This dimension describes the architecture of the universe and the stories that explain it. Cosmology sets the spatial and temporal map (what exists, how it is ordered), while myth provides the narrative logic (why it came to be, how it operates). Together they define a religion’s metaphysical blueprint.


Cosmology & Myth Template

1. Creation Story (Cosmogony)

2. Structure of the Universe (Cosmos Layout)

3. Time and Cycles

4. Order and Disorder

5. Hero and Culture Myths

6. Eschatology (End of Time)

7. Function in Practice


Example: Ancient Mesopotamian Religion

  1. Creation Story: Enuma Elish—cosmos formed from the slain chaos-dragon Tiamat by Marduk.
  2. Structure of Universe: Three layers—heavens, earth, underworld; cosmic river and firmament hold waters in place.
  3. Time and Cycles: Kingship tied to cosmic order, renewed in New Year festival; history seen as divinely guided but fragile.
  4. Order and Disorder: Marduk establishes order after defeating chaos; law codes (Hammurabi) embody cosmic justice.
  5. Hero and Culture Myths: Gilgamesh epic—mortality, quest for immortality, civilizational values.
  6. Eschatology: No strong apocalyptic vision; afterlife bleak underworld for all, not differentiated by morality.
  7. Function in Practice: Recitation of Enuma Elish at Akitu festival; royal ideology grounded in mythic struggle.

Cosmology & Myth shows how a religion frames existence itself: the big picture of origin, order, and destiny.