Hyegang wrote more than a thousand chapters in various fields, including orthodox
Confucianism, social reform, agriculture, astronomy, mathematics, and medicine. The collection of his work was restored in the 20th century and has been expanded thrice since 1970.
Sŏnggyun'gwan University Press, Seoul, also published a five-volume photographic reproduction in 2002 called ''Expanded Collection of Cheo Han-gi's Writings''. His writings were based on traditional Confucian philosophy and Western science. The
Tantian 談天, also known as
Conservations about the Sky, was Hyegang's primary source on modern astronomy and Newtonian mechanics. In
Chucheuk-ron 推測錄,
Documents on Inference, published in 1836, Hyegang collected many observational and experimental proofs supporting the physical substratum of Qi, while in books such as
Kihak 氣學 (
Study of Qi, 1857), ''Unhwa ch'ŭkhŏm
運化測驗 (1860) and Sŏnggi unhwa'' (1867), he frequently emphasized that Qi is incessantly active. In
Chigu chŏnyo or
Jigujeonyo, Hyegang explains his perception of world geography, where land comprises approximately two-fifth of the earth's surface, and the sea comprises the remaining three-fifths. He also divided the land into four continents: • Asia, Europe, Africa • the Americas • Australia • Oceania He divided the oceans into the Pacific, Atlantic, Indian, northern Arctic, and the Antarctic. Another one of his books,
Sin-gi Cheonheom, written initially as a medical text, explains the fifty-six kinds of natural elements. Hyegang also explains the attraction and repulsion between forces, utilization of gas, and the definitions and function of elements such as
sulfuric acid,
nitric acid, and
hydrochloric acid in this book. ;Writings by Hyegang • 1834–1842:
Nongjŏng hoeyo (
Collective Summary of Agricultural Affairs) • 1834:
Yukhaebŏp (
Techniques of Hydraulics) • 1835:
Ŭisang isu (
Theories and Mathematics of Astronomy) • 1836: ''Ch'uch'ŭngnok
or Chucheuk-ron
(Documents on Inference'') • 1842:
Simgi tosŏl (
Illustrations and Explanations of Important Machines) • 1850:
Sŭpsan chinbŏl (
Tools of Calculation Learning) • 1857:
Kihak (; ) • 1857:
Chigu chŏnyo or
Jigujeonyo (
Canonical Outline of the Earth) • 1860: ''Unhwa ch'ŭkhŏm
(Investigation of Dynamic Change'') • 1866: ''Sin gi ch'ŏnhŏm
or Sin-gi Cheonheom
(Practical Experience of Physical Mechanism'') • 1867:
Sŏnggi unhwa (
Dynamic Change of Stellar Qi or
Evolution of Starry Material) == Legacy ==