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13 February, 08:38

Read this parable, which comes from the Hasidic storytelling tradition:

One day a prince begins to act like a rooster. No one, including the king and queen, can convince the prince he is a man until a wise man comes and begins acting like a rooster himself. Once the prince accepts the wise man as a fellow rooster, the wise man is able to convince the prince to act like a man again.

What is the most likely moral of this parable?

A. Being true to one's nature is more important than conforming.

B. Animals offer a unique, and instructive, view of the world.

C. A peer is more persuasive than an authority figure.

D. One must be degraded before one can gain wisdom.

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Answers (2)
  1. 13 February, 09:45
    0
    C) a peer is more persuasive than an authority figure
  2. 13 February, 12:23
    0
    The answer is C I did it on Apex.
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