No. From the perspective of folk psychology of worship. People deify and spiritualize the figures and objects they worship. It can possess extraordinary functions of resisting the intrusions of nature, protecting the worshiping group, bringing welfare, and at the same time punishing individuals in the worshiping group who do not act according to the group's rules. They all engage in extreme exaggeration when creating gods (shaping and portraying the image of gods). The perception that makes it born out of heat is beyond human perception. This gave rise to strange images of gods that could soar into the clouds, drive wind and rain, have horns on their heads, have three eyes, and so on. The fact that different myths all have the same three-eyed god is actually due to the mutual influence of different cultural ideologies. The Erlang God in China was actually formed under the influence of Indian Buddhism. And throughout the Classic of Mountains and Seas there are nine heads, eight legs and other weird things.