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The Origin of Beliefs : A Brief History of Religious Beliefs

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Did God create us or did we create gods?

Ever wondered how thousands of religions and countless gods came into existence?

How did humans first begin to believe? When did we start to worship? And why?

If you’ve asked these questions but never found the time to dig deep, you’re not alone. In the age of social media and shrinking attention spans, most of us don’t have the patience to read through 800-page academic books. That’s exactly why The Origin of Beliefs was written — to give you everything you need to understand the birth and evolution of religious beliefs, in one powerful, brief read.

Inside this book, you’ll

• How belief systems first emerged

• When and why humans started worshipping deities

• The psychological and social roots of religion

• Fascinating facts you probably never heard before

• Rich historical graphics to bring ideas to life

No fluff. No heavy jargon. Just concise, thought-provoking, and sometimes mind-blowing content that will challenge the way you see the world.

By the end, your perspective on life, religion, and humanity may never be the same. Join hundreds of readers already binging on this unique read. It’s short, smart, and totally worth your time (and your penny).

130 pages, Kindle Edition

Published June 25, 2025

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Displaying 1 of 1 review
Profile Image for Andrea Cothern.
Author 4 books3 followers
September 11, 2025
I’m still reading this, but the prologue and first chapter really annoyed me. Grammatical errors aside, the author provides no evidence, making this an opinion piece. They give all the glory of intelligence and first funerals to Homo sapiens, calling Neanderthals “grunters” and ignoring homo naledi completely. This doesn’t seem like a well researched book and should not be taken as fact without evidence and peer reviewed papers.

UPDATE - FINAL REVIEW:
2 star rating stands, mostly due to no sources cited.

There is no bibliography. The author references studies but offers no citation for them. The lack of references makes me question the authors credibility, especially considering that he calls Neanderthals “grunters” (he also says he’ll mention a Neanderthal funeral- I assume the one in Shanidar cave - but never does). Funerary evidence found in Africa by the species homo naledi is never mentioned, so this book has a very narrow scope. He sings the praises of Homo sapiens as a superior species, ignoring that there were several other species alive with us at one time. This book is more a study in the evolution of Eurasian religions rather than a study into the origin of why humans believe in the supernatural. No mention of religions outside of Eurasia at all. The left turn to talk about climate change and poverty threw me off.
Displaying 1 of 1 review