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How Did India Really Get Independence from Britain? Freedom Movement, World War II, and the Hidden Geopolitical Reality

India’s independence from Britain—did it come mainly through freedom movements and sacrifice, or because World War II weakened the British Empire? A deeper historical and geopolitical analysis of what really made 1947 possible. How did India actually become independent from the British Empire? At first, the answer seems simple. Most of us grow up learning that India became free because freedom fighters sacrificed everything, mass movements challenged British rule, and generations of Indians fought with courage and determination. That story is true. But is it the complete truth? Or is history more complex than what school textbooks often simplify? This question creates curiosity not only in India, but across the world. Because when historians study the end of the British Empire in India, they often find something deeper: India’s independence was not caused by only one event, one movement, or one leader. It was shaped by both: India’s long internal resistance and Britain’s g...

Who Created the Universe? The Infinite Loop of Creation and Why the Universe Is Its Own God

Understanding cosmic origins, debunking creator myths, and seeing the universe as self-generating intelligence.

Humans have always been captivated by one profound question: Who created the universe?
Religions across the world offer different creators—divine beings, gods, or supreme consciousness. But if we pause for a moment and go deeper into this question, we’ll find ourselves trapped in an infinite loop:

“If the universe has a creator, who created the creator? And who created the one who created the creator?”

It never ends.

This paradox forces us to rethink the very idea of a single-origin being. To understand the truth, we must look beyond myths, belief systems, or human limitations—and turn to the universe itself. Because maybe... the universe is the real god.

The Mind-Bending Scale of the Universe

The observable universe spans about 94 billion light-years in diameter. Light travels at 299,792,458 meters per second, and yet it would still take 94 billion years to reach its furthest edges—if we were even capable of such a journey. And still, that’s only the observable part.

We don’t know what lies beyond. Could be more galaxies. Could be multiverses. Could be nothingness—or something we aren’t yet equipped to perceive.

Now ask yourself:

“If something is this immense and governed by rules that consistently create balance, does it really need a creator outside of itself?”


The Laws That Govern the Universe

Let’s not ignore the obvious:

  • Gravitational Force – binds galaxies and stars.

  • Electromagnetic Force – enables atoms, light, chemistry, life.

  • Strong Nuclear Force – keeps atomic nuclei stable.

  • Weak Nuclear Force – responsible for radioactive decay.

  • Thermodynamics – drives entropy and energy flow.

  • Probability – the quantum force behind unpredictable events.

These laws don’t fluctuate—they hold the entire fabric of space-time together. And they weren’t written in a book. They emerged from the universe itself.

So instead of attributing creation to an external “god,” maybe we should realize that:

“The universe is not a creation. It is the creator.”


The Problem With the ‘Creator’ Argument

Religions suggest that a divine entity watches over everything. People say, “Don’t worry, God will take care of it.”

That’s comforting, but let’s look at what really takes care of us:

  • The sun gives us light and energy.

  • Gravity holds us on the planet.

  • The earth recycles life through ecosystems.

  • Photosynthesis turns air into food.

  • The cosmos evolved us from stardust.

These are not miracles—they’re laws. And they’ve been operating for 13.8 billion years, long before humans invented the concept of “God.” If you think Universe itself watches over us and everything.  


🌀 Why the Creator Argument Breaks Down

If we say, “God created the universe,” then we must ask:

“Who created God?”

If we say, “God always existed,” why not just say, “The universe always existed or emerged from itself”?

This is the paradox of infinite regression—and it’s a trap of logic. That’s why the Big Bang Theory is important: it tells us space and time began at the same point. No “before,” no “outside.” Just existence birthing itself.

So maybe the universe didn’t need a creator.
Maybe it is the creator.


Check out similar articles on God, Universe and its importance. 

Does God Really Exist? Why Belief in God—Even If False—Is Still Good for Humanity


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We don't need to outsource divine power to some invisible being. The universe is self-aware through us. It is observing itself through our consciousness. We are made of its particles. We follow its laws. We are the universe experiencing itself.

So next time you look at the stars, remember:

“That’s not the creation of a god. That is god.”

A god without a face.
Without bias.
With only patterns, forces, and laws.

A living, breathing, evolving system—called the universe.

“If the universe creates itself, is it not the god we’ve been seeking?”


Written by

Antarvyom Kinetic Universe 

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