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Sovran (adj.) — an archaic form of “sovereign.” Chosen deliberately.
AI is automating entire professions. The financial system is being rewritten in real time. And the institutions that should be teaching you how to navigate this? They're still updating last decade's curriculum. Sovran teaches the skills that actually matter now — critical thinking, AI command, economic literacy, and first-principles reasoning.
Take the free 5-question AI displacement assessment. No signup required. See exactly where you're exposed.
AI mentors challenge your thinking with Socratic questions — not passive video. You reason your way to understanding.
Track growth across 5 cognitive dimensions with a real, rising score. Watch the number move as the thinking sharpens.
Every skill was chosen because it becomes more valuable as AI gets more powerful — not less.
AI can write code, pass exams, and generate entire business plans. The skill that matters now isn't using AI — it's knowing when to trust it and when to override it.
Neuralink, Mars colonization, CRISPR, humanoid robots — these aren't science fiction, they're funded projects with timelines. Understand what's actually coming and how fast.
86% of Americans can't distinguish a factual statement from an opinion (Pew Research). In a world where AI generates convincing lies at scale, this track is survival.
Most people don't understand how money is created, why currencies fail, or what happens to economics when machines run the economy. This track covers all three.
“I'm 18. I realized no institution was teaching my generation what actually matters — how to think in an AI world, how money really works, how to navigate exponential change. So I built the education I wished existed.”
Sovran doesn't lecture — it challenges. AI mentors debate you, question your assumptions, and adapt to how you think. Every lesson is built around first principles, not memorization. Every exercise demands you think, not just recall.
7 AI mentors, each with a different teaching philosophy. The Economist breaks down monetary systems and AI economics. The Flaneur challenges your assumptions until they break. The Architect teaches you to think like the machines you're building alongside.
Join 127 students building their edge.
AI makes information free. What's scarce now is the ability to think clearly, adapt fast, and make decisions when the ground is shifting. That's what Sovran builds.
A 20-dimension assessment that maps how you actually think — not what you know, but how you process, reason, and decide. Your results reveal where AI complements you and where you need to sharpen your own edge.
e.g., reveals whether you default to authority or evidence when your beliefs are challenged
7 AI mentors modeled after the world's sharpest thinkers — each with a different philosophy. They don't explain at you. They ask questions, challenge assumptions, and adapt to how you reason.
e.g., The Economist breaks down monetary systems; The Flaneur stress-tests your reasoning until it holds or breaks
Track your growth across 5 dimensions: intellectual, economic, technological, digital, and adaptive. Watch your score climb as you build the skills that compound over time.
e.g., Economic readiness rises from 34 → 71 after completing the Money & Bitcoin track
Debates, crisis simulations, and exercises that push back. You don't just absorb ideas — you defend them, attack them, and rebuild them stronger. This is how real understanding forms.
e.g., defend Bitcoin as sound money to a skeptical economist — then argue the other side
A taste of what's inside
Three excerpts from the actual lesson content. No fluff, no motivation-poster language.
"When you save money, you're converting your time and energy into a token that you expect to exchange for equivalent value in the future. If someone debases that token while you sleep, they're stealing your time. This is not metaphorical — it is the literal mechanism of inflation."
From: How Money Is Created
"In 1929, Edward Bernays was hired by the American Tobacco Company. Women didn't smoke publicly — it was taboo. Bernays didn't argue. He staged a protest at the Easter Parade, hiring debutantes to light cigarettes and calling them 'Torches of Freedom.' The next day, women across America started smoking. He didn't change minds. He changed identity."
From: The Architecture of Persuasion
"Claude can write production code, pass medical exams, and generate legal briefs. But it can't tell you whether to sue, whether to operate, or whether to ship. The skill that matters now isn't knowing — it's judgment. That's what we teach."
From: Judgment Is the Moat