The thinking of gods and ghosts of Westerners is quite different from that of Chinese people. The gods and ghosts of the West are basically derived from the Christian view of gods and ghosts, and there is no doubt about monotheism. God is God, the God, the only God, there are angels below God, which is the army of God; while ghosts are more similar to the pale and erratic ghosts in the minds of the Chinese people, and they also think that ghosts are dead. Souls in hell, but the Chinese are accustomed to attribute ghosts to negative evil, which is the reason why ghosts and monsters are called together. On the other side of good and evil, the West attributes the evil side to the Satan family in the Christian doctrine, which they call demons. The origin of the term "devil" is difficult to study. The Chinese language originated from Buddhism. I don't think the local religions of China have ever used this word.
The view of gods and ghosts in this American drama is naturally the follow-up of the Christian view of gods and ghosts. You can see Holy water, crosses, Latin spells and so on. Of course, as the plot unfolds slowly, there are some limitations, so the screenwriter also added voodoo, Hinduism, Indian religion and even some Japanese myths and legends. And the Winchester brothers’ method of eliminating demons and killing ghosts seems to be very simple, salt, holy water, and burning corpse bones, except for a few shots of Cult, and even a decent weapon, thanks to the brothers who were bestowed by the screenwriter. Luck has always been very good, not like the victims who were killed by the evil spirits and demons in two or two.
Of course, if there is no irrationality in the plot, a TV series is no longer a TV series. Ignoring these logical flaws is a good American drama for entertainment.
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