Is it safe to assume that sun worship is the oldest and most popular principle of religion...

Is it safe to assume that sun worship is the oldest and most popular principle of religion? Every single culture in the world is familiar with the sun and day/night.

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High cultures worshipped the sun, subhumans worshipped vaginas/women in general.

But user, all cultures deified nature in someway and that's the tradtions sun worship is apart of

No. We clearly also have a strong 'thing' for rivers and boobs (mountains).

That's why Incas were superior to europeans.

-t. Stoned mezito

You write this with a picture of Ra, even though Ra wasn't considered the most powerful God in Ancient Egyptian religion.

I mean, Akenaton actually tried to make Egypt into a sun worshipping society, but he failed and was forever known as the Heretic after he died.

el peruANO

Is that why they are still around?

Incacas

Genocide? A greater reason compared to the black fever partly responsible of eurangutan extinction hehe

genocide? what genocide?

Yurangutan pestilence due to lack of bath technology, which brought germs that desestabilied the Inca empire and killed functionaries and messengers necessary to keep the order and law.

They had to be taught by mesoamerican savages how to bath hehe
>pic
Hehe

>Is it safe to assume that sun worship is the oldest and most popular principle of religion?

That's not a "religion" - it's called theology. Abrahamic delusions are religions.

youtube.com/watch?v=zXDL2hQ76tU

I once read an interesting post about an anonymous user who realized the correlation between the use of some astronomical bodies as symbols for each of the kinds of civilizations.
Muslims use the moon a lot. Think of the flags of countries like Algeria, Turkey, Tunisia.
Eastern Civilizations are more capable than the Muslims, so they go beyond the moon, towards the sun. Think of the flags of Japan, Taiwan, Philippines.
Some civilizations are even more advanced than Asians, so they go to a star beyond our sun. Think of the flag of Israel.
And finally, the most advanced civilization is the Western. They colonize several stars. Think of the flags of the US and EU, with many stars on them.

>the stars of the USSR

...

If by "religion" we are excluding such traditions as shamanism and talking only of organized religions, then yes it would seem so. This is most likely due to the pre-eminent importance of agriculture in societies that develop organized religions, and the gradual decline in status the sun god typically suffers can be traced to the gradual lessening of agriculture's importance in the face of trade and the development of ever more complex societies.

The """muslim""" moon was simply copied from the Byzantines.

Absolutely moronic. Muslims use the moon because it was the emblem of the Byzantine Empire, which heavily influenced the early Muslim states. Japan uses the sun because it is the eastwardmost big piece of land, hence, "land of the rising sun". Israel uses the seal of Solomon because it's a symbol of protective magic, not because it looks like a star.

This is the most asspull theory I've ever read on here.

Thanks for the giggle my friend

>Every single culture in the world is familiar with the sun and day/night.

Lol.

Literally no better than a fly going straight toward a bug zapper.

Subhuman detected.

t.Caca Seville Bergowitz Sanchezio Alvarez

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animism

The egyptian religion could vary during its history. Gods combined, were created, and disappeared. There probably was an instance where Ra was the "most powerful".