The episodes of The Great Report are read as an explanatory dialogic structure, not as a book structure. Their sequence does not move from chapter to chapter, but from a broad public question to detailed applications concerning language, knowledge, religion, the state, the family, and jurisprudence.

Editorial stages

StageEpisodesFunction within the atlas
Establishing the tools of reading and the structure of revelation1-6Finality, universality, mercy, the negation of synonymy, the Book, the Qur’an, and the Reminder, the decisive and the ambiguous, revelation and sending down.
Knowledge and divine laws7-12Existence, perception, the heart and the mind, divine decree and predestination, provision, lifespans, plurality, and God’s attributes.
Classifying religious and ethical concepts13-17Islam and faith, creed and rituals, unbelief and polytheism, sin, and the beginning of clarifying the concept of the prohibited.
The lawful and the prohibited, and custom18-20Forbidden matters, food, amusement, the arts, and the difference between divine prohibition and social regulation.
The state, plurality, and fighting21-24The nation-state, sovereignty, creeds, verses of fighting, the city, and political and religious plurality.
Recompense, testament, and inheritance25-27Paradise and Hell, reward and punishment, the testament, inheritance, and private and public justice.
Family, marriage, and lineage28-30The solemn covenant, divorce, guardianship, marital discord, adoption, lineage, and parents.

Rule of treatment

The episode is treated as an explanatory dialogic source. If a claim appears in it, it is not relied upon on its own as a foundational statement unless it is linked to a Book, an atom, or a Qur’anic locus within the atlas. Therefore, the relation of the episode to the atom is one of these types:

  • Simplified explanation.
  • Applied example.
  • Response to an objection.
  • Terminological distinction.
  • Dialogic expansion.
  • A locus that needs textual corroboration.

Structural effect

This structure makes the program a suitable entry point for the general reader: it begins with a clear question, then moves to a concept, then to a Book or an atom, and then to the verse locus or the conceptual relation. In this way, the program does not compete with the books, but helps one reach them.