He did not talk in the book about any heavenly religion. Rather, he began his book with Buddha and Confucius, then in ten chapters he reviewed the biographies and ideas of ten thinkers and writers, including Shakespeare, Goethe, and Tolstoy. It was as if he had elevated them to the ranks of prophets and treated their creativity and ideas as if they were the teachings of one of the religions. As for the rest of the chapters, he talks about dreams and utopias, such as the unknown land, or its opposite, as in the Island of Demons.In the beginning of the book, he describes these people as "the great men who led human society, appeared in it like flags throughout the ages, and left deep traces in human life that cannot be erased by the sands of time."