Hinduism Polytheistic? I don't think so...

screwtype

Warlord
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Jul 23, 2004
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This is only a small thing, but it bothers me. And that is that Hinduism is associated in the game with "Polytheism".

Hinduism is not a Polytheistic religion and never was. Yes, it has a pantheon of Gods, but they are essentially seen as different aspects of the one Godhead.

In fact Hinduism is if anything the complete opposite of Polytheistic. Hinduism is Monistic - meaning a belief, essentially, that everything is God (as opposed to Judaism's Monotheism, the belief that there is only one God). The oldest living scriptures in the world are the Hindu Vedas and Upanishads, which go back as far as 1500BC, and anybody who has read them can be in no doubt whatever that Hinduism's great innovation was the concept of Monism.

I simply mention this because I think associating Hinduism with Polytheism panders to a popular Western prejudice of Hinduism as a rather backward religion. Nothing could be further from the truth. Along with some schools of Buddhism it is probably the most conceptually radical religion in the world.

I'm already seeing posts from folks in the general forum arguing for such features as "human sacrifice" for those ignorant, backward, "polytheistic" Hindus. And this is the danger of the game. It reinforces completely damaging and retrograde notions about one of the world's great religions.

But if you won't associate Hinduism with Monism because you think it might be confused with Judaistic Monotheism, then I suggest you associate it with another of its innovations, Yoga.

Incidentally, it is also not really accurate to associate Buddhism with Meditation, since meditation was, if I'm not mistaken, an arm of Yoga long before Buddha appeared on the scene. This in turn is reinforcing another Western and particularly American prejudice in favour of Buddhism as the East's "progressive" religion (when in fact Buddhism contains some quite negative, Calvinistic assumptions, such as "dukkha" - suffering - and so on).

However, I'm willing to let that pass. But I do feel obliged to make an issue of the association of Hinduism with Polytheism. A generation of kids is going to grow up with this game, please don't leave them with such a false and potentially harmful impression.
 
Thank you for the info-it's more than I know about any of it -it's good to learn this stuff-and your right-more care should be taken in presenting this information.:crazyeye:
 
Don't forget the most important aspect.... IT'S JUST A GAME!!

Maybe our children should learn about religion and other things from an alternative source and not a game :)
 
seriously if people are learing about religion from a game, then there is something wrong with that system.
 
Well, it's not precisely polytheistic, but then again, it's not precisely monotheistic.

I actually covered this in my Eastern Philosophy/History class. It's kind of a fine line. It's certainly not as much of a polytheistic religion as like, the Greeks had. But neither is it precisely monotheistic.

Here's what religioustolerance had to say on the subject:
http://www.religioustolerance.org/hinduism2.htm

Hinduism has commonly been viewed in the west as a polytheistic religion - one which worships multiple deities: gods and goddesses. Although a widespread belief, this is not particularly accurate.

Some have viewed it as a monotheistic religion, because it recognizes only one supreme God: the panentheistic principle of Brahman, that all reality is a unity. The entire universe is seen as one divine entity who is simultaneously at one with the universe and who transcends it as well.

Some view Hinduism as Trinitarian because Brahman is simultaneously visualized as a triad -- one God with three persons: Brahma the Creator who is continuing to create new realities
Vishnu, (Krishna) the Preserver, who preserves these new creations. Whenever dharma (eternal order, righteousness, religion, law and duty) is threatened, Vishnu travels from heaven to earth in one of ten incarnations.
Shiva, the Destroyer, is at times compassionate, erotic and destructive.

Strictly speaking, most forms of Hinduism are henotheistic; they recognize a single deity, and recognizes other gods and goddesses as facets, forms, manifestations, or aspects of that supreme God.
 
but it does have many gods, or facets of one god, which is good enough to be considered polytheistic for the sake of a game.
 
thedarf said:
Don't forget the most important aspect.... IT'S JUST A GAME!!

Maybe our children should learn about religion and other things from an alternative source and not a game :)

Indeed, it is a game. But people learn from it. When you are confronted with something all the time, you will remember it. So if the information is wrong, and the people don't have any knowledge of the topic, they will take the information as given.

gj screwtype :goodjob:
 
GreenMonkey said:
Well, it's not precisely polytheistic, but then again, it's not precisely monotheistic.

I actually covered this in my Eastern Philosophy/History class. It's kind of a fine line. It's certainly not as much of a polytheistic religion as like, the Greeks had. But neither is it precisely monotheistic.

Yes, it doesn't comfortably fit into the monotheistic/polytheistic either/or model because it recognizes different levels of reality. At one level, there is the pantheon of Gods, but at another, these Gods are all recognized as different aspects of the one all-embracing reality, or Brahman.

But for that reason alone, it is inaccurate to describe it as polytheistic. Indeed it is in a sense more radically "monotheistic" than Judaism, since it argues, essentially, that only God exists. All other forms of existence are, if you like, qualified forms of the one undivided Reality. Neither Judaism or its offshoots, Christianity and Islam, necessarily go that far.

Hinduism is more accurately described as monistic. As Wikipedia says in its entry on monism:

The first religious system in India that clearly explicated Absolute monism was that of Advaita (or nondualist) Vedanta (see Advaita Vedanta) as expounded by Adi Shankaracharya. It is part of the six Hindu systems of philosophy, based on the Upanishads, and posits that the ultimate monad is a formless, ineffable Divine Ground called Brahman. But even outside nondualist Vedanta, Hinduism is monistic, even as far back as the Rig Veda [circa 1500BC], in which hymnists speak of one being-non-being that 'breathed without breath,' and which singular force self-projected into the cosmic existence. Such monistic thought also extends to other Hindu systems like Yoga and non-dualist Tantra.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monism

See also the wikipedia article on Hinduism, especially under the heading, "Nature of God":

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hinduism
 
SoCalian said:
but it does have many gods, or facets of one god, which is good enough to be considered polytheistic for the sake of a game.

So does Christianity. Christianity has the Holy Trinity, consisting of the Father, Son and Holy Ghost.

Catholicism goes even further, with Mary the Divine Mother of Jesus, and the pantheon of saints to which one can pray.

But I think you'd go a long way before you found a Christian who'd be ready to describe his religion as "polytheistic".
 
JadeDragon87 said:
Indeed, it is a game. But people learn from it. When you are confronted with something all the time, you will remember it. So if the information is wrong, and the people don't have any knowledge of the topic, they will take the information as given.

That's just my point. People who go on to study comparative religion will learn the truth of the matter. But most people never will. Their perception of Hinduism will instead be modelled on their impressions gained through the medium of popular culture, in which computer gaming plays an increasingly significant part.
 
Wouldn't it be more correct to say that Hinduism is not "theistic" at all? To say that god is everything seems more like a deliberate metaphor than a picture of some person-like "creator". Also, strictly speaking, there's no big difference between the statements
"There is no god" and
"God is everything.",
at least as far as the observation of a reality and practical life matters are concerned.

Anyway, I don't mind the anglo-centric angle on history the game uses, but I agree that they should have been a bit more, in fact way more careful about non-western religions.
(At least it's ridiculous to model all religions after Christianity and then lecture everyone about the PCness of all religions being equal in the game.)
 
I am a hindu. I agree fully that hinduism is monistic, <i>as it is today</i>. this new facet of my religion is a direct result of Adi Shankaracharya's post-buddhist reforms of Hinduism way the hell back when. Before this time, Hinduism was most definately a polytheistic religion. Just read the Vedas, and you'll see. Indeed, the battle of mono vs poly can best be seen in the stories of Krishna, where the demi gods and goddesses acknowledge the power of the One God over them all.

However, if civ wanted to be really correct, it would call polytheistic hinduism by it's proper name--Brahmanism. This is how historians divide vedic hinduism from pop culture hinduism.

//no, i didnt research this extensively in college, why do you ask?
 
screwtype said:
So does Christianity. Christianity has the Holy Trinity, consisting of the Father, Son and Holy Ghost.

Catholicism goes even further, with Mary the Divine Mother of Jesus, and the pantheon of saints to which one can pray.

But I think you'd go a long way before you found a Christian who'd be ready to describe his religion as "polytheistic".
I know that mormons don't describe their version of Christianity as "monotheistic", or at least thats what the annoying guys at my doorstep said.;)

As far as the Holy trinity goes, the name is never mentioned in the Bible, though the parts are. The Trinity is not considered to be three seperate being, but rather three parts of one being. Just as man has the body, mind, and soul, so does God. God the Father is like the mind, Jesus Christ the Son was the Earthly manefestation of God or the body, The Holy Ghost is like the soul of God. This is how we are created in God's image.

As far as the Saints go, they are still human and not divine, not gods.
 
Of course "Hinduism" is basically an English creation. When the English were running India they categorized everyone as either Islamic (which they recognized from the Middle East) or everything else. The everything else consisted of a huge variety of different belief structures which the English dubbed as being "Hinduism".

http://www.dalitstan.org/books/mohr/mohr5.html
 
I can't belive theres acutally a post like this. This is the crap they were tryin to avoid by making every religion no different from any other. I hope you're acutally a Hindu that is deeply offended, and not just some douche *****ing just to *****. You know what i've learned about Hinduism from Civ so far? Its a squiggily blue symbol thing that i usually dont have on my citys because I dont like Spiritual civs.
 
danbosko said:
I can't belive theres acutally a post like this. This is the crap they were tryin to avoid by making every religion no different from any other. I hope you're acutally a Hindu that is deeply offended, and not just some douche *****ing just to *****. You know what i've learned about Hinduism from Civ so far? Its a squiggily blue symbol thing that i usually dont have on my citys because I dont like Spiritual civs.
I must say, that was quite an intelligent post! You MUST be a Harvard University student, yes? :rolleyes:
 
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