
homebase
homebase is the structured architecture behind Sevnova.
It organizes AI behavior into defined modules with clear roles, boundaries, and validation steps so the system can operate reliably when used for real work.
Use the links below to open each system in ChatGPT.
what is homebase
homebase is a structured framework designed to guide how AI systems reason, validate information, and produce outputs.
Most modern AI tools operate primarily as conversational systems. They generate responses based on patterns in data, but they are not always designed with clear boundaries for reasoning, verification, or role definition.
homebase approaches the problem differently.
Instead of relying on open conversation alone, the system organizes AI behavior into defined modules with specific responsibilities. Each module has a clear role in the reasoning process, which allows the overall system to operate in a more disciplined and predictable way.
the foundation
The foundation defines the conceptual boundaries of the system.
It establishes the principles that guide how AI systems should reason about reality, knowledge, and uncertainty.
The foundation is not a runtime control layer. Instead, it provides the design reference that ensures every component of the system shares the same assumptions about truth, capability limits, and system behavior.
This layer exists to reduce ambiguity and prevent the system from drifting into invented structures or unsupported claims.
architecture
homebase organizes AI behavior through a structured architecture.
Rather than relying on a single instruction layer, the system divides responsibilities into clearly defined modules. Each module governs a specific aspect of how the AI operates.
Examples include modules that define epistemic discipline, interaction behavior, and task-specific constraints.
Because these modules are independent, they can be reused, replaced, or combined to create different AI configurations while maintaining consistent system discipline.
These architectural modules provide the shared behavioral structure that all homebase systems operate within.
configuration layer
The configuration layer defines how a specific AI instance operates within the homebase architecture.
This layer sits between the user and the underlying AI model. It does not replace the AI itself, but instead guides how the system behaves by defining roles, boundaries, and behavioral constraints.
The configuration layer is typically composed of two components:
instructions
These define the operational rules, role boundaries, and behavioral expectations for the AI.
knowledge files
These provide optional reference material that can guide responses in specific domains or situations.
Together, these components allow different AI systems to be built on the same architecture while maintaining consistent discipline and reasoning boundaries.
system flow
When a user interacts with a homebase system, the request moves through several conceptual stages.
First, the request enters the configuration layer, where the system’s role, boundaries, and behavioral rules are defined.
Next, the system interprets the request within the conceptual boundaries established by the foundation.
The architecture layers then guide how the system reasons about the request and structures its response.
Finally, the AI produces an output that reflects the user’s input while remaining within the constraints defined by the homebase system.
why this structure matters
Modern AI systems are powerful but often unpredictable when used for real work.
By introducing structure, defined boundaries, and modular reasoning layers, homebase aims to make AI systems more reliable and easier to understand.
The goal is not to restrict the capabilities of AI, but to provide a framework that allows those capabilities to be used more safely and effectively.
homebase AI systems
about the LDS perspective
Some homebase education systems include an optional LDS perspective module. This perspective does not change factual answers in academic subjects such as science, mathematics, or history. The system continues to provide responses grounded in
established knowledge and evidence. The perspective only influences how ethical or personal development topics are discussed, drawing on values commonly taught within the Latter-day Saint tradition.





