Gods: A History of the Divine, the Mythic, and the Sacred Mind is a sweeping journey through the entire religious imagination of humanity-from the first carved figurines and shamanic trances of the Paleolithic, to the mathematical deities of Babylon, the sky-fathers of Greece, the solar kings of Egypt, the thunderers of the Steppe, the dreamtime of Australia, and the fierce sun and blood gods of the Aztecs.
From there, the narrative follows the dramatic emergence of monotheism in the ancient Near East, the transformation of Yahwism into Judaism, Christianity's universalizing theology, Islam's uncompromising unity, and the esoteric rebellions of mystics, alchemists, and occultists who sought hidden knowledge rather than obedience.
But the story does not end where scripture ends. The book explores how the gods migrated into ideologies, markets, technologies, nations, and digital landscapes-how science replaced heaven with cosmos, how nationalism sacralized borders, how capital became providence, and how the modern imagination invented gods through superheroes, fiction, and memes.
Ultimately, Gods argues that the divine is not a relic of ancient superstition, but a persistent function of the human mind-a tool for explaining the unknown, binding communities, legitimizing power, coping with death, and pursuing meaning. The gods do not disappear; they evolve into new forms.
With global scope, archaeological detail, philosophical insight, and accessible storytelling, this book reveals that the history of gods is not merely the history of religion-it is the history of us.