and promoting evil to all around him, like the scene where he kills Ophelia’s father as a result of complete lack of rationality.
However, Hamlet's madness is gradual and we can see that he gets worse as the series begins. Not even Hamlet is sure of his sanity.
If I'm correct its C hope that helps:)
<span>The central idea of the paragraph is most clearly: hierarchical
thinking is rarely accurate. The paragraph states that one’s opinion about
subordinates changes as soon as they go higher on hierarchical ladder which is wrong
as our position in hierarchy doesn’t always define our work and effort and
surely it doesn’t define us as a person. </span>