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    Bernd Herd (herdsoft@gruene.social)'s status on Thursday, 23-Nov-2023 09:50:35 JSTBernd HerdBernd Herd
    in reply to
    • Micro SF/F by O. Westin

    @MicroSFF Isn't this also a logical fallacy, since very many people believe there is only exactly one god, so "most gods" doesn't make sense to them.

    While people like me don't think any gods exist at all, so "most gods" also makes no sense to me?

    Maybe "Most people who believe in a god believe their god cares about living people"?

    Worth reading:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_Gods

    In conversationThursday, 23-Nov-2023 09:50:35 JST from gruene.socialpermalink

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      Small Gods
      Small Gods is the thirteenth of Terry Pratchett's Discworld novels, published in 1992. It tells the origin of the god Om, and his relations with his prophet, the reformer Brutha. In the process, it satirises philosophy, religious institutions, people, and practices, and the role of religion in political life. Plot background Omnia is a theocracy based on the Seven Books of the Prophets of Om, collectively known as the Septateuch. The Discworld is flat and is orbited by its sun, but Omnian doctrine says that the world is round and orbits the sun. Omnians believe in a single god, Om, though the Discworld has many gods, including the billions of Small Gods who exist as points of desire searching for believers. Om was once a Small God, but managed to speak to a shepherd, gained believers (despite the shepherd being stoned to death) and took over from Ur-Gilash as the God of what became Omnia. In Omnian tradition there is a new Prophet every two hundred years. Plot The Great God Om tries to manifest himself once more in the world, as...
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