Using specific examples, compare the way gods and people were depicted in the sculptures of ancient India and Greece, noting similarities and differences.
“The story of Indian art and sculpture dates back to the Indus valley civilization of the 2nd and 3rd millennium BC. Tiny terra-cotta seals discovered from the valley reveal carvings of peepal leaves, deities and animals. These elemental shapes of stones or seals were enshrined and worshipped by the people of the civilization. Two other objects that were excavated from the ruins of the Indus valley indicate the level of achievement that Indian art had attained in those days. The bust of a priest in limestone and a bronze dancing girl show tremendous sophistication and artistry.” ( Sayre,2011) Gods of India formed a superhuman and mysterious race of mighty human beings that were prayed to by the ancient Aryan and Vedic tribes of the Mid-East from around 3000 BC till modern times. They were recognized mainly in Hinduism. It is believed that God pervades in everything and everywhere. He is the massive being and stays in the enormous things as well as in the slightest particle of the world. Hinduism defines God as the being who is visible and at the same time invisible, He has a form and he is unshaped as well. “Greek
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Which made some people better than others and affecting society in a way that only the better people could do better things in life that the worse cannot do, this was the same as many other values and beliefs, affecting society that everyone treated differently by looks, wealth, and many other things. In the period 600-300 BCE we find a number of ideas shared by India and Greece, for instance (a) monism, the idea that all things are in some sense a single entity, (b) the unitary inner self as a concept central to understanding the world, (c) the idea of abstract or incorporeal