Philosophy & Meaning Courses
11 AI-powered courses with podcasts, flashcards, case studies, quizzes, and AI-graded assignments.
Tao Te Ching in Practice: Wu Wei, Paradox, and the Art of Non-Forcing
A tao te ching summary isn't enough — work with the paradoxes until they reshape your intuition.
Letters from a Stoic in Practice: Seneca's Ethics Applied to Daily Challenges
Reading the letters is a start. Practicing Seneca's advice on anger, time, wealth, and death is mastery.
The Book of Five Rings in Practice: Swordsmanship Strategy Applied to Modern Conflict and Decision-Making
You've read about the five elements. Now train your strategic intuition through combat scenarios.
Sapiens in Practice: Tracing Human History Through Cognitive, Agricultural, and Scientific Revolutions
Reading about fictions, hierarchies, and shared myths isn't the same as examining your own.
The Prince in Practice: Statecraft, Power, and Political Realism for Modern Leaders
You've read the prince summary. Now stress-test Machiavelli's counsel through real-world scenarios.
The Obstacle Is the Way in Practice: Applying Stoic Principles to Adversity and Growth
You've read about perception, action, and will. Now train yourself to turn obstacles into advantages.
Ego Is the Enemy in Practice: Restraining Ambition, Defusing Success, and Surviving Failure
You've absorbed the Stoic warnings. Now work through the three stages where ego sabotages you.
Meditations in Practice: Training the Stoic Mind Through Marcus Aurelius
Reading the Emperor's journal is one thing. Learning to think like him is another.
Man's Search for Meaning in Practice: Logotherapy and the Will to Meaning
Reading Frankl isn't enough — now apply his existential framework to your own life.
The Almanack of Naval Ravikant in Practice: Building Wealth, Happiness, and Specific Knowledge
You've read the tweets. Now internalize the principles through deliberate practice.
The Art of War in Practice: Strategic Thinking for Competition, Conflict, and Calculated Positioning
You've read the maxims. Now apply Sun Tzu's strategic principles to real decisions.