Confucian cosmology is defined as much by what it refuses to explain as by what it affirms. It deliberately avoids creation stories, mythic origins, and speculative accounts of beginnings, treating the cosmos as already given, ordered, and intelligible. Rather than a spatial architecture of realms or divine agents, the universe is understood as a moral field of relationships, structured through the Heaven–Earth–Humanity triad and sustained by patterned correspondence between ritual, governance, social roles, and natural rhythms. Time is continuous and historical, oriented toward preservation and restoration rather than cycles of destruction or apocalyptic culmination. Order arises through ritual propriety, humaneness, and right action aligned with Heaven’s normative force, while disorder appears as moral and social breakdown rather than cosmic evil. Confucian myth is minimal and demythologized, centering sage-kings and exemplars who legitimate ethical norms and political authority without supernatural intervention. In practice, Confucian cosmology exists to stabilize society, evaluate governance, and cultivate virtue, grounding human responsibility within an enduring and non-transcendent cosmic order.

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