Answer:
what?
Explanation:
what exactly is the question here?
Answer:
It’s ‘A Chip of Glass Ruby’
Explanation:
Here’s the book (copy the link and paste it in ur browser):
https://rowanlitandthesocial.files.wordpress.com/2016/06/a-chip-of-glass-ruby.pdf
Answer:
14, Model Town
Delhi
May 25, 20XX
The Managing Director
The Radisson Hotel
Gurgaon
Sir
Sub: Application for the post of Chief Chef
This is with reference to the advertisement published in the esteemed daily. The Hindu on May 20, 20XX. I am Anand. I have completed my MBA in hotel management
from Delhi University. I intend to apply for the post of chief chef in your esteemed organisation.
Please find enclosed my biodata for the said purpose. I am hard working, honest and punctual. I assure you that I shall work with full devotion and sincerity.
In anticipation of an early response.
Yours truly
Anand
BIO – DATA
Name : Anand Kumar Father’s Name : Kapil Kumar Date of Birth : 22 January, 1990 Contact No. : 9350298679 Marital Status : Unmarried Educational Qualifications• Master of Business Administration, A.K. College, Delhi (2013)-95% Marks.
• Graduation in Hotel Management, Satyawati College, (2011) -94% Marks Working Experience : Trainee at the Taj Hotel, New Delhi. (May 2013-Dec. 2013) Languages Known : Hindi and English References1. A.K. Poddar Professor, Head of Dept. ABC College, Delhi
2. Ram Prakash Professor and Dean K.X. College, Delhi
The movement of naturalism was greatly influenced by the 19th-century ideas of Social Darwinism, which was in turn influenced by Charles Darwin's theories on evolution. Social Darwinism applied to the human environment the evolutionary concept that natural environments alter an organism's biological makeup over time through natural selection. Social Darwinists and naturalists cited this as proof that organisms, including humans, do not have free will, but are shaped, or determined, by their environment and biology. Naturalists argued that the deterministic world is based on a series of links, each of which causes the next (for more on these causal links, see Causal links and processes, below). In "To Build a Fire," London repeatedly shows how the man does not have free will and how nature has already mapped out his fate. Indeed, both times the man has an accident, London states "it happened," as if "it" were an inevitability of nature and that the man had played no role in "it." The most important feature of this deterministic philosophy is in the amorality and lack of responsibility attached to an individual's actions (see Amorality and responsibility, below).