This is a three-part series exploring what a concept such as Love-First Investing might look like. Part 1 explores the backdrop—the fundamental logic behind aligning capital with life's structuring principles. Part 2 delves into practical applications. Part 3 examines broader societal implications for economic systems and cultural transformation.
TL;DR:Great investing is about more than compounding financial returns—it’s about compounding quality, which emerges from deep structural coherence and alignment. At its core, true quality arises from love, understood not as emotion but as a force of generativity, coherence, and interdependence. Love is here understood as the force that brings separate parts into coherence.
With this in mind, an enquiry into what a Love-first investing paradigm could look like, would be underpinned by a design principle of aligning with reality’s natural tendency toward complexity, connection, and regeneration (syntropy). It would build resilient systems that enhance relational, cultural, ecological, and systemic health, in which financial returns become a byproduct. This doesn’t mean sacrificing returns, on the contrary it would mean to build anti-fragile portfolios. This approach would be pragmatic, not sentimental. It would mitigate systemic risk, aim to create durable returns, and foster long-term value that goes beyond financial metrics.
Rather than extracting value, love-first investing would invest in the conditions that allows value to multiply. It’s would be about aligning capital with life’s fundamental movement toward deeper relationship and coherence. The question is not whether this approach could generate returns, but whether our current frameworks are failing to recognize the most powerful source of resilience and growth.
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The Hidden Lever of Regenerating Value
Every great investor understands the power of compounding. But compounding is not just a function of time—it is fuelled by something deeper. What allows certain systems to grow stronger while others succumb to fragility?
The Answer is Quality—deep, structural excellence—which allows value to reinforce itself. It's not merely an outcome but an orientation, a patterning principle governing enduring value creation. This concept of "Dynamic Quality," originated by Robert Pirsig (author of "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance"), has since been applied to many fields, including finance. As investor Chris Begg explains, true excellence is an active, evolving force—the leading edge where innovation and transformation occur.
But what governs quality, and what enables us to play infinite, rather than finite games? What gives rise to the trust, integrity, and alignment that make businesses great, communities strong, and ecosystems anti-fragile?
Quality is an expression of something deeper………. Love—not as emotion, but as the fundamental force that fuels creation, allows trust to compound, and generates coherence across time. Love is the structuring principle of interdependence and generativity. Yet, outside of personal relationships, love remains taboo. Especially in the fields we normally think of as highly objective, like investment, business and governance. This is a massive missed opportunity and an Overton window I believe we need to expand.
Love, properly understood, is the highest form of quality. It enables misalignment to self-correct, ecosystems to optimize for long-term value rather than short-term extraction, and organizations to sustain value creation across generations.
The best investors recognize this intuitively. They seek cultures built on integrity, businesses with deep alignment, and ecosystems where value creation outpaces extraction. If we are serious about investing in enduring quality and systemic change, we must expand the Overton Window of investing to include love—not as an abstraction, but as the fundamental indicator and orientation of self-reinforcing value.
This isn't sentimentality. It's strategic clarity. Those who see it first will lead the next era of value creation.
The real reward of aligning with this patterning principle is not just better and more stable financial returns, but that we feel better. Our relationships improve. Our energy rises. The ecosystems we are part of regenerate, and we work with the flow of life instead of against it. As Tom Morgan of the Leading Edge reflects in conversation with Ulisse Di Corpo::
"We all know about entropy—'things fall apart,' the tendency toward death, disorder, and chaos. In contrast, syntropy is a symmetrical force that tends toward order, organization, and complexity in systems. The key practical idea is that connection to syntropy feels like 'love' and gives us life energy. Disconnection from syntropy results in depression and anxiety."
The question isn't just how we invest for compounding value, but how we invest in the forces that compound life.
Love as the Deepest Function of Reality
We often think of love as an emotion—something personal, fleeting, and subjective. But what if love is not just something we feel, but a fundamental organizing principle of the universe? What if love is not just abstract and subjective, but also has the power to be clear, precise, and technical—capable of guiding how we create in the world?
Love is the force that draws separate parts into relationship, catalyzing new combinations. It is not just sentiment but structure, not just feeling but formation. The universe does not simply expand in space—it deepens in relationship between parts, an ever-intensifying dance of self-entanglement and deepening intimacy.
Leading scientists describe love's pattern as intrinsic to the very fabric of reality. Stuart Kauffman, in his work on self-organization, describes life's emergence as an inexorable process of increasing complexity. Lee Smolin suggests that even the laws of physics evolve, pointing to a cosmos that is dynamically unfolding—a kind of cosmic eros, where matter and energy continually reconfigure into more sophisticated relationships. Andreas Wagner extends this insight to evolution, showing that life flourishes not merely through competition but through connectivity.
From quantum entanglement to symbiotic leaps in evolution, existence unfolds as a pattern of co-becoming. David Sloan Wilson's research on multilevel selection reveals that cooperation, not just competition, is a driving force of evolution—groups that collaborate outcompete those that do not. Dennis Snower demonstrates that economies thrive when they prioritize relational wealth and prosocial behavior over extraction and short-term gain.
Physics tells us that reality is inherently relational—entangled particles remain mysteriously connected across vast distances. Biology reveals that life persists through mutual dependence. Mitochondria, once independent bacteria, now sustain human life from within our cells. Trees form vast underground fungal networks that exchange carbon, minerals, and biochemical signals, creating a thriving web of interdependence. Even in human history, civilizations that flourished were those that fostered the richest networks—through trade, cultural exchange, and shared knowledge.
This is love in the ontological sense—the deep logic of interdependence and movement towards greater entanglement that underlies life, evolution, and the systems that sustain us.
Love is not just something we feel; it is something reality does.To love is to increase intimacy with what is, to enter into deeper entanglement with the world, to move from fragmentation to coherence. If love is the universe's deepest function, then capital—our collective ability to shape the material world and our social contract on value—should be aligned with this fundamental movement.
Capital, at its core, is the power to bring forth potential into form, to channel intention into structures that endure. When wielded in alignment with love, capital becomes a force of coherence rather than fragmentation, a medium through which relationships deepen rather than dissolve.
Love-First Investing: Investing with Reality
To invest in accordance with love is to engage with reality as it actually, and dynamically unfolds—not as we might wish it to be. This would require a shift in how we understand risk, time, and value creation. Investing through a lens we typically associate with emotion does not mean sacrificing rigor or precision. Rather than aiming for a fixed outcome, love-first investing would follow a patterning principle—one that aligns with how life sustains and evolves itself over time.
A patterning principle is like learning how a river flows before building a bridge. Instead of forcing things in a rigid way, you observe and work with the natural movement of life—how things grow, connect, and sustain themselves over time.
In love-first investing, this matters because it would help us invest in ways that truly support life, rather than just chasing quick profits. Instead of treating money like a machine that only maximizes returns, we could recognize that healthy investments follow patterns of trust, regeneration, and long-term well-being—just like nature or strong communities do.
Consider a forest: if you maximize short-term timber yield through clear-cutting, you extract value but leave destruction. Alternatively, investing in the ecosystem's long-term health—cultivating biodiversity, improving soil, deepening stakeholder relationships, and maintaining sustainable harvest cycles—follows a deeper pattern that prioritizes resilience, interconnection, and renewal over short-term gain. Love-first investing applies this principle to capital allocation, designing financial structures that reinforce the underlying health of social, ecological, and economic systems. Some hallmarks of Love-first investing would then be:
- Love-first investing is syntropic, driving living systems toward greater complexity and interdependence. Rather than extracting value through scarcity and control, it fosters regenerative loops where capital deepens relationships, knowledge, and ecological health.
- Love-first investing is ergodic—recognizing that systemic resilience cannot be averaged across short-term gains. Traditional finance assumes risk can be spread across a portfolio, but in living systems, a single catastrophic loss can be irreparable. This approach prioritizes structures that sustain long-term viability over extractive, probabilistic returns.
- Love-first investing aims to catalyze autopoiesis—investing in systems that sustain and renew themselves. Just as a healthy ecosystem or thriving community self-perpetuates, capital must be designed to maintain coherence, adapt, and reinforce its own vitality over time.
Investing is not just a mechanism for wealth creation; it is participation in reality's fundamental movement toward greater interconnection and complexity. The question is not whether capital can generate returns, but whether those returns reinforce the underlying relational fabric of the world—or unravel it.
Intimacy and Relationships: The Gauge for Love
If love-first investing is at its core syntropic—the tendency toward entanglement, order, organization, and complexity in systems. The patterning principle of individual elements coming together to form something new by deepening intimacy can be applied directly within investing.
In its simplest form, one question can act as a guide: Will this action lead to deeper intimacy/relationship?
Consider several dimensions:
- Bilateral relationship: Is your investment structured to deepen intimacy and relationship between you and the recipient? Does it create conditions for trust and mutual understanding, or does it maintain distance and control?
- Ecosystem relationships: Will the capital lead the recipient into deeper relationships with the ecosystem in which they operate? Does it strengthen connections with suppliers, customers, communities, and the natural environment?
- Cultural Integration: Does the investment honor and enhance the cultural context in which it exists? Does it respect local wisdom, strengthen community bonds, and contribute to shared meaning and values rather than eroding them?
- Inner Integration: Will the environments that this money cultivates foster deeper inner intimacy within the individuals running the company? Does it create space for authentic leadership, personal growth, and meaningful work?
- Knowledge Integration: Does the investment facilitate deeper understanding between stakeholders? Are insights, learning, and wisdom being shared and integrated, rather than hoarded?
- Lineage Integration: Does this create continuity across time? Are we investing in ways that honor past wisdom while creating conditions for future flourishing?
When capital flows in accordance with these principles, it doesn't just generate financial returns—it creates webs of relationship that become increasingly robust, adaptive, and generative over time. The measure of success expands beyond quarterly profits to include the depth and quality of connections being fostered.
Safety Up and Down the Capital Stack
If love-first investing is about deepening relationships, the first priority must be ensuring that all stakeholders—including investors—feel safe enough to participate. True safety is not just a moral aspiration; it is the foundation that enables love, and in this context, what allows capital to flow in ways that support life rather than constrain it.
Investors, like any living system, require security before they can take creative risks. The due diligence, legal protections, and financial structures that dominate traditional investing are not just about control—they are fundamentally about a feeling of safety. They reflect a need to navigate uncertainty in a way that minimizes loss. However, real safety—the kind that allows an ecosystem to evolve rather than stagnate—emerges not from control, but from coherence.
A forest is resilient not because it is fenced off, but because it is biodiverse, with deep roots and reciprocal flows of energy.
A relationship is secure not because of legal protections, but because it is built on trust, mutual commitment, and the ability to adapt.
A financial system is stable not because of rigid contracts, but because it is deeply embedded in real productive value, capable of withstanding shocks and evolving with changing conditions.
For a love-first investment paradigm to work, it must cultivate a form of capital safety that is not just rooted in extraction or rigid control, but in relational coherence. When investors and all other stakeholders feel safe in this way, they are freed to engage more fully—not from a place of fear, but from a place of trust and generative participation.
Love as a Fiduciary Duty
For most investors, the mandate is clear: protect capital and generate responsible returns. But investing with love as a guiding principle is not at odds with this mandate—it enhances it. By expanding the return landscape to include relational resilience, cultural health, ecological regeneration, and systemic coherence, love-first investing recognizes that genuine wealth emerges from the strength of relationships—between people, communities, ecosystems, and capital itself. This approach doesn’t just generate financial returns; it builds resilient networks where value can be continuously created and compounded over time. It’s an invitation to expand fiduciary duty to include the conditions that allow life—and, by extension, capital—to thrive.
Why It's Compatible with Fiduciary Responsibilities
- Risk Mitigation: Traditional investing focuses on market volatility. The real threat is systemic instability—economic collapse, climate crises, social fragmentation. Love-first investing builds resilient systems designed to endure and thrive over decades.
- Sustainable Returns Through Systemic Health: Investing in land, relationally resilient businesses, and cultural infrastructure doesn’t mean lower returns. It means durable, anti-fragile returns—rooted in real assets, trust-based relationships, and institutions that enhance economic resilience.
- Regenerative Liquidity, Not Extractive Exits: Traditional exits drive volatility by forcing sales, flipping land, and displacing communities. Love-first investing creates liquidity mechanisms that recycle capital within systems, enabling returns without degrading underlying value.
- Long-Term Value Over Short-Term Speculation: Compounding value works best over generations. Love-first investing aligns capital structures to preserve and enhance value without resorting to extraction.
Rethinking Value Creation
Financial capital may secure survival, but beyond that, what truly defines value? What does it mean to feel ROI as a return of care, beauty, and deeply lived time? Imagine a portfolio where returns also include: being on land that is alive and vibrant, full of thriving human and non-human communities; being held by a community as committed to your well-being as you are to theirs; belonging where you are valued for all of who you are, not just the capital you bring; relationships forged through safety, longevity, and care; participating in systems rooted in reciprocity, not extraction.
What is the true return of providing future generations with a world that is neither a golden cage nor a post-apocalyptic bunker, but a forest of deep relationships? Perhaps the real fiduciary duty is not just to capital, but to life itself. Choosing love as a guiding principle is not sentimental idealism—it is deep pragmatism aligned with reality. It’s the recognition that the most resilient wealth strengthens the fabric of life, ensuring it remains rich, diverse, and capable of renewal.
The Next Post: Love-First Investing as an Applied Strategy
In the next post, I will explore how love-first investing applies these principles in practice:
- How do we structure investments that align with life's regenerative patterns?
- How can we create a new paradigm that is realistic and practically oriented, while being underpinned by values like Love.
- How can capital flow in a
- How do we measure success beyond financial returns—toward returns of care, relational wealth, and systemic resilience?
way that fosters coherence rather than fragmentation?
Rather than treating love as a vague ideal, we will quantify how investing in alignment with life's deep logic creates tangible, long-term value. We will explore how love-first investing integrates syntropy, ergodicity, and anti-fragility into financial structures that can sustain both returns and resilience over time.
The question is no longer whether capital should align with life's deepest principles. The question is: how do we make it happen?
→ Stay tuned for Part 2
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