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Ad Intervals Are Fixed and Arranged to Contain 1 Ad Every 10 Minutes. You Can JOIN Us from This Link to Support Our Library: https://bit.ly/3jyZzL8 What is a Man? It has a different place among Twain's other works in terms of both its presentation and content. The book is written in the form of a dialogue between two men. While reading the book, we witness a Socratic dialogue between an old man who has sifted his flour and hung up his sieve, withdrawn into his corner and a bit sarcastic, and an inexperienced, hasty in his judgments and excited young man - just like in Plato's famous dialogues or many other works written in dialogue form, we see that the topics discussed are evaluated from different perspectives. While the Old Man puts forward and justifies his own ideas about man and what a man is, the Young Man constantly objects to them. However, the questions the Old Man asks force the Young Man to question whether these objections are justified. In this way, Twain includes us, the readers of the book, in this conversation, and we find ourselves questioning the parties involved in this dialogue.