Love and Political Order: The Evolutionary Path to Unity

We live in an age of fragmentation. Politically, we witness the hardening of tribal identities and nationalist divisions. Ecologically, we confront a world torn between exploitation and preservation. Socially, we experience the paradox of unprecedented connectivity coupled with profound isolation. Spiritually, many have lost confidence in transcendent meaning or are unsure anymore of what this implies for us. In such a moment, the vision of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin offers a radical counter-narrative: that the universe itself is structured by love, that consciousness emerges through love, and that our fractured world can be healed only through a renewed understanding of love as the fundamental energy of existence.

Teilhard de Chardin spent his life wrestling with a central theological-scientific question: How can love, even more so, a God of love, be reconciled with a universe shaped by random mutation, violence, and ruthless competition? His answer transformed both domains. Evolution, Teilhard argued, is not merely a blind mechanism of survival but a progressive movement toward greater complexity, consciousness, and union. This movement is driven by love—not as sentiment or morality imposed from without, but as the most basic energetic principle of reality itself. “The physical structure of the universe is love,” he wrote. In our divided world, this vision provides not escapism but clear-eyed wisdom: that our deepest human longings for unity, meaning, and transcendence are not illusions but invitations to participate in the fundamental trajectory of the cosmos.

For Teilhard, love is not peripheral to cosmology but central to it. In his book, The Human Phenomenon, he insists that the universe cannot be understood through the lens of physics alone—the science of impersonal matter and external forces. To grasp reality authentically, we must recognize that love is the structure holding everything together, the force that draws fragments toward unity. This is a stunning inversion of materialist thinking. Where classical science sees matter as fundamentally inert, requiring external forces to organize it, Teilhard perceives attraction as intrinsic to existence. At every level, from subatomic particles to human consciousness, there operates a mysterious pull toward unity. At the material level, this appears as gravity and electromagnetic force. At the biological level, it manifests as reproduction, nourishment, symbiosis. At the human level, it flowers as compassion, solidarity, and passionate desire. More so, this pull toward unity is accompanied by a shift in consciousness. Being drawn toward another, we are affected by the other in such a way that the other and myself become an entangled whole. We might think of consciousness as deepening or expanding through entangled wholeness.

Love, in this vision, is not a moral imperative arbitrarily imposed. Rather, it is the internal structure of the cosmos, the thread connecting all things. When we love, we are not acting against nature but in harmony with it. We are recognizing and participating in the deepest grammar of reality. This reframes the human experience of love entirely. Our capacity to love is not a luxury or gift of conscious life, nor is it simply a theological virtue. Love is the signature of our participation in the universe’s fundamental nature. Teilhard describes love as a “mysterious force”; he is deliberately mystical because he believes that rational discourse alone cannot capture this reality. Love is “mysterious,” because it cannot be reduced to mechanics, nor can it be fully comprehended through analysis alone. It can only be known from within, through participation, through the risk of genuine encounter. Yet this mystery is not irrational; rather, it is transpersonal, exceeding but not contradicting reason.

The most revolutionary dimension of Teilhard’s thought concerns love’s role in evolution. Classical Darwinism, as Teilhard understood it, presented evolution as driven by competition and the survival of the fittest. The cosmos appeared as a battleground where love seemed at best irrelevant and at worst disadvantageous. Teilhard refuses this framework entirely. Evolution, he argues, does proceed through mutation and natural selection, but the overall trajectory reveals something deeper: an irresistible drive toward complexity and, more significantly, toward greater interiority—toward consciousness itself. Matter organizes into molecules, molecules into cells, cells into organisms, organisms into nervous systems, until finally consciousness emerges. This is not accidental; it is the direction of the whole process. According to what Teilhard called “the law of complexity-consciousness,” all phenomena have a tendency to organize into ever more complex entities with ever greater levels of interiority.

What drives this movement? Teilhard’s startling claim is that love—understood as the attractive force drawing disparate elements into higher unity—is the principle energy of evolution itself. Evolution is not merely competition but convergence, whereby complex novel entities emerge. Organisms do not merely survive; they increasingly cooperate, symbiose, and unite. Love, therefore, is not a gift that drops down from heaven, nor is it a later addition to an otherwise mechanical process of life. Evolution itself is love in process, the fundamental energy of matter working toward spirit. The emergence of increasingly complex, conscious beings represents the universe’s progressive capacity for love. When human beings fall in love, create art, or act with compassion, we are not contradicting the evolutionary process; we are fulfilling it. We are accelerating matter’s drive toward greater consciousness and union. This has profound implications. It means that the apparent cruelty and waste in nature are not the final word. Yes, competition occurs; yes, suffering is real. But these exist within a larger context: a cosmos fundamentally oriented toward unity. Evolution has direction, not merely random drift. And that direction is precisely the direction love moves—toward greater connection, consciousness, and communion—what Teilhard called “Omega.”

To become conscious of this movement is to experience a radical transformation of perception: to see the sacred everywhere, not as an escape from the material but as its deepest reality. The divine milieu is not a place one goes to after death; it is the present structure of all existence. But we must grow in consciousness to perceive it. A stone does not experience it; it is unconscious of the divine love that sustains it. A plant participates in it passively, through growth toward light. Animals experience it partially, through instinct and sensation. Only human consciousness can recognize and deliberately participate in the divine milieu. This is why humanity is crucial: we are the universe becoming conscious of its own sacred depth. Teilhard’s mysticism insists that action within the world—work, love, engagement, creation—is itself a form of participation in the divine. There is no need to escape matter to touch God. The spiritual life does not require withdrawal from the world but deeper penetration into it. When we work, we are cooperating with divine creativity. When we love, we are recognizing the divine presence in the other. The world is not a prison from which spirit must escape but a living sacrament through which God communicates. This reframes spiritual practice entirely. Contemplation is not opposed to action but fulfilled through it. The monk and the scientist, the artist and the laborer, the parent and the activist all participate equally in the divine milieu insofar as they act with love and consciousness. What matters is not the particular activity but the orientation of the heart, the intentionality with which one engages reality.

Teilhard recognized that humanity is now entering a new phase in cosmic evolution, which he called “planetization” or what we call today “globalization.” For the first time in Earth’s history, all humans are being drawn into a single, interconnected system. Physically, through technology and commerce, we are woven into one another. But this external convergence opens the possibility of something more profound: a convergence of consciousness itself, a movement toward what Teilhard called the “noosphere”—a new layer of consciousness enveloping the planet. We are witnessing, Teilhard insists, the birth of a planetary consciousness. This process is neither automatic nor guaranteed. It contains immense potential but also real dangers. Planetization could manifest itself as totalitarian homogenization, the crushing of individual consciousness into a mechanical uniformity. Or it could manifest what Teilhard calls “interiorization of unity”—a genuine convergence where differences are not erased but integrated into a higher unity, where each person retains uniqueness while becoming genuinely conscious of and connected to all others. Planetization thus poses the central question of our age: Can humanity evolve the capacity for planetary love, or will we fragment under the pressure of our own technological power? The noosphere, when guided by love and interiorization, represents the next phase of evolution. Individual consciousness does not disappear but is enriched by connection to a greater collective consciousness. A person remains unique while experiencing genuine empathy and union with all others. This is an evolution toward something unprecedented: collective consciousness achieved through and preserving individual freedom. 

Teilhard’s vision is animated by what might be called a mystical optimism, rooted in what he names a “zest for life.” This is not naïve positivity or denial of suffering. Rather, it is a fundamental saying “yes” to existence, a recognition that being is fundamentally good and that the universe moves toward greater value, beauty, and consciousness. The zest for life is not primarily intellectual; it is visceral, affective, and passionate. It is the biological drive toward growth and flourishing, but now conscious and spiritualized. It manifests as curiosity and creativity, as the desire to love and create and discover. It is what compels us toward communion with others, toward beauty and truth. It is the felt sense that existence matters, that consciousness is valuable, that love is worth pursuing even at great cost.

This zest for life is fundamentally opposed to nihilism, despair, and the death-dealing impulses that divide our world. A person animated by genuine zest for life does not hoard or destroy; such a person does not divide. Instead, one desires to grow and flourish in community with others; to create, connect, and understand. The natural expression of this zest is solidarity and may be stated this way: I want to flourish, and I recognize that my flourishing is inseparable from the flourishing of all life. Complexity alone is insufficient. Consciousness alone is not redemptive. Even global consciousness does not guarantee convergence, if guided by domination rather than communion. Evolution can abort at any threshold if the necessary conditions are not met; on our present level of complexified life, love is the necessary condition. Teilhard’s insistence on the necessity of love emerges from his frank recognition that without it, evolution fails.

Love and Political Order: The Failure of Hierarchy

I recently reviewed an article on Teilhard’s vision of love and the classical Christian understanding of love organized through hierarchy, the ordo amoris. The author noted how U.S. Vice President J. D. Vance in February 2025 invoked the Christian notion of ordo amoris to justify the conduct of the United States in international relations. “Just Google Ordo Amoris,” he said on Fox News: “There is a Christian concept that you love your family and then you love your neighbor, and then you love your community, and then you love your fellow citizens, and then after that, prioritize the rest of the world.” This order of love, the author notes, is at the heart of American foreign policy, particularly with regard to migration. The medieval hierarchy that Vance cited was supposed to prevent chaos and vice in a fixed and stable world: if everyone adhered to it, love would be properly ordered, and social stability would follow. The state, the church, and the family were conceived as expressions of this divine order, each with its proper role and authority. If the cosmos was a fixed hierarchy descending from God through angels, nobility, commoners, and servants, then love too should be hierarchical.

But Teilhard perceived that the modern world has shattered this ordering. Not primarily through sin or rebellion, but through the very evolution of consciousness itself. As humanity develops, we recognize the equal dignity of all persons who are part of the evolutionary flow. Science reveals that all humans share common ancestry and are capable of similar consciousness. Technology binds us together such that the suffering of distant others is no longer abstract but viscerally real to us. We cannot honestly pretend that some people matter less than others. To mix medieval metaphysics with the contemporary world is a disaster. The classical ordo amoris assumed a cosmos of external hierarchy. But Teilhard insists that the structure of reality is not external hierarchy but internal communion. Love does not flow downward through fixed ranks; rather, it works as the attraction drawing all into unity. The universe tends not toward order-from-above but toward convergence-through-connection. Therefore, the classical political ordering cannot hold. Attempts to preserve it through coercion—what conservatives sometimes call “traditional values”—become increasingly reactionary because they fight against the actual evolutionary direction of consciousness. When hierarchical orders are imposed by force in a world of awakening consciousness, they produce alienation and resentment—and eventually—destruction.

Yet neither does radical egalitarianism solve the problem, if it simply flattens all difference and denies that some levels and forms of organization have greater complexity and beauty than others. The question becomes: How can we create a political order appropriate to a humanity awakening to its unity without imposing totalitarian uniformity? How can we honor both equality and excellence, both individual freedom and collective responsibility?

Teilhard’s answer points toward a politics of love: political orders that emerge from below, that honor the unique dignity and perspective of each person, that seek genuine convergence where difference strengthens rather than threatens unity. This is an enormously difficult practical challenge. But it cannot be solved by returning to hierarchical orders; it can only be solved by evolving consciousness itself toward greater capacity for genuine, planetary love.

It is worthwhile to note that, over the years, more than half of the Secretaries-General of the United Nations have cited Teilhard’s influence on their thinking and the mission of the UN, recognizing in his vision a framework for understanding planetary unity that could preserve both individual and cultural diversity. Dag Hammarskjöld, who led the organization from 1953 until his death in 1961, and U Thant, who held the position from 1961 to 1971, were both drawn to Teilhard because of the central place he accorded to spirituality and love in his theory of planetization. U Thant particularly emphasized Teilhard’s insight: “Love alone is capable of uniting living beings in such a way as to complete and fulfill them. . . . A universal love is not only psychologically possible; it is the only complete and final way in which we are able to love.” This vision of a world order founded on love was precisely the kind of synthesis that guided UN leadership in their work for global solidarity and peace.

At the political level, therefore, love and zest for life have revolutionary implications. Politics driven by zest for life seeks to create conditions where all can flourish. It is fundamentally aligned with justice, with care for the vulnerable, with the creation of beauty and meaning. Such a politics rejects both coercive collectivism and destructive individualism. It seeks instead a commonwealth, a genuine common good, understood not as imposed from above but as emerging from the conscious participation of all in creating a more beautiful, just, unified world.

Conclusion: Building the Earth

We return to our opening question: How can a divided world be healed? The answer Teilhard offers is radical in its simplicity and profound in its implications. Love is not one value among many nor is it a divine gift from above; it is the fundamental structure of reality: the principal energy of evolution, the presence of God in all things. To answer our divisions, we must grow in consciousness and capacity for genuine, planetary love. This is not romantic sentimentalism. It is the most clear-eyed realism: reality itself is structured by love, and the only solutions to our crises that work are those aligned with love. Political systems that attempt to preserve power through division and fear work against the actual trajectory of evolution and therefore inevitably fail or produce great suffering. Spiritualities that deny the sacredness of the material world or withdraw from engagement with others reject the actual way God is present in reality. 

The divisions we face are real and urgent. But they are not ultimate. Beneath them runs the indestructible and irresistible energy of love, the attractive force that binds all things together, the presence of the divine milieu penetrating all reality. Our task is to grow in consciousness of this reality, to align ourselves and our institutions with it, and to consciously participate in the convergence toward Omega, the conscious unity of being in love, toward which all creation tends. This is Teilhard’s great vision for a divided world. Not escape into otherworldliness, but deeper engagement with the world as sacred. Not denial of science and evolution, but their integration into a cosmos that is fundamentally spiritual and loving. Not passivity, but passionate commitment to the work of creating a more just, beautiful, unified world. And not merely personal salvation, but the transformation of the entire noosphere toward genuine communion, where all are connected through love, developing technologies to actualize our fundamental unity. Teilhard wrote: “Love alone is capable of uniting living beings in such a way as to complete and fulfill them, for it alone takes them and joins them by what is deepest in themselves.” Every single person whether rich, poor, black, trans, straight, Asian, indigenous, homeless, disabled—every person seeks to love and to be loved. “Love alone can bring us to another universe,” Teilhard said. We need a new evolutionary political order of love. 

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