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Atlas Entry 01Universe Geography
How to read this entry
This atlas approaches Paradise in a curious, exploratory, and non-dogmatic spirit.
That means this page is not only about cosmic placement. It is also about orientation.
Paradise can be read in two ways at once:
- as the central point within the larger cosmology
- as a meaning-bearing framework through which human beings interpret center, source, order, stability, and ultimate reference
The goal is not to force belief. The goal is to understand how this cosmology arranges reality, and how that arrangement also functions as a symbolic map for consciousness.
Seen this way, Paradise becomes more than a location.
It becomes a way of navigating significance.
Paradise
The still point at the center of the cosmic map.
Paradise is one of the most important locations in The Urantia Book universe model.
It is presented not as a planet, star, or evolving world, but as the eternal central Isle: the absolute center around which all cosmic organization is arranged.
For this atlas, Paradise is approached as a cosmographic idea as much as a place: the fixed center, the source-point, the axis from which order radiates outward.
Atlas Lens
This page describes Paradise as presented in Urantia cosmology.
It is explored here as part of a symbolic and structural universe model, not as a demand for belief.
Quick View
- Category: Central Isle / Absolute Cosmic Center
- Region: Center of the grand universe
- Surrounded by: Havona
- Type: Eternal, non-evolutionary reality
- Function in the model: Source-center of cosmic order, gravity, and divine administration
- Atlas role: Foundational reference point for nearly every major map in the system
Why Paradise Matters
Paradise is the anchor point that makes the rest of the atlas make sense.
Without Paradise, the wider geography of this cosmology becomes foggy. With it, the structure snaps into focus:
- Paradise at the center
- Havona encircling Paradise
- The seven superuniverses beyond
- Local universes, constellations, systems, and inhabited worlds farther outward
In other words, Paradise is not just another destination. It is the reference point by which all other destinations are oriented.
What Paradise Is
In the Urantia model, Paradise is described as:
- eternal rather than created in time
- perfect rather than evolutionary
- central rather than peripheral
- absolute rather than local
- the source-center of multiple forms of cosmic coordination
It is portrayed as the cosmic homeland of ultimate stability: not a world struggling upward, but a reality that simply is.
What Paradise Is Not
Paradise is not presented as:
- an inhabited evolutionary planet like Urantia (a.k.a. Earth)
- a cultural civilization in the usual sense
- a star system or galactic structure
- a temporary station in cosmic history
That distinction matters.
Many atlas pages later will describe beings, civilizations, training worlds, headquarters spheres, and ascending pathways. Paradise stands apart from all of them. It is less like a capital city and more like the zero-point of the whole architecture.
Closing perspective
Paradise matters not only because it names the central point in the cosmic structure, but because it also functions as a map of ultimate orientation.
Not just where the center is.
What kind of meaning a center creates.
Position in the Cosmic Layout
A simple mental map looks like this:
Paradise
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Havona
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Seven Superuniverses
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Local Universes
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Constellations
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Systems
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Inhabited Worlds