About This Book
Using archaeological, linguistic, and comparative evidence from ancient symbols, monuments, and rites, the author presents sexual differentiation as the primary influence on the formation of deity concepts. Early worship is portrayed as reflecting female-associated, fertility-oriented themes such as tree, plant, and fruit symbolism, while later male ascendancy produces virile, power-focused gods and the rise of solar and phallic cults. The narrative follows the emergence of dual and triple divine forms, the eventual separation and marginalization of feminine elements, and the persistence and adaptation of pagan symbols—stones, columns, sacrifices, dying-and-reborn savior motifs—into subsequent religious frameworks.
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