Steve Satterfield is an educator and software engineer, and a U.S. Air Force veteran whose work draws on cognitive science, technology, and adult education. He is an adjunct faculty member at Southern New Hampshire University and teaches computer science and software development, working primarily with adult learners who balance education with professional, military, and family responsibilities. His teaching emphasizes clarity, durable understanding, and the development of learning habits that extend beyond any single course or credential.Dr. Satterfield holds advanced degrees in neuropsychology and computer science, along with specialist and doctoral degrees in education. His academic preparation spans cognitive science, software engineering, and instructional design, and his professional experience includes developing and maintaining complex technical systems in high-consequence environments such as nuclear engineering and electronic warfare, as well as teaching in applied, skills-focused programs.A Learning Republic represents his first sustained exploration of civic education. In this work, he brings together insights from cognitive science and technology to examine how individuals learn, adapt, and update their understanding over time-and why that capacity is foundational to democratic life under conditions of rapid change. In an era marked by large-scale migration and an expanding civic body shaped by diverse cultural and ethical traditions, Dr. Satterfield emphasizes the importance of shared civic understanding and the learning capacities that allow democratic principles to be understood, transmitted, and sustained across generations.A republic does not sustain itself.It depends upon citizens capable of disciplined thought, skilled work, and moral seriousness. From the artisan workshops of the early American republic to the collaborative technologies of the present, learning has always been the invisible infrastructure of self-government.Freud suggested that psychological health rests on the capacity to love and to work. Constitutional health rests on a third pillar: the capacity to reason. A republic endures only when its citizens can work productively, love generously, and reason clearly about the common good.In A Learning Republic, Steve Satterfield traces how learning-formal and informal, scholarly and practical-forms the character required for constitutional liberty. Drawing from history, cognitive science, and lived technical experience, he argues that education is not merely preparation for employment. It is the sustaining architecture of freedom.A free society cannot be inherited passively. It must be learned.