Knench/Religion: Difference between revisions
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Qhirom ben-Qhenni constructs a neo-Hadīqūt; he translates many Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain texts into Knench. He views paganism as natural, rather than racial/essential to IE-speaking people. (Re Judaism, he notes how Rabbinic Judaism encourages pluralism, and he even sees some common cause with the Tanakh itself, because some objectionable things it condemns were also condemned by the Hadīqīm) | Qhirom ben-Qhenni constructs a neo-Hadīqūt; he translates many Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain texts into Knench. He views paganism as natural, rather than racial/essential to IE-speaking people. (Re Judaism, he notes how Rabbinic Judaism encourages pluralism, and he even sees some common cause with the Tanakh itself, because some objectionable things it condemns were also condemned by the Hadīqīm) | ||
Most modern Knench people are irreligious; among the religious, the largest | Most modern Knench people are irreligious; among the religious, the largest religions: Christianity > syncretic paganism > Judaism ≈ Islam (People usually don't go from Christianity/Islam to paganism, they go to irreligion) | ||