God is singular in nature.
It is not pluralistic.
explain in brief the pluralist nature of Indian society
A plural is something that has more than one component, as in grammar. For instance, man is the singular form and men is the plural form of the word. So in a pluralistic society more than one thing is going on. For instance, if we all believed in God as Christians that would be a somewhat singular society. But what we have today is a pluralistic society because there are many different belief systems. Another example is the difference between Godly wisdom and worldly wisdom, Christian ethics and worldly ethics. There are many other ideas I could illustrate this with, but I think you get the point.
The singular possessive noun for nature is "nature's."
Buddhism does not specifically focus on the concept of a singular, omnipotent god figure. Instead, it emphasizes the teachings of Siddhartha Gautama (the Buddha) on achieving enlightenment and understanding the nature of suffering.
Although only in theory, the opposite of a pluralistic society is a monistic society.
The God worship by the Rastas, Jewish and Christians differ in their names. The Rastas worship a singular God whom they call 'JAH', the Jewish also worship a singular God whom they call 'YAHWEH' and the Roman Catholic Christians also worship a singular God whom they call 'YAHVE'. Nevertheless, all of them worship a singular God but with a different names.
How is the nature of God in Judaism different from God in Christianity
Zifuniro za Mulungu Singular is Chifuniro, but I think God is plural. If singular, it becomes: Chifuniro cha Mulungu
A pluralistic democratic state is one in which a diverse population representing many differences and cultures governs itself. The United States is an example of a pluralistic democratic state.
No rights come from God or Nature. The rich grab the rights, then claim that they received them from God or Nature.
a pluralistic society