Pretty good overview. Unlike some other books ive read on this subject there is a focus on certain trends amongst all Chinese religions, such as actual theism and its proliferation into monism dualism and polytheism, ancestor veneration, agnosticism and even materialism. There are a number of variant theories across all Chinese religions pertaining to each of these categories. All in all, I find the broadly Chinese position to be closest to the Indian position, though more rationalistic and precise and less mystical and meditative. Hence, materialism is more pronounced in the Chinese tradition than in any other tradition I've studied. The original theism seems to have almost gone extinct outside of occasional ritualism, with Taoism taking up the dominant role in pre-communist daily religious practice alongside Buddhism, though the latter is slightly more "high church" to my eye. Formal confucianism likewise is an elite phenomenon though it permeates daily family life. It also discusses some of the intrusion of Zoroastrian and Manichean/Nestorian and Islamic ideas into China, but it doesn't seem as though these by and large had a great effect on the general current of Chinese thought, with the exception perhaps of Islam (not as an influence but as a stable counterpole).