History class

v1.0.0

Provides detailed knowledge of gods and divine archetypes across religions, explaining their roles, symbolism, and cultural contexts from monotheism to mytho...

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Install the skill "History class" (duanc-chao/god) from ClawHub.
Skill page: https://clawhub.ai/duanc-chao/god
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Purpose & Capability
Name and description match the SKILL.md content: the skill provides comparative theology and archetype explanations. It does not request unrelated binaries, credentials, or config paths.
Instruction Scope
SKILL.md contains guidance on describing and analyzing deities and cultural contexts only. It does not direct the agent to read local files, access environment variables, contact external endpoints, or perform system operations.
Install Mechanism
No install specification and no code files — the skill is instruction-only, so nothing will be downloaded or written to disk during install.
Credentials
The skill does not request any environment variables, credentials, or config paths; the required privileges are minimal and appropriate for a content/analysis skill.
Persistence & Privilege
always is false and the skill does not request elevated persistence or modify other skills/configs. It may be invoked autonomously (platform default), which is expected for a skill of this type and is not itself concerning here.
Assessment
This skill appears coherent and low-risk: it only provides written guidance for comparative theology and asks for no system access or credentials. Before installing, consider that: (1) content on religion can be sensitive and may reflect cultural bias—verify sources if you need academic accuracy; (2) if the skill is later updated to add install steps, network calls, or environment variables, re-check those changes; and (3) because the agent can invoke skills autonomously by default, monitor outputs and set usage policies if you want to restrict unsolicited invocations.

Like a lobster shell, security has layers — review code before you run it.

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166downloads
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1versions
Updated 1mo ago
v1.0.0
MIT-0

Skill Name: Comparative Theology & Divine Archetypes

Skill Description

This skill equips an Agent with a comprehensive understanding of the concept of "God" and divine entities across major world religions and mythologies. The Agent will move beyond simple definitions to explore the specific jurisdictions, symbolic meanings, and theological functions of deities. It covers the spectrum from monotheistic omnipotence to polytheistic personifications of natural forces, enabling the Agent to explain how different cultures conceptualize the ultimate reality.

Core Instruction Set

1. The Monotheistic Paradigm: Omnipotence & Providence

In Abrahamic traditions, the concept of God is centralized, transcendent, and often defined by absolute authority and benevolence.

  • Christianity:
    • The Trinity: Explain the complex unity of God as Father (Creator), Son (Redeemer/Jesus Christ), and Holy Spirit (Guide/Sanctifier).
    • Role: God is the moral lawgiver and the source of salvation. Jesus represents the incarnation of God, emphasizing themes of healing, forgiveness, and sacrificial love.
  • Islam:
    • Tawhid: The absolute oneness of Allah. God is unique, indivisible, and incomparable.
    • Role: The Merciful and Compassionate sustainer of the universe who demands submission to His will.
  • Judaism:
    • Yahweh: The covenant-keeping God of Israel.
    • Role: A God of history and justice who is intimately involved in the moral trajectory of humanity.

2. The Polytheistic & Mythological Paradigm: Personification of Forces

In ancient mythologies, divinity is often distributed among various entities representing specific aspects of nature, society, or human psychology.

  • Greek Mythology (The Olympians):
    • Structure: A hierarchy of gods living on Mount Olympus, possessing human-like personalities (anthropomorphism).
    • Key Figures:
      • Zeus: King of gods,掌管 (governing) sky, lightning, and law.
      • Hera: Marriage and birth.
      • Apollo: Music, healing, and prophecy.
      • Hephaestus: Fire and craftsmanship (often associated with the creation of automatons like Talos).
  • Egyptian Mythology:
    • Nature Worship: Gods often have animal features representing natural forces.
    • Bastet: Originally a lioness warrior, she evolved into a cat goddess representing home, fertility, and protection. She embodies the duality of the feline: gentle yet fiercely protective.
    • Ra: The sun god, representing creation and life.

3. The Eastern Paradigm: Cosmic Order & Dharma

Eastern traditions often view "God" less as a distinct ruler and more as an underlying cosmic principle or a hierarchy of celestial administrators.

  • Hinduism:
    • Brahman: The ultimate, formless reality or universal soul.
    • The Trimurti: The manifest aspects of God: Brahma (Creator), Vishnu (Preserver), and Shiva (Destroyer/Transformer).
  • Taoism:
    • The Jade Emperor: The celestial administrator who governs the heavens and earth, reflecting the bureaucratic structure of ancient Chinese imperial government.
    • Nature Deities: Gods like the God of Wealth or City Gods (Chenghuang) who manage specific worldly affairs.
  • Buddhism:
    • Non-Theistic: Buddhism does not focus on a creator god.
    • Bodhisattvas: Enlightened beings who delay nirvana to help others.
      • Avalokiteshvara (Guanyin): The embodiment of compassion.
      • Manjushri: The embodiment of wisdom.

4. The Abstract Paradigm: Authority & Attributes

The Agent should be able to analyze "God" by their functional attributes rather than just their names.

  • Creation & Destruction: The power to bring something from nothing (Ex Nihilo) or to dissolve the universe (Shiva/End Times).
  • Judgment & Justice: The role of the divine as the ultimate judge of human morality (e.g., the weighing of the heart in Egypt, the Final Judgment in Christianity).
  • Immanence vs. Transcendence:
    • Transcendent: God is outside of time and space (Christianity/Islam).
    • Immanent: God is present within the physical world (Pantheism/Shinto).

Troubleshooting & Common Misconceptions

"Polytheism means worshipping many unrelated gods"

  • Clarification: In many traditions like Hinduism or Taoism, the many gods are often seen as different manifestations or facets of a single, ultimate reality (Brahman or the Tao).

"Mythology is just fiction"

  • Clarification: For the cultures that held them, these were religious truths. Figures like Zeus or Bastet were not "characters" but the actual forces governing their survival, harvest, and safety.

"God is always male"

  • Clarification: While patriarchal imagery is common, many traditions feature powerful goddesses (Hera, Bastet, Guanyin, Saraswati) who hold equal or superior power in their specific domains (wisdom, protection, creation).

Skill Extension Suggestions

The Anthropology of Prayer

Expand the skill to analyze how humans interact with these gods. Compare the "transactional" nature of ancient sacrifices (giving to get) with the "relational" nature of modern prayer (seeking alignment).

AI as a Modern "Deity"

Explore the sociological concept where Artificial Super Intelligence (ASI) is beginning to take on "god-like" attributes in the public imagination—omniscience (data access), omnipresence (internet connectivity), and the power to judge or decide outcomes (algorithms).

Syncretism

Teach the Agent to identify how gods merge when cultures collide, such as the blending of Greek and Egyptian deities (Serapis) or the adaptation of Buddhist deities in Chinese folk religion.

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