Card: 2 / 50 |
The kingdom enforces a rule where night becomes day and day becomes night, requiring everyone to follow this reversed schedule. |
Card: 6 / 50 |
A series of blame-shifting occurs, with various characters pointing fingers at each other for the incident. |
Card: 7 / 50 |
True or False: The guru initially stays in the Kingdom of Fools to observe its peculiarities. |
Card: 8 / 50 |
False. The guru senses trouble and quickly leaves the kingdom, while the disciple stays behind. |
Card: 10 / 50 |
The guru tricks the foolish king and his minister into executing themselves by convincing them of a mystical rebirth as rulers. |
Card: 11 / 50 |
Fill in the blank: In the end, the people of the Kingdom of Fools make the guru and his disciple the ___ rulers of the kingdom. |
Card: 13 / 50 |
What unusual characteristic did the Kingdom of Fools have regarding its daily routine? |
Card: 14 / 50 |
In the Kingdom of Fools, people and animals worked through the night and rested during the day, reversing the normal routine. |
Card: 15 / 50 |
The disciple was attracted to the Kingdom of Fools primarily because of ___ and ___. |
Card: 17 / 50 |
True or False: The disciple immediately recognized the wisdom in the guru's warning and left the kingdom with him. |
Card: 20 / 50 |
The trial was initiated when a thief died after a wall collapsed on him, leading to a series of blame-shifting accusations that implicated various individuals. |
Card: 21 / 50 |
Fill in the blank: The foolish king decided to punish the merchant for the wall's collapse, but when they tried to execute him, they found he was too ___ for the stake. |
Card: 23 / 50 |
How did the guru outsmart the king to save the disciple at the time of execution? |
Card: 24 / 50 |
The guru convinced the king that the stake was magical, claiming that whoever was executed first would be reborn as the king, which made the king and minister eager to take the disciple's place. |
Card: 25 / 50 |
What transformation occurred in the Kingdom of Fools after the king and minister were executed? |
Card: 26 / 50 |
The kingdom was left leaderless, and the people offered the throne to the guru and the disciple, who then transformed the kingdom into a place of true justice and wisdom. |
Card: 28 / 50 |
The themes illustrate how cunning and deception can manipulate systems of justice, with characters attempting to deflect responsibility while the guru's cleverness determines the outcome. |
Card: 29 / 50 |
The consequences of greed in the story lead to the downfall of which two characters? |
Card: 30 / 50 |
The king and his minister, whose desire for eternal rulership through mystical rebirth blinds them to reality. |
Card: 31 / 50 |
In the story, the guru's manipulation of the king and minister demonstrates the shifting nature of ___ based on who possesses wisdom. |
Card: 33 / 50 |
True or False: The story suggests that true wisdom involves navigating systems of power and influence. |
Card: 35 / 50 |
What does the contrast between the guru's wisdom and the king's folly teach about navigating absurd situations? |
Card: 36 / 50 |
It teaches that those with wisdom and insight can navigate absurd situations effectively, turning folly into fortune. |
Card: 38 / 50 |
To accuse someone means to claim that they have done something wrong or illegal. |
Card: 41 / 50 |
True or False: A burglar is someone who legally enters buildings to steal things. |
Card: 48 / 50 |
If someone is described as 'guilty', it means they have committed a wrong or illegal act. |
Card: 50 / 50 |
Injustice refers to situations where fairness is lacking or wrongs are committed. For example, if someone is punished for a crime they did not commit, that is an injustice. |