this post was submitted on 04 Mar 2026
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Hierarchy sells because it gives you a place that belongs to you, even when it's a shitty place. Having a place does wonder for depression, because it creates meaning.
Creating meaning without hierarchy is possible, though much harder.
When they sell you what I assume is the Christian God (not all Gods are hierarchical), they sell you an easy solution. Burgers make you full if you're hungry, even if they are not good for other parameters. But if a friend is starving and all you have is a burger, you offer a burger.
the burger exists and it will be my new god
Solutions have to work. Its kind of their thing.
Hierarchy is inherent to monotheism specifically. Polytheism can be hierarchical but often is less so.
Pantheism is monotheistic and non-hierarchical. Hierarchy, by definition, implies the existence of more than one thing, and any monistic theology is non-hierarchical.
Pantheism is non dualistic. It is a philosophy where we are all part of the divine. There is no distinct god. In monotheism, god is a distinct entity. I wouldn't categorize pantheism under monotheism.
I would. Monotheism is any belief that prescribes the existence of a single God and its worship. I don't want to argue on semantics, but what else could Pantheism be if not monotheistic?
I think you'd run into trouble with the definition you've offered - worship of a single God. In Advaita Vedanta, as a prominent age old example of pantheism, we are all part of the divine. There is not worship of a distinct entity seperate from ourselves, which is a defining characteristic of the practical application monotheism.
Sufism on the other hand has pantheistic elements (beleiving that all creation is part of the divine) but ultimately includes worship of a single distinct divine entity ie. Allah/God.
Agree that we don't need to go too deep into semantics.