Monotheism In Hinduism

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One of the main characteristics of Hinduism is the varied concept about ishta devata ([any] adorable deity), which recognizes that any person may have a conception of divinity, equally respectable, since God can take all forms, and eventually transcends them. Hence the infinitude of representations of the divinity. But finally God is one, even though its manifestations are infinite. In Western texts came to become popular the Hindu triad, called Trimurti ('three forms [of God]': the male gods Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva), but usually no one worships that triad. Many Hindus worship the goddess Durga (known by some by one of its aspects as Kali), but also to a large number of other gods, including regional gods. Monotheism: many Hindus believe in one God, polytheism (belief in multiple gods) as various religions of India - profess syncretism, and Advaita: or absolute monism, which defends the existence of only one God. Within monotheism can be the Vaishnavism (who worship the God Vishnu), the Krishnaism (who worship the god Krishna), the Shaivism (who worship the God Shiva) and the Shaktism (which worships the goddess Kali), opposite to the doctrine Advaita (the Jnanis attended the impersonal Brahman).

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