“What we call the beginning is often the end… and to make an end is to make a beginning.” — T. S. Eliot, Four Quartets
What is often described as the unraveling of the world order may, in fact, be something closer to renewal. Systems that once imposed structure from above are beginning to lose their hold—not through revolution, but through misalignment with the realities they attempt to govern. What appears as instability may instead be release.
For decades, the architecture of global governance has expanded in scope, ambition, and authority. Institutions such as the United Nations, World Health Organization, NATO, and the World Economic Forum have operated on the assumption that complex global systems can be directed, coordinated, and ultimately improved through centralized frameworks. But that assumption rests on a fundamental misunderstanding of how complex systems actually function.
As British science writer Matt Ridley argues in, The Evolution of Everything, many of the systems we rely on—markets, culture, even language—are not centrally designed, but emerge organically through decentralized human activity. The most effective systems are not designed—they emerge. Order arises not from instruction, but from interaction. A city feeds itself not because it is centrally planned, but because countless individuals make decisions that collectively produce stability. The same is true of markets, cultures, and civilizations.
Matt Ridley challenges one of the most persistent assumptions of modern governance: that complex systems require direction from above. In his insightful book, The Evolution of Everything, he shows that many of the structures we rely on—markets, culture, even social norms—are not designed but emerge through decentralized processes. They evolve through trial, error, and adaptation. When institutions attempt to replace that process with top-down control, they do not improve it—they interfere with it. The failure is not one of intention, but of misunderstanding how order itself arises.
Culture as an example is not engineered—it accumulates. It is more like a coral reef than a machine, built gradually through time, interaction, and adaptation. No one designs a reef. It grows over time, slowly growing, expanding as an evolving organic ecosystem. And when something foreign is imposed upon it without regard for its internal balance, the damage is not always immediate—but it is inevitable.
The recurring mistake of modern governance is the belief that such systems must be directed from above rather than allowed to function from below. This assumption has produced policies and programs that, while often well-intentioned, fail to align with the complexity of the systems they attempt to shape.
Nowhere is this more evident than in large-scale, top-down initiatives that commit vast resources without clear alignment to practical outcomes. When policies move faster than verification—when billions are allocated through complex, layered structures with limited transparency—the result is not coordination, but distortion. Oversight struggles to keep pace, accountability becomes diffuse, and confidence erodes.
This is not simply a matter of inefficiency, it is a profound structural problem. Systems that become too complex, too opaque, and too detached from the realities they govern begin to lose their legitimacy. They continue to operate—but increasingly without trust. The tension between imposed order and organic evolution has begun to surface in political life. The uneasy relationship between Donald Trump and international institutions is often framed as confrontation, but it may be better understood as reassessment and realignment.
Withdrawals from agreements, skepticism toward multinational organizations, and challenges to institutional authority reflect a broader question: whether these structures continue to serve their intended purpose, or whether they have evolved into systems that prioritize their own continuity over functional effectiveness.
This tension became visible in moments of strain. When institutions are tested—not in theory, but in practice—their limitations become clear. Alliances prove conditional. Coordination reveals its boundaries. What once appeared unified begins to fracture under pressure and history suggests that such moments are not necessarily signs of collapse, but are often preconditions for renewal.
The transition from the medieval world into the Renaissance offers a powerful example as centralized authority loosened and multiple centers of initiative emerged—cities, patrons, universities, and new technologies—creativity surged. Art, science, and exploration flourished not because they were directed, but because they were permitted. The world did not collapse; it brazenly expanded.
Periods of constraint are often followed by bursts of vitality when those constraints ease. Even brief moments of release—such as the Prague Spring—demonstrate how quickly creative and intellectual energy can reassert itself when given space. The same principle applies beyond culture. Systems—economic, political, or social—do not generate vitality through control, but through conditions that allow it to emerge. Creativity cannot be commanded, it can only be permitted.
For years, it has felt as though a brake has been applied—slowing adaptation while channeling resources into expansive, centrally designed programs whose outcomes remain uncertain. When that pressure lifts, the effect is not chaos, but movement. Capital, initiative, and innovation return to more immediate and tangible forms of renewal.
This is why the language of a “new golden age” resonates. It reflects an intuition that when systems are allowed to function more freely—when the weight of imposed frameworks begins to recede—energy returns. Not because it is directed, but because it is no longer suppressed. The question, then, is not whether the world order is ending. It is whether it has already outlived the conditions that made it effective.
Institutions do not fail only when they collapse. They fail when they continue to operate while losing the confidence of those they are meant to serve. They fail when they become too complex to understand, too opaque to evaluate, and too detached to trust. What we are witnessing may not be the breakdown of order, but the shedding of structures that no longer fit the systems they attempt to govern, an ecdysis is underway. And when that happens, something else begins to form and take form in a bold and confident manner.
George Orwell’s superlative, 1984, gave us one of the most haunting images of power ever conceived: a boot stamping on a human face—forever. It is a vision of control without end, pressure without release. But what happens when that boot stops? What happens when the pressure lifts and that hobnailed boot stops stomping down?
Systems do not freeze in the absence of control. They move. They breathe. They reorganize. Energy that was suppressed begins to flow again—into creation, into innovation, into life itself. The end of imposed order is not necessarily chaos, it may be the precondition for a vigorous renewal. It may be, in the most unexpected sense, something closer to Gene Kelly dancing in Singin’ in the Rain—not disorder, but release. Movement. Expression. A return to something human, spontaneous, and alive.
The old order may be ending, but that does not mean the world is ending. It may mean, quite simply, that it signifies a bright and promising new beginning.







