Xenophanes on the Nature of the Divine
Xenophanes critiqued conventional portrayals of the gods, particularly those found in Homer and Hesiod. He argued that attributing human traits and behaviors to deities was a projection of human limitations. Instead, he proposed that the divine is singular, eternal, and transcendent—a being far removed from human faults and forms. His writings encouraged a more abstract understanding of divinity, setting the stage for later philosophical inquiries into the nature of the divine.