It is hard to answer, because usually all religions are based on spirits.
Shintoism is a animistic religion heavily based around spirits and animals.
Taoism is a nature-based religion.
Monotheistic; based upon Divine revelation.
Mainstream religion is typically based on a shared set of beliefs, practices, and teachings that are derived from sacred texts, traditions, and historical figures. It provides a framework for understanding the purpose of life, morality, and the divine, and often involves rituals, prayers, and communal worship. Different mainstream religions have distinct beliefs about the nature of the divine, the afterlife, and the individual's relationship to the sacred.
The religion called "Science"
sacrifices of food to spirits and fortune-telling.
It was similar because African religion was based on the worship of ancestors of spirits both good and bad and the Kalinago worshiped their ancestors and nature and believed in evil spirits or as they call it (maboya) the second reason was that the west Africans believed that soul lives on so that the ancestors were always with you just like how the Kalinago believe that the spirit of their ancestors lived on after death to protect them and the Arawaks(Tainos) religious beliefs and songs were about spirits and ancestors and the life of the village.
Buddhism is not generally regarded as a religion based on divine revelation. Its teachings center around the teachings of Siddhartha Gautama (the Buddha) rather than a divine being.
Christianity is a religion based on the teachings of Jesus, as recorded in the New Testament.
Speaking only for democracy, it is based on the concept of a divine Creator, and crumbles without it.
Yes, of course! Wicca is a religion just as Christianity is a religion. It is based on the beliefs of nature, and is in no way evil or dark. ----- Yes - it is a fertility based initiatory mystery religion.
Most pagan religions are earth based. They believe in the divinity of the natural world (ie spirits of trees, lakes, etc). These groups include (but are not limited to) druids, native Americans, most tribal religions (like those found in Africa or Australia).