There are books about artificial intelligence. And then there is Civilizational.
This is not a manual. It is not a roadmap. It is not a collection of frameworks for your next board meeting. It is an argument (rigorous, uncompromising, and deliberately uncomfortable) that the leaders, executives, and decision-makers of 2026 are making a mistake so fundamental that no amount of correct tactical execution will compensate for it.
The mistake is this: they believe they are managing a technological transition.
They are not.
What is unfolding is a reconfiguration of the relationship between intelligence, power, and human agency, the kind that happens once every few centuries, that rewrites the rules of who governs and who is governed, and that is almost never recognized by the people living through it until it is too late to influence its direction.
Civilizational. is the book that names what is actually happening. Written by Lucian Grey, it draws on history, philosophy, economics, and geopolitics to make the case that the AI transition is not a business problem. It is a civilizational one. And that the leaders who understand this (truly understand it, not merely repeat it) will be the ones who shape the next era of human organization.
The ones who do not will be shaped by it.
This is not a book about artificial intelligence.
This is a book about power.
And it begins now.