Reference: Postulate Mechanics
Why Do People Think About God?
Have you ever looked up at the sky and felt like it goes on forever? That feeling of “forever” and “everything connected together” is actually where the idea of God comes from. People noticed that the universe is enormous — maybe infinite — and that everything in it seems to work together like one giant, amazing machine. That’s the starting point for thinking about God.
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The First Gods: Ancient India
A very long time ago, people in ancient India wrote poems called the Vedas. In these poems, they talked about many different gods — gods of fire, wind, sky, and water. But here’s the cool part: they also said that all these gods were really just different names for one big truth underneath everything.
Think of it like this: imagine a giant diamond. It has many different sides, and each side sparkles differently. But it’s still one diamond. The ancient Indians saw their many gods the same way — many shining sides of one truth. They even had a saying for it: “The Truth is one; the wise call it by many names.”
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What Buddhism Says
Buddhism came from some of the same ideas, but it asked a different question: why do people believe in God in the first place?
A Buddhist teacher explained it this way: people feel scared and want to be safe, kind of like how little kids feel safer when a parent is nearby. So people invented the idea of God — a super-powerful protector who watches over them. Buddhism says this comes from fear and not fully understanding how the world works.
Buddhism also doesn’t believe in one all-powerful God who created everything. Instead, it teaches that everything is connected and always changing.
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The One-God Idea
The idea of just one God — and only one, with no others — didn’t appear all at once. It grew slowly over a very long time.
Way back in the Middle East, people first prayed to one main god but still believed other gods existed. Over hundreds of years, that slowly changed. By around 500 BCE, after a group of Jewish people went through a very hard time (they were taken away from their homeland to Babylon), their leaders came back with a firm new idea: there is only one God, the creator of everything, and no other gods are real at all.
This one-God idea was later passed on to Christianity and Islam, which together have billions of followers today.
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What This Book Says
This book (called Postulate Mechanics) starts with an ancient Indian idea: reality has three qualities — substantiality, awareness, and oneness. The whole book builds on that starting point.
The book sees the idea of “one true God” as a kind of shortcut — people took the amazing, complex oneness of the universe and turned it into a simple person-like God. That can be easier to understand, but it might also miss the bigger, more wonderful picture.
The book also points out that after the Jewish people returned from Babylon, having a single, strict God helped their leaders keep everyone united and following the same rules. One God, one law, one people — it’s a powerful idea for building a community. But the book suggests that believing only your God is the real one can actually get in the way of truly understanding how wonderfully connected and complex the whole universe really is.
The big takeaway? Humans have always sensed that everything is somehow one — and they’ve tried to explain that feeling in different ways across different cultures. This book tries to explore that oneness without the shortcuts.
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