## The Six Modern Replacements for Sterling's Classical Commitments
Claude:
Sterling's six commitments restore classical philosophy precisely because modern philosophy systematically replaced each one. Here's the mapping:
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## 1. SUBSTANCE DUALISM → Replaced by Materialism/Physicalism
**Classical (Sterling's Commitment)**:
- Mind and body are distinct substances
- Mind is immaterial, not reducible to physical processes
- Consciousness/reason operates in non-physical domain
**Modern Replacement**:
- **Materialism/Physicalism**: Only physical substance exists
- Mind = brain states, neural patterns, computational processes
- Consciousness is emergent property of matter
- No "ghost in the machine" (Ryle's dismissal)
**Key Figures**:
- **Gilbert Ryle** (*The Concept of Mind*, 1949): Dualism is a "category mistake"
- **Daniel Dennett**: Consciousness explained as neural computation
- **Patricia Churchland**: Eliminative materialism—mental states don't exist as traditionally conceived
- **Neuroscience generally**: Assumes mental events = brain events
**Why this matters for Stoicism**:
- Without dualism, prohairesis collapses into neural causation
- No non-physical domain where the pause can occur
- No substance that could be "up to us" vs. physical determinism
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## 2. LIBERTARIAN FREE WILL → Replaced by Determinism/Compatibilism
**Classical (Sterling's Commitment)**:
- Genuine freedom: agent could have done otherwise
- Assent not determined by prior physical/psychological states
- Real authorship, not just feeling of freedom
**Modern Replacement**:
**A. Hard Determinism**:
- **Baruch Spinoza**: Everything necessarily follows from prior causes
- **Pierre-Simon Laplace**: Universe as clockwork—given initial conditions, all future states determined
- **Modern neuroscience**: Libet experiments—brain decides before conscious awareness
**B. Compatibilism** (more common in contemporary philosophy):
- **David Hume**: Freedom = acting according to your desires (even if desires are caused)
- **Daniel Dennett**: "Freedom Evolves"—freedom compatible with determinism
- **Harry Frankfurt**: Freedom = having desires you want to have (second-order desires)
- Free will = "doing what you want" (ignoring whether you could have wanted otherwise)
**Why this matters for Stoicism**:
- Without libertarian freedom, the pause is illusion (just delayed causation)
- Decision becomes predetermined outcome, not genuine choice
- Responsibility becomes legal fiction, not metaphysical fact
- Sterling: "Without this, no agency exists"
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## 3. CORRESPONDENCE THEORY OF TRUTH → Replaced by Coherence/Pragmatism/Deflationism
**Classical (Sterling's Commitment)**:
- Truth = correspondence to reality
- Propositions true when they match what is
- Objective reality exists independent of our representations
**Modern Replacements**:
**A. Coherence Theory**:
- **Idealists (Bradley, Bosanquet)**: Truth = coherence within system of beliefs
- No direct access to reality—only to other beliefs
- Truth as internal consistency, not external matching
**B. Pragmatism**:
- **William James**: Truth = "what works," what has "cash value"
- **John Dewey**: Truth = warranted assertibility, successful inquiry
- **Richard Rorty**: Truth as what your peers let you get away with saying
- Abandons correspondence for usefulness
**C. Deflationism/Minimalism**:
- **Quine, Tarski**: "True" is just a linguistic device
- No substantive property of truth—just disquotation ("Snow is white" is true iff snow is white)
- No metaphysical relation to reality
**Why this matters for Stoicism**:
- Impressions arrive claiming correspondence—"I am harmed" claims real harm occurred
- Without correspondence, examination tests coherence/utility, not match to reality
- Can't distinguish false impression from true one objectively
- Sterling: "The impression either corresponds to them or it does not. There is a fact of the matter."
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## 4. MORAL REALISM → Replaced by Emotivism/Subjectivism/Constructivism
**Classical (Sterling's Commitment)**:
- Objective moral facts exist
- Virtue is really good, vice really evil (not just "seems so to me")
- Moral properties are features of reality
**Modern Replacements**:
**A. Emotivism**:
- **A.J. Ayer**: Moral statements are just emotional expressions ("Boo murder!")
- **Charles Stevenson**: Moral language = expressions of approval/disapproval
- No moral facts, only feelings
**B. Subjectivism/Relativism**:
- **David Hume**: Morality based on sentiment, not reason
- **J.L. Mackie**: "Error theory"—moral realism is false, we're all mistaken
- **Cultural relativism**: Morality varies by culture, no objective standard
**C. Constructivism**:
- **Kant (partially)**: Morality constructed by reason, but not discovered in nature
- **Rawls**: Justice as procedurally constructed, not metaphysically real
- **Christine Korsgaard**: Normativity constructed through practical identity
**Why this matters for Stoicism**:
- Impressions claim objective moral properties: "This IS shameful" (not "seems shameful to me")
- Without moral realism, examination can't test whether externals truly are good/evil
- Can't distinguish false value judgment from true one
- Sterling: "These impressions don't report your feelings about events. They report the moral properties of events."
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## 5. FOUNDATIONALISM → Replaced by Coherentism/Infinitism
**Classical (Sterling's Commitment)**:
- Knowledge has foundations—bedrock beliefs that terminate justification
- Some beliefs are self-evident or directly apprehended
- Axiomatic structure (like Stoic "only virtue is good")
**Modern Replacements**:
**A. Coherentism**:
- **Wilfrid Sellars**: "Myth of the Given"—no foundations, only mutual support of beliefs
- **Laurence BonJour**: Justification through coherence with belief system
- No ultimate stopping point—beliefs justified by other beliefs circularly
- "It's turtles all down"
**B. Infinitism**:
- **Peter Klein**: Infinite regress of justification is fine
- No foundations needed, justification extends indefinitely
**C. Contextualism**:
- **Wittgenstein (later)**: Meaning as use within language games
- **Ludwig Wittgenstein**: Bedrock is just "this is what we do"—not rational foundation but practice
- No privileged starting point
**Why this matters for Stoicism**:
- Stoic axioms ("virtue = only good") function as bedrock, not derived
- Without foundations, examination has no stable standard—only coherence checking
- Can't test impressions against reality, only against other beliefs
- Sterling: "The standards used in examination are not derived from other beliefs. They terminate justification."
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## 6. ETHICAL INTUITIONISM → Replaced by Naturalism/Emotivism
**Classical (Sterling's Commitment)**:
- Direct rational apprehension of moral truths
- Non-inferential recognition (like perceiving color)
- Immediate grasp of "insult = external = indifferent"
**Modern Replacements**:
**A. Ethical Naturalism**:
- **Philippa Foot**: Moral properties reducible to natural properties
- **Frank Jackson**: Moral facts supervene on natural facts
- Morality discovered through empirical investigation, not intuition
- Must be inferred from natural facts
**B. Non-Cognitivism** (overlaps with emotivism):
- **Simon Blackburn**: "Quasi-realism"—moral judgments don't report facts
- **Allan Gibbard**: Moral judgments express plans/norms, not beliefs
- No intuition because nothing to intuit
**C. Reflective Equilibrium**:
- **John Rawls**: Moral knowledge through balancing principles and intuitions
- **Norman Daniels**: Coherentist methodology—no direct intuition
- All moral knowledge inferential and tentative
**Why this matters for Stoicism**:
- Stoic examination uses immediate recognition: "One does not compute that an insult is external; one recognizes it as such"
- Without intuitionism, every judgment requires inference (infinite regress or circularity)
- Can't have non-inferential bedrock apprehension
- Sterling: "Just as perception distinguishes colors without syllogism, rational intuition distinguishes moral kinds without proof"
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## The Modern Package That Replaced Classical Philosophy
Combine all six modern replacements and you get:
**The Standard Modern View**:
1. **Materialism**: Mind = brain
2. **Determinism/Compatibilism**: No libertarian freedom
3. **Pragmatism/Coherence**: Truth = usefulness or consistency
4. **Emotivism/Subjectivism**: Morality = feelings or conventions
5. **Coherentism**: No foundations, only mutual support
6. **Naturalism**: All knowledge inferential from empirical observation
**Result**: No metaphysical basis for Stoic practice possible
- No prohairesis (just neurons)
- No pause (just delayed causation)
- No objective truth to test (just coherence or utility)
- No objective good/evil (just preferences)
- No bedrock principles (just circular justification)
- No direct moral knowledge (just inference or emotion)
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## The Systematicity of the Replacement
This wasn't random. Each replacement **depends on** and **reinforces** the others:
**Example chain**:
- Materialism → no substance for libertarian freedom to operate in → determinism
- Determinism → no agency → responsibility becomes useful fiction → emotivism/subjectivism
- No objective values → no foundations in ethics → coherentism
- No foundations → no direct rational apprehension → no intuitionism
- No correspondence → truth becomes coherence or pragmatism
**The modern package is systematically anti-classical**, and this is why restoring Stoic practice requires restoring all six classical commitments together.
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## Key Philosophical Movements That Executed the Replacement
1. **Enlightenment Empiricism** (Locke, Hume): Attacked innate ideas, foundations, moral realism
2. **19th Century Materialism** (La Mettrie, d'Holbach): Mind as matter
3. **Logical Positivism** (Vienna Circle, Ayer): Attacked metaphysics, moral realism, correspondence
4. **Pragmatism** (James, Dewey, Rorty): Replaced correspondence with utility
5. **Analytic Philosophy** (Quine, Davidson, Sellars): Attacked foundations, dualism
6. **Neuroscience/Cognitive Science** (20th-21st century): Assumes materialism, determinism
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## Sterling's Achievement
Sterling identified that these six replacements **systematically undermine** the possibility of Stoic practice, and that restoring classical commitments isn't nostalgia—it's **necessary** for the practice to be coherent.
Without the classical package:
- Impressions aren't truth-claims (no correspondence)
- Can't be separated from self (no dualism)
- Can't be suspended (no libertarian freedom)
- Can't be tested objectively (no moral realism or foundations)
- Can't be recognized directly (no intuitionism)
**The five steps collapse into therapeutic psychology** rather than rational engagement with objective moral reality.
Sterling's Core Stoicism is classical philosophy **restored as a systematic whole** against the modern replacements that fragmented it.
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