Though
3,000 miles away, the Chinese and Indus Valley are very much alike—in terms of politics
and religion. Both civilizations demonstrate a centralized state, but the
Chinese centralized state was more prominent than the Indus Valley, due to
archeological research. These centralized governments were run by Indian priest
kings and the Chinese Zhou dynasty. Because of this, the Indus Valley developed
a more religious structure—as opposed to the Chinese belief in honor. In
regards to religion, both civilizations pushed polytheism, which is the belief
of multiple deities. Chinese religion focuses heavily on the idea of faith in
ancestry, while people from the Indus Valley established the idea of
reincarnation.
In spite of the fact that the Chinese and Indus
civilizations had similarities in their politics, these civilizations’ polytheistic
ideals started to differentiate themselves as time progressed. The Indus Valley
mentality of reincarnation eventually turned itself into Hinduism—while its’
Chinese counterpart (Shang religion) believed that Gods controlled multiple aspects
of daily life—also known as the “Mandate of Heaven”. What this “Mandate”
granted was access to heavenly powers—as long as they were faithful in their
decisions.
awesome introduction for a file type project
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DeleteI have a project on this topic and I got bored of looking for the answers in the book so I looked up the question on line and I found this
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Deleteumm i don't see nothing on here but they r so much alike
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ReplyDeleteneeds more ways there alike
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