Acharya Prashant expresses profound admiration for Kabir Saheb, describing him as a figure of immense courage, devotion, and conviction. He highlights Kabir Saheb's ability to proclaim himself as the pet dog of the Divine, demonstrating a unique blend of brute honesty and childlike simplicity. Living in Varanasi, a center of orthodoxy, Kabir Saheb fearlessly challenged idol worship and religious rituals, suggesting that even a dog is more useful than a stone deity. Acharya Prashant notes that Kabir Saheb's teachings provide the most direct and simple definitions of complex spiritual concepts like Illusion and Time, defining Illusion as that which one cannot remove from the mind and Time as the imagination of the mind.