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Question number 67-70 are based on the following passage.
What does laughter mean? What common ground can we find between the grimace of a merry-andrew, a play upon words, an equivocal situation in a burlesque and a scene of high comedy? What method of distillation will yield us invariably the same essence from which so many different products borrow either their obtrusive odour or their delicate perfume? Our excuse for attacking the problem in our turn must lie in the fact that we shall not aim at imprisoning the comic spirit with ina definition. We regard it, above all, as a living thing. However trivial it may be, we shall treat it with the respect due to l ife. We shall confine ourselves to watching it grow and expand. We shall disdain nothing we have seen. We may gain from this prolonged contact, for the matter o f that, something more flexible than an a bstract definition-a practical, intimate acquaintance, such as springs from a long companionship. And we may also find that, unintentionally, we have made an acquaintance that is useful.
For the comic spirit has logic of its own, even in its wildest eccentricities. It has a method in its madness. It dreams, I admit, but it conjures up, in its dreams, visions that are at once accepted and understood by the whole of a social group. Can it then fail to throw light for us on the way that human imagination works, and more particularly social, collective, and popular imagination? Begotten of real l ife and akin to art, should it not also have something of its own to tell us about art and life?
The comic does not exist outside the plain of what is strictly 'Human'. A landscape may be beautiful, charming and sublime, or insignificant and ugly; it will never be laughable. You may laugh at an animal, but only because you have detected in it some human attitude or expression. You may laugh at a hat, but what you are making fun of, in this case, is not the piece of felt or straw, but the shape that men have given it-the human caprice whose mould it has assumed. It is strange that so important a fact, and such a simple one too, has not attracted to a greater degree the attention of philosophers. Several have defined man as "an animal which laughs." They might equally well have defined him as an animal which is laughed at; for if any other animal, or some lifeless object, produces the same effect, it is always because of some resemblance to man, of the stamp he gives it or the use he puts it to.
The phrase 'has a method in its madness' most likely means ...
That humans plan the comic spirit in order for it to give results.
That the comic spirit may be unconventional in its approach but still manages to achieve its end result.
That the imagination required to dream the comic spirit is uncontrolled and rarely understood.
That the comic spirit follows a method which may be unacceptable to society.
That the comic spirit is extremely methodical though some people may not understand this fact.
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