Hinduism is a civilization-scale religious complex comprising multiple theologies, ritual systems, philosophies, and social orders, unified historically and culturally rather than by a single founder, creed, or institution. Organized around dharma-based ritual life and shared cosmological concepts such as karma, saṃsāra, and mokṣa, Hindu identity is sustained through temple worship, household rites, sectarian devotion, and inherited social structures. Plurality and syncretism are foundational rather than exceptional, with continuity maintained through ritual life and cosmological order rather than doctrinal uniformity.

1. Unit Type
Hinduism is treated here as a civilization-scale religious complex comprising multiple theologies, ritual systems, philosophies, and social orders, unified historically and culturally rather than by a single founder, creed, or institution.

2. Naming

3. Boundaries

4. Time Span

5. Geography

6. Evidence Base

7. Dimensional Check

Anchor determination:
Hinduism is anchored in ritual life and cosmological order, maintaining unity through shared symbolic systems, practices, and social structures rather than doctrinal uniformity.