Daoism understands the supernatural as a layered system ordered around an impersonal ultimate reality (the Dao) and populated by a wide range of divine, semi-divine, and spiritual agents who operate within defined, non-absolute roles. The Dao itself is not a god and does not act, command, or receive worship; instead, it functions as the underlying principle from which order, process, and harmony arise. All divine figures—including the highest theological beings such as the Three Pure Ones—are subordinate to and derived from the Dao, serving as administrators, transmitters, or regulators rather than creators or sovereign rulers. Major deities operate as jurisdiction-bound officials within a celestial bureaucracy, while local gods, spirits, and immortals address specific domains of life, place, or function. Power is finite, conditional, and role-specific, not morally or metaphysically absolute. Disorder is not framed as cosmic evil but as imbalance or disruption, managed through ritual correction rather than moral combat. Daoist supernatural life is therefore structured less around devotion to a supreme being than around alignment, regulation, and harmonization within an ordered yet flexible cosmic system.

1. Supreme or High Being(s)

2. Major Deities

3. Secondary or Local Deities

4. Spirits & Demigods

5. Ancestors & the Dead

6. Opposing Forces

7. Hierarchies & Relations

8. Function in Practice