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Hinduism claims antiquity, depth, and permanence. Older than Christianity, older than Judaism, it presents itself not as a single religion but as an eternal way. In this episode of And the Questions, I examine Hinduism the way I was trained to examine anything that claims authority, under pressure. Beginning with the Bhagavad Gita and tracing backward through the Upanishads and the Vedas, the system reveals not one voice, but many. Many texts. Many gods. Many answers, none of which correct the others.

Rather than comparing text to text, this episode asks the only questions that matter. Who is God? Who is man? What went wrong? How is it fixed? Hinduism offers wisdom and discipline, but it refuses definition. God becomes undefined, man becomes divine yet unaccountable, evil is reduced to ignorance, and the solution to suffering is escape rather than restoration. This episode does not mock Hinduism. It tests whether it can carry the weight of reality.