Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Thursday, May 21, 2026

What AI Is Taking From Us — The Complete Series

 

What AI Is Taking From Us — The Complete Series

Six posts applying the Stoic framework of Grant C. Sterling to six losses identified by Faisal Hoque in “Six Big Things Are Disappearing from Your Life," Psychology Today, April 8, 2026. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.


Part One: What You Lose When Nothing Is Hard

Hoque identifies the right symptoms. The Stoic diagnosis goes deeper.


Faisal Hoque, writing in Psychology Today, opens his recent article with what he calls the disappearance of a valuable kind of difficulty. He offers an example: growing up in Bangladesh, obtaining a Simon and Garfunkel cassette required real effort. That effort made the music matter to him in a way it would not have if he had simply asked a voice assistant to play it. The investment created the attachment. AI, he argues, is removing that kind of friction from our lives, and in doing so is costing us growth.

The observation is not wrong. But it stops at the surface. Hoque correctly notices that something has been lost. What he does not tell us is why the loss bites — what mechanism makes difficulty constitutive of value in the first place. Without that explanation, his prescription amounts to: try harder on purpose. That is not a framework. It is a reminder.

The Stoic framework, particularly as reconstructed by philosopher Grant C. Sterling, provides the mechanism Hoque is missing. And it locates the real problem somewhere Hoque does not look at all.

The Stoic Account of Effort

Sterling, drawing on the core Stoic account, argues that desires are not raw feelings that arise in us independently. They follow from judgments — specifically, from judgments about what is genuinely good or genuinely evil. As he puts it: “You desire what you judge to be good, and desire to avoid what you judge to be evil.” The desire just is the judgment in its motivational form. Change the judgment, and the desire changes too.

This matters for the effort question because it reframes where the value actually resides. When Hoque says that effort creates attachment and attachment creates meaning, he is describing something real — but he is describing it from the outside, behaviorally. The Stoic account goes inside the mechanism. Effort matters not because difficulty is intrinsically valuable, but because engaging seriously with something requires and develops the only faculty that is genuinely yours: the rational will, the capacity to judge and assent correctly.

Sterling states this directly in his core formulation of the framework:

“The only things in our control are our beliefs and will, and anything entailed by our beliefs and will.”

Everything else — the cassette, the music, the memory, the attachment — is an external. It is preferred, perhaps, worth pursuing. But it is not genuinely good in the philosophically loaded sense. The only thing that is genuinely good is the correct use of the rational faculty. And the correct use of the rational faculty is precisely what effortful engagement, properly understood, calls upon and strengthens.

So the Stoic is not opposed to Hoque’s intuition. He simply refuses to locate the value in the difficulty itself, or in the attachment the difficulty produces. He locates it where it actually is: in the quality of the assent the agent brings to the work.

The Problem Hoque Misses

Here is where the Stoic analysis does something Hoque’s article does not. Hoque treats AI as the agent of erosion. The technology removes friction; the friction was doing important work; now the important work goes undone. The solution, accordingly, is behavioral: choose the harder path when the friction is growth-producing, not merely procedural.

The Stoic framework identifies a prior cause that operates entirely independently of AI.

Sterling explains that impressions arrive already carrying value claims. They are not neutral raw data that we then evaluate. When I reach for an AI tool to draft something I could write myself, an impression has already arrived — an impression that says: the output is what matters, the process is merely a cost, the result is the genuine good. That impression carries a value claim. And in reaching for the tool unreflectively, I have assented to it. Silently, automatically, without noticing that an assent occurred at all.

Sterling describes this mechanism with precision:

“I receive impressions. Those impressions are cognitive, propositional — they are not uninterpreted raw data, but rather ideas that claim that the world is a certain way… What is in our control is how we react to them. We can assent, or not assent.”

The false dogma — the unexamined belief that the output is the genuine good and the process merely instrumental — was already in place before any AI existed. AI does not create the problem. It creates an occasion that reveals a problem that was already there. If I never had access to AI assistance, the same false dogma would show up elsewhere: in my preference for the summary over the source, the shortcut over the route, the credential over the learning it was meant to represent.

Hoque’s six-step behavioral fix addresses the symptom. The Stoic framework asks about the assent that produced the symptom.

What Correct Engagement Looks Like

This is not an argument against using AI tools. Sterling’s framework does not counsel the deliberate embrace of difficulty for its own sake — that would be a different kind of error, treating hardship as a preferred indifferent and mistaking it for virtue. The framework is not ascetic in that sense.

What it asks is something prior to the question of which tools to use. It asks: what impression am I assenting to when I make this choice?

If I use an AI tool because I have correctly judged that the task is procedural — that the value is genuinely in the output and not in the process of producing it — then the assent is rational. There is nothing Stoically objectionable about offloading the formatting of a spreadsheet or the transcription of a recording. The rational faculty is not being bypassed; it is making a correct classification.

If I use an AI tool because I have silently accepted that the output matters and my engagement with the work does not — that producing text is the goal and thinking through the problem is merely a cost — then I have assented to a false impression about where value resides. And that assent, repeated, shapes the rational faculty. Not because difficulty is lost, but because the capacity to distinguish genuine goods from indifferents is being exercised less and less, replaced by an automatic reach toward whatever reduces friction.

Sterling draws the distinction between training and therapy that is essential here. Stoicism, he argues, is not a system for recovering lost capacities after the damage is done. It is an immunization — a prior orientation of the rational faculty that determines how impressions are received before they arrive. He writes:

“The Stoic medicine has to be administered before the shock. Stoicism functions as an immunization, not as a cure. Let me have a chance to convince my neighbor of the truth of Stoic doctrine long before the loved one dies, and he will feel no debilitating grief when it occurs.”

The same structure applies here. The question is not how to recover the value that frictionless convenience has already dissolved. It is what orientation toward value needs to be in place before the tool is reached for, such that the reach itself is a rational assent rather than an automatic one.

The Reframe in Propositional Form

Hoque’s loss: AI is removing the effortful friction that turns information into knowledge and events into formative experiences.

The Stoic reframe: The problem is not friction removal. The problem is the false judgment, already in place, that outputs are genuine goods and the rational engagement that produces them is merely instrumental. AI is an occasion that makes that false judgment visible — but the judgment preceded the tool.

The correct question is not should I embrace this difficulty? It is: what am I assenting to when I reach for the easier path, and is that assent true?

That question is available at any moment. It does not require hardship as a precondition. It requires only that the rational faculty be brought to bear on the impression that is already present — the impression that the output is what counts, that the process is expendable, that the result is the genuine good.

Refuse that assent, and the tool question resolves itself. Not always in favor of difficulty — but always in favor of clear judgment about what the work is actually for.


Part Two: The Attention Problem Is Not What You Think It Is


Faisal Hoque’s second loss is the collapse of attention. We race through days packed with competing demands, he writes, multitasking our way through meetings and meals. The research is clear: multitasking makes us worse at everything we are trying to do. But the deeper loss, he argues, is human rather than cognitive. When we hurry through life, we stop being present to ourselves and to the people we care about. We live reactively rather than intentionally, letting the world dictate its pace instead of choosing our own.

His prescription is single-tasking: choose one thing, give it your complete attention, mute the notifications, protect a window of time. The world will keep accelerating. But you get to choose the speed at which you move through it.

Again, the observation is not wrong. And again, it stops at the surface. Hoque correctly identifies that something is pulling attention apart. What he does not identify is the prior condition that makes the pull possible. You cannot choose your own speed if an unexamined judgment has already told you, before any deliberate choice is made, that every incoming claim on your attention is genuinely urgent — genuinely important — genuinely worth interrupting whatever you are doing to address.

That unexamined judgment is where the Stoic analysis begins.

The Mechanism Behind the Distraction

Grant C. Sterling, developing the Stoic account of impressions, explains that the impressions we receive are not neutral raw data. They arrive already carrying value claims. When a notification appears, the impression is not merely “a message has arrived.” It is “a message has arrived, and not attending to it now carries a cost.” When a colleague sends a message flagged urgent, the impression is not merely “he wants something.” It is “he wants something, and the wanting constitutes a claim on me that is not trivially deferrable.”

Sterling describes the structure precisely:

“I receive impressions. Those impressions are cognitive, propositional — they are not uninterpreted raw data, but rather ideas that claim that the world is a certain way… What is in our control is how we react to them. We can assent, or not assent. That is, we can accept that a given impression is true, or reject it as unproven or false.”

The key phrase is we can assent, or not assent. The impression arrives. But the evaluation carried by the impression — the verdict that this demand is urgent, that this notification is worth interrupting the current task for, that the incoming claim is more important than what is already in progress — is not given with the impression. It is added by the agent’s assent. And in the case of attention collapse, the assent is happening before the agent has examined whether it is warranted. The notification wins the moment it arrives, not because it has been weighed, but because the agent is operating from a background dogma that makes winning automatic.

That background dogma is the false judgment that responsiveness is a genuine good and its absence a genuine cost. Once that judgment is in place, every incoming claim rides it into the agent’s attention without friction. The agent is not choosing to be distracted. He is executing a prior assent he has already given and does not know he gave.

What a Dogma Actually Does

This is not a small technical point. It is the difference between Hoque’s diagnosis and the Stoic one, and it determines what kind of intervention is actually available.

Hoque frames the problem as a behavioral pattern: we multitask, we live reactively, we let the world set the pace. The solution is therefore also behavioral: single-task deliberately, protect time, mute the notifications. These are reasonable behavioral adjustments. They can produce short-term improvement. But they do not touch the source, because the source is not a behavior. It is a governing judgment.

The Stoic framework identifies dogmata — the evaluative verdicts the rational faculty passes on impressions — as the exclusive cause of the disturbance. Epictetus states this without qualification: “Men are disturbed not by things, but by the dogmata which they form concerning things.” The scattered attention, the reactive living, the sense that the world is dictating its pace rather than the agent choosing his own — none of these are caused by the volume of notifications. They are caused by the dogma that makes each notification feel like a legitimate claim that must be honored now.

Remove the false dogma — the judgment that responsiveness to externals is a genuine good, that the inbox has a legitimate claim on the agent’s time regardless of what the agent is currently doing — and the distraction loses its traction. Not because the notifications have stopped arriving. Because the impression they carry (“attend to me now, this matters”) no longer finds a pre-installed assent waiting to receive it.

Muting the notifications is a workaround. Correcting the dogma is the repair.

Prosochē: The Stoic Practice of Attention

The Stoic framework has its own account of attention, and it is not single-tasking. It is prosochē: continuous watchfulness over the rational faculty’s own operations. The agent practicing prosochē is not protected from incoming impressions. He is present at the moment each impression arrives, observing whether the evaluation it carries corresponds to reality before giving or withholding assent.

This is a different relationship with attention than Hoque proposes. Hoque’s single-tasking model manages the external environment — one thing at a time, notifications muted, time protected — to create conditions in which full attention is possible. The Stoic model turns attention inward toward the assenting faculty itself: not “what should I attend to?” but “what am I about to assent to, and is that assent warranted?”

The structural description from the corpus is exact on this point. Before assent, there is a gap — a pause, however brief, in which the impression has arrived but the faculty has not yet responded. That gap is the site of genuine freedom. In that gap, the agent can examine the value claim the impression carries and refuse it if it is false. But the gap is only available to an agent who is practicing prosochē — who is watching for the moment impressions arrive and maintaining the pause before completing the response. An agent who has already pre-installed the assent — who already believes that each incoming claim is urgent, that responsiveness is a genuine good — finds the gap closed. The impression arrives and the assent follows automatically, because the prior dogma has already done the work.

Sterling states the consequence of this clearly in his core account:

“If I get my assents right, then I have guaranteed eudaimonia. If I get one wrong, I cannot have eudaimonia.”

Every assent to the false impression that the notification is urgent — every unexamined compliance with the claim that responsiveness to externals is a genuine good — is a wrong assent. Not a minor lapse in time management. A wrong assent, with the consequences the framework specifies.

The Prior Question

Hoque asks: how do I protect my attention from a world that keeps accelerating? The Stoic asks a prior question: what judgment am I operating from that makes each incoming impression feel like a legitimate claim on my attention before I have examined it?

The prior question matters because the behavioral solution presupposes a capacity that the false dogma is actively undermining. An agent who has genuinely installed the judgment that responsiveness to the inbox is a genuine good will find it difficult to single-task, because every moment of single-tasking will arrive with the sense that something important is being neglected. The protected hour will feel like avoidance. The muted notification will carry an edge of anxiety. The behavioral adjustment is being made by an agent whose underlying orientation toward the externals in question has not changed. He is working against his own dogmata every time he tries to implement the prescription.

The Stoic prescription reverses the order. Examine the dogma first. Ask what judgment about genuine goods is operating when the notification pulls at the attention. Identify it precisely: the belief that the inbox has a legitimate claim on the agent’s time regardless of what is already in progress; that responsiveness is a genuine good whose absence constitutes a genuine cost; that the external demand, by arriving, acquires a priority it would not have been assigned by deliberate choice. Then submit that judgment to what Sterling identifies as the foundational test: is this external thing — the inbox, the response, the appearance of responsiveness — genuinely good?

The answer the framework requires is no. It is a preferred indifferent at most — something worth pursuing in its appropriate place, by rational means, with reservation. It carries no genuine claim on the agent’s attention in excess of what deliberate choice would assign it. The impression that says otherwise is carrying a false value claim. The agent who has corrected the dogma does not need to mute the notification to protect his attention. He has corrected the judgment that made each notification feel urgent before it was examined, and the behavioral adjustment follows naturally rather than requiring ongoing effort against his own prior assent.

The Reframe in Propositional Form

Hoque’s loss: AI and the accelerating pace of the world are collapsing our capacity for sustained attention and full presence.

The Stoic reframe: The collapse of attention is driven by a false dogma — the unexamined judgment that responsiveness to externals is a genuine good and that each incoming claim carries a legitimate prior claim on the agent’s attention. That dogma was in place before the acceleration. The acceleration is an occasion that reveals it.

The correct question is not how do I protect my attention from the world? It is: what judgment am I already operating from that makes each incoming impression feel like a legitimate demand before I have examined it, and is that judgment true?

The agent who has corrected the dogma does not experience single-tasking as discipline. He experiences it as the natural expression of having correctly classified what is and is not genuinely important. The behavioral prescription follows from the perceptual correction — and not before.


Part Three: You Are Not the Story You Tell. You Are the One Who Tells It.


Faisal Hoque’s third loss concerns selfhood. We tell ourselves stories to live, he writes, quoting Joan Didion. We make sense of our experiences by shaping them into narratives. In doing so, we do not merely describe our lives — we create them. The struggle to find the right word for what we feel is part of how we come to understand what we feel. Storytelling is self-creation.

The problem, on his account, is that we are handing this work to AI. We ask it to draft our emails, polish our reflections, sharpen our descriptions of things that matter to us. The AI-written version may read better by any conventional standard. But it is not the record of a particular person making sense of a particular life. When AI shapes our stories, we do not just lose words. We lose the process through which we become ourselves.

There is something genuinely right in this observation. The process of articulating experience matters. But Hoque’s account of why it matters contains a philosophical assumption that the Stoic framework directly contradicts — and the contradiction is not minor. It concerns the nature of the self.

If Hoque is right, the self is a narrative construction. It is built from the outside in, through the accumulation of stories told and refined. If Sterling’s framework is right, the self is the rational faculty — prior to any story, prior to any articulation, not built but given. The self does not emerge from the narrative process. It is the one conducting it.

This difference determines everything about what is actually at risk.

What the Self Actually Is

Sterling states the identity claim with precision in his core summary of Stoic doctrine:

“I am my soul/prohairesis/inner self. Everything else, including my body, is an external.”

The Greek term prohairesis names the faculty of rational choice — the capacity to attend to impressions, evaluate them, and give or withhold assent. It is the faculty that judges, that wills, that chooses. And on Sterling’s account, it is not a product of anything. It is not constructed by experience, not assembled through narrative, not constituted by the stories the agent tells about himself. It is who the agent is — the standing subject pole that was there before the first story and remains after every story has been told.

This matters immediately for Hoque’s claim. If the self is the narrative, then surrendering the narrative process to AI is genuinely self-dissolving. The self is being produced elsewhere. But if the self is the rational faculty — the one who chooses, evaluates, assents, and refuses — then no AI tool can produce or dissolve it. What the AI produces is text. The agent remains the one who receives that text as an impression, examines it, and decides whether to assent to it as an accurate expression of what he thinks, values, and intends.

The self that Hoque worries about losing cannot be lost by delegating a writing task. It can only be lost by abdicating the judgment that the writing task is meant to serve.

What Is Actually at Risk

Identifying the self correctly does not dissolve Hoque’s concern. It relocates it — and in doing so, makes it considerably more precise.

What is at risk when an agent outsources his articulation of experience is not his identity. His identity is intact. What is at risk is the quality of his assent. The agent who accepts an AI-generated description of his own experience without examining whether it corresponds to what he actually judges, values, and intends has given a lazy assent — one that did not do the work of genuine examination. He has accepted an impression about himself without checking whether it is true.

Sterling draws the general point directly from the structure of the framework:

“Everything on the Stoic view comes down to assent to impressions. Choosing whether or not to assent to impressions is the only thing in our control… and yet, everything critical to leading the best possible life is contained in that one act.”

An AI-generated description of what the agent experienced, felt, or decided is an impression with a value component. It claims to represent the agent’s inner life accurately. That claim requires examination, exactly as any other impression does. The agent who reads the AI draft and accepts it without asking whether it is true — whether it correctly represents what he actually judged and valued — has assented to an unexamined impression about himself. The cost is not narrative selfhood. The cost is the quality of the assent.

This is a real cost. But note what it is not: it is not the loss of the self. It is a failure of the self to do its proper work. The self remains. The rational faculty is present, capable, and has jurisdiction over the assent. The failure is not dissolution but abdication.

Why Hoque’s Account Carries Its Own False Dogma

Hoque’s narrative theory of selfhood — the view that the self is created through the process of storytelling — imports a false value judgment that the Stoic framework identifies and refuses.

If the self is constituted by its narrative, then the narrative is a genuine good: producing it is self-creation; losing it is self-dissolution. This makes the quality, authenticity, and authorship of the narrative genuinely important to the agent’s wellbeing in the deepest sense. The agent who does not write his own story is not merely failing at a task. He is failing to exist properly as himself.

Sterling’s framework classifies this as a false value judgment. The narrative is an external. It is a preferred indifferent — worth attending to carefully, worth producing with integrity — but it is not the agent’s good. What the agent produces in writing, whether it is eloquent or clumsy, whether it is AI-assisted or entirely hand-crafted, is a preferred indifferent whose quality does not determine the quality of the rational faculty producing it.

The agent who falsely judges his narrative to be constitutive of his self has placed something external at the center of his identity. He has made his wellbeing dependent on an output he produces — and outputs, however carefully produced, are externals. They belong to the world, not to the prohairesis. When AI can produce them more fluently than he can, the false value judgment generates distress. If the narrative is me, and the machine writes better than I do, then I am threatened.

Remove the false judgment, and the threat dissolves. The machine produces text. The agent produces assent. These are not the same activity, and only one of them constitutes the agent’s good.

What Articulation Is Actually For

Refusing the narrative theory of selfhood does not mean that the process of articulating experience is without value. It means understanding what that value actually is.

The process of finding words for an experience is, at its best, an act of examination. When an agent works to articulate what he thinks about a difficult situation, he is doing something specific: he is examining the impression the situation has generated, testing whether his initial response to it is accurate, and arriving at a more precise account of what he actually judges to be true. This is exactly what the Stoic framework requires of him. The writing is not creating the self. It is the self doing its proper work — examining impressions, testing assents, arriving at verdicts that correspond to what is actually there.

Understood this way, the question about AI assistance becomes considerably more tractable. The relevant question is not whether the agent writes his own prose. It is whether the agent is doing the work of examination — whether the articulation process, however assisted, is serving the function of testing his own assents against what he actually judges to be true.

An agent who uses an AI draft as a starting point, reads it carefully, identifies where it does not capture what he actually thinks, revises it toward accuracy, and arrives at a text that correctly represents his own judgment — that agent has done the work. He has examined the impression the draft generated. He has assented to what is accurate and withheld assent from what is not. The rational faculty has been fully operative throughout. The draft was a tool in the examination; the examination was the agent’s own act.

An agent who accepts the AI draft without reading it critically, who lets the machine’s fluency substitute for his own examination, who publishes a description of his experience that he has not genuinely checked against what he actually judges — that agent has abdicated, not lost, his proper function. The self is not gone. It is idle.

The Reframe in Propositional Form

Hoque’s loss: AI is taking over the narrative process through which we create ourselves, and with it we are losing the self that process produces.

The Stoic reframe: The self is the rational faculty — prior to narrative, not produced by it. What is at risk when articulation is outsourced is not identity but the quality of assent: the agent may accept descriptions of his own experience, values, and judgments without examining whether they are accurate. That is a genuine failure of the rational faculty. But it is not dissolution. It is abdication — and abdication is something the agent can stop at any moment by returning to the work of examination.

The correct question is not am I writing my own story? It is: am I examining what I actually judge, value, and intend, and do my words — however produced — correspond to that examination?

The agent who is asking that question has located himself correctly. He is the one who examines and assents. The narrative is what that examination produces. It is worth producing well. But it is not what he is.


Part Four: The Comfort Trap


Faisal Hoque names the fourth loss with precision: we are confusing tolerance with acceptance. We see what is happening — AI reshaping work, algorithms feeding disturbance, risks accumulating — and we scroll past. We tell ourselves someone smarter is handling it. We tolerate what we will not look at directly. Hoque calls this the Comfort Trap, and he is right that it is a trap. But the classical Stoic diagnosis goes deeper than the behavioral description.

The Comfort Trap is not primarily a failure of courage. It is a failure of assent. And that failure begins before the agent makes any visible choice.

What the Framework Sees

The Stoic account of false dogmata holds that they do not operate primarily at the level of explicit judgment. They operate at the level of perception. When an impression arrives — a news item about AI displacement, a shift in how one’s own work is being valued, a pattern one would rather not name — the false dogma shapes what that impression appears to be before judgment occurs. The agent who has silently accepted that confronting a difficulty is genuinely bad does not see the difficulty and then decide to avoid it. He perceives it, from the first moment, as something to be moved past. The avoidance is not a decision. It is a perceptual outcome.

Epictetus states the causal structure without qualification: men are disturbed not by things but by the dogmata they form concerning things. The same applies in reverse. Men are comforted not by the absence of genuine difficulty but by the dogmata that make difficulty appear other than it is. The agent who tolerates what he will not examine has not chosen comfort over truth. He has formed a dogma that makes examination itself appear unnecessary, threatening, or beyond his purview.

This is why Hoque’s prescription — “look at reality unflinchingly” — while correct, does not reach the mechanism. The agent in the Comfort Trap is not averting his gaze from something he can see. He has formed the impression that there is nothing to look at. The first task is not willpower. It is the examination of the impression that says: this is not mine to address.

The Purview Error

The Stoic Decision Framework identifies this as a purview failure. The agent in the Comfort Trap has drawn the circle of his purview too small. He has accepted the impression that the large-scale disruption is outside his domain — something for regulators, executives, or researchers to handle. This is a misclassification of what is and is not within control.

The purview check asks: what is actually mine to determine here? The answer is always the same: only the agent’s own assents and the action that follows from correct assent. The disruption is external and outside purview. The agent’s response to it — what he examines, what he refuses to examine, what he assents to concerning its meaning for his own life and role — is entirely within purview. The Comfort Trap presents itself as a recognition of limits. It is, in fact, a refusal of the one thing genuinely within the agent’s control: his own assent to what is actually happening.

What the agent tolerates without examining, he effectively assents to. Passive non-engagement is not a neutral position. It is an implicit assent to the impression that nothing is required of the rational faculty here. That assent has consequences: the character is formed by it, slowly and invisibly, in the direction of a person who does not examine.

Acceptance Is Not Tolerance

Hoque draws a distinction that the framework confirms: true acceptance means looking at reality unflinchingly and engaging with it. This is not the Stoic acceptance of outcomes after a decision has been made correctly. This is something prior: the acceptance of the impression as real, as requiring examination, as presenting an object that the rational faculty must engage with rather than defer.

The Stoic reserve clause — the agent acts with reservation, holding outcomes loosely — does not begin at the moment of action. It begins at the moment the impression is received. The agent who accepts what is actually presenting itself, examines it correctly, and then acts with reservation has done everything within his purview. The agent who tolerates the impression rather than accepting it has refused the first step, and everything that follows is shaped by that refusal.

Ask yourself: What am I hoping will simply go away? Whatever the honest answer is, that is the impression that has not been examined. It is not necessarily threatening. It may be far more manageable once the rational faculty is directed toward it. But the comfort of not knowing is a preferred indifferent — at best. It is not a good. And the habit of treating it as one is among the most corrosive a person can form in a period of rapid change.


Part Five: The Crisis of Judgment


Peter Drucker’s distinction between efficiency and effectiveness is the pivot of Hoque’s fifth point. AI makes us dramatically more efficient — more output, faster, at lower cost. Effectiveness — knowing what matters, knowing what is worth doing, knowing where your specifically human judgment is required — remains in your hands. And when you can do ten times as much, the cost of doing the wrong things multiplies accordingly.

Hoque’s diagnosis is precise and the crisis is real. But the classical Stoic framework identifies something that Hoque’s account does not reach: the reason the crisis of judgment is so difficult to address is not primarily that we lack time for reflection. It is that we have formed false dogmata about what judgment is for.

What Judgment Is Actually Doing

The Stoic Decision Framework begins with a purview check: what is actually mine to determine here? This is not a question about scope of authority or organizational role. It is a question about the metaphysical structure of action. Only the agent’s own assents and the will that flows from them are genuinely within his purview. Outcomes, other people’s responses, the success or failure of the enterprise, are outside it.

This reframes the crisis of judgment entirely. The question is not merely “what is worth doing?” in the sense of identifying the highest-value activity on an undifferentiated list of tasks. The question is: what does my role actually require of me, at this moment, given the social relationships I actually stand in? The answer to that question is always available, regardless of the pace of output that surrounds it. It does not require time so much as correct orientation.

The false dogma at the heart of the judgment crisis is this: that the appropriate measure of what is worth doing is the external outcome it produces. If an action produces a preferred external result, it was the right action. If it does not, it was perhaps not worth doing. This is the consequentialist distortion that makes effectiveness — in Drucker’s sense — feel like a puzzle about outcome optimization. It is not. Effectiveness, on the Stoic account, is the correct identification of what role-duty requires, pursued with reservation, regardless of outcome.

The Governing Question

Proposition 59 of the Sterling Logic Engine states that every rational action has three and only three components within the agent’s purview: the goal pursued, the means selected, and the reservation with which the whole is held. Everything outside these three is external and therefore outside purview. This has a specific implication for the AI-amplified efficiency crisis: the question of what is worth doing is always a question about goal and role, never a question about output volume.

When AI can produce ten times the output, the temptation is to experience this as a question about which ten things to produce rather than one. This is the wrong frame. The question remains what it always was: what does the role actually require? A manager’s role requires role-clarity for those beneath him — not ten times more communications, but communications that are genuinely role-correct. An employee’s role requires the discharge of the duties generated by the actual employment relationship — not ten times more deliverables, but deliverables that are genuinely appropriate to what the role is.

The multiplication of capability does not change the governing question. It increases the cost of answering it incorrectly.

Deferring to the Tool

Hoque warns that we may stop trusting ourselves to make judgments and defer to the tool, or let the pace of output substitute for reflection. The framework identifies this as a specific form of assent failure: the agent who defers his judgment to an external process has not withheld assent from a difficult impression. He has assented to the impression that the external process is a more reliable judge than the rational faculty.

This is, structurally, a misclassification of what is inside and outside purview. The tool’s output is external. It arrives as an impression — a recommendation, a draft, a prioritized list — and like every impression it requires examination before assent. The agent who assents to the tool’s output without examination has not saved himself the labor of judgment. He has performed a judgment — “this output deserves assent” — without examining it. The judgment is still his. The failure to examine it is still his. The tool does not relieve the rational faculty of its responsibility; it changes the character of the impression the rational faculty must examine.

Hoque recommends building the muscle: at the end of each day, ask what you chose to do, what you delegated, and why. This is the beginning of the evening review that the Stoic training architecture calls for — the retrospective examination of the day’s assents. The question is not only what was done but whether what was done flowed from correct role-identification and purview-correct judgment, or from the unreflective assent to whatever the pace of output demanded. The judgment crisis is resolved not by doing less but by examining what one assents to before acting on it.


Part Six: Reclaiming Agency


Hoque names the deepest loss last: agency itself. When everything is uncertain, when the ground keeps shifting, it is natural to freeze. The volume of change makes people feel powerless, and powerlessness breeds passivity. His prescription is grounding — a return to what has sustained before, to the songs, the books, the practices, the people who gave strength in the past. He instances listening to “The Boxer” in his fifties and hearing in it something new: tenderness for the young man he once was, and from that tenderness, a source of strength.

It is a beautiful prescription and a true one. But the framework can say with precision why it works, and what it is working on.

What Agency Actually Is

The Stoic account of agency is the most direct available answer to the paralysis Hoque describes. Agency, on this account, does not require certainty about outcomes. It does not require a stable external environment. It does not require that the ground stop shifting. It requires only that the agent correctly identify what is within his purview and act on that identification with reservation.

Proposition 62 of the Logic Engine states: reservation is the constitutive framing of every rational act of will. The agent aims at the goal if the control dichotomy allows — not unconditionally. Contentment is not made dependent on the outcome. This is not passivity. It is the only form of genuine action available to any agent in any circumstance: action that originates in the rational faculty, is aimed at what role and situation make appropriate, and is held without attachment to the result.

The paralysis Hoque identifies is not a failure of will in the ordinary sense. It is the consequence of a false dogma: that action is only worth taking if the outcome can be predicted or controlled. When the environment is uncertain, this dogma generates a prohibition on action that feels like wisdom but is a form of assent to powerlessness. The agent has, in effect, treated a preferred outcome as a necessary precondition for virtuous action. It is not. The precondition for virtuous action is only the agent’s own correct orientation — which is available in any circumstance.

Why Return Works

Hoque’s prescription — return to what has sustained you before — works because it does something specific to the agent’s perceptual field. It re-establishes the agent’s continuity with himself. The person who hears “The Boxer” again in his fifties is not retrieving a memory for consolation. He is recognizing, through the form the song takes, that he has a self that has persisted through disruption before and that the resources it then possessed are still available. This recognition is an impression — and it is a true one. The rational faculty, when presented with it, can assent to it correctly: I have navigated uncertainty before. I did so by acting correctly within my purview, not by controlling what was outside it.

The framework calls the content of this recognition a prospective resource: the pre-established understanding, formed by practice and reflection, that one’s genuine good is not located in external stability. The agent who has genuinely formed this understanding — not merely held it as a proposition but assented to it as a fact about how things are — does not freeze when the environment shifts, because the environment was never the ground of his action. His action was always grounded in what is within his purview. The disruption changes the shape of the practical context. It does not change the question: what does correct action look like here, given the roles I occupy and the situation as it actually is?

The Reserve Clause as Structure of Agency

The reserve clause — the “if nothing prevents me,” the “God willing,” the Stoic qualification attached to every act of will — is not a hedge against disappointment. It is the structural acknowledgment that the outcome is outside purview and is therefore not the agent’s good. This acknowledgment, when it is genuinely operative, produces not passivity but a specific kind of freedom: the freedom to act correctly without needing the outcome to validate the action.

This is what Hoque is pointing at when he writes that agency does not require certainty. He is right. But the framework can say why: because the agent’s good is not in the outcome. It is in the act of correct judgment, correctly aimed, held with reservation. That act is available in full, right now, regardless of what the environment is doing. The AI disruption, the shifting ground, the volume of change — these are all external. They arrive as impressions. They require examination. They do not require assent to the impression that action is pointless until they resolve.

Return to what has sustained you. Not because it will make the uncertainty go away. But because it will remind the rational faculty of what it already knows: that you have acted correctly within your purview before, and that acting correctly within your purview now is all that is ever required. The resources you need to face what is ahead are not ahead of you. They are already part of who you are.


Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.

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