Colorful mountain landscape for an article about a more beautiful world

We don’t need a more beautiful world

The titles of two recent books — Sally Rooney’s Beautiful World, Where Are You and Charles Eisenstein’s The More Beautiful World Our Hearts Know Is Possible — capture something many people feel today: disappointment with the failures of modern society and a longing for a future more beautiful, wise, and just than the world we currently inhabit.

When I hear this call for a “more beautiful world,” part of me wants to push back.

What do we mean by “a more beautiful world”?

I think I know what people mean: a society more harmonious with the Earth, more prosperous for all, and more rooted in justice. I believe such a world is possible — and it is certainly worth striving for. In some sense, that world would undeniably be more beautiful than one riddled with inequity and ecological collapse. It is valuable to imagine that future and to bring it about wherever and however we can.

And yet: is the world we live in today really not beautiful enough for us?

From where I stand, Earth right now is almost unimaginably beautiful. Our planet teems with vibrant landscapes, oceans, forests, and an abundance of life. Every culture continues to generate works of art, courage, and genius. Every single day, billions of ordinary people dedicate themselves to acts of love — caring for family, showing up for friends, tending to communities. We live in a profoundly, impossibly beautiful world.

This does not mean we can ignore the urgent problems before us. Climate change, inequality, and conflict all demand our energy and urgent attention.

But a lack of beauty is not one of our problems.

Why striving for a more beautiful world might be holding us back

When we frame our work as building a more beautiful world, we subtly position the present as insufficient — something to be fixed or escaped rather than fully inhabited. That framing can quietly drain the very energy and presence we need to do good work without burning out.

Perhaps the change we want will come about more swiftly and fully if we start striving not for a world with more beauty, but one with less ugliness.

Perhaps our more beautiful world will arrive sooner if we spend more time in genuine awe of the preposterously beautiful world already right before our eyes.


Coach, writer, and recovering hustle hero. I help purpose-driven humans do good in the world in dark times - without the burnout.


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