To achieve multiple inheritance, we must use interfaces, but why don’t interface methods have bodies and why do they have to be overridden in the derived class?
I really want a lucid answer , not involving too much computer jargon , i cant seem to understand this , i have referred various references
Because Java, in contrast to languages like C++ or Eiffel, only has multiple inheritance of types (i.e. interfaces as well as one class), not multiple inheritance of state and behaviour. The latter of which add enormous complexity (especially state).
The Java designers (and C#, for that matter) opted to not include it as it presented C++ programmers often with very hard to debug issues. You can solve pretty much most problems that require true multiple inheritance with implementing multiple interfaces, so the tradeoff was deemed worth it.
Note that multiple inheritance of behaviour (not state) might come to Java 8 (unless they postpone it again like one of the many other things) in form of virtual extension methods where an interface can declare a method that delegates to one in another class, which then exists on all types that implement that interface.