Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Monday, April 13, 2026

Classical Presupposition Audit: Series Summary and Comparative Table

 

Classical Presupposition Audit: Series Summary and Comparative Table

The Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) has now been applied to nine figures across the modern Stoicism space and adjacent political and philosophical territory. The instrument audits a figure’s argumentative record against six classical philosophical commitments: substance dualism (C1), libertarian free will (C2), ethical intuitionism (C3), foundationalism (C4), correspondence theory of truth (C5), and moral realism (C6). The five verdict categories are Aligned, Partially Aligned, Contrary, Inconsistent, and Non-Operative. The dissolution finding — Full, Partial, or None — follows exclusively from the C1 and C2 findings.

The Becker run closes the academic philosophy strand of the series. Its findings are the most divergent of any figure audited.


The Becker Finding

Lawrence C. Becker’s A New Stoicism (Princeton University Press, 1998; revised 2017) is the most academically rigorous Stoic reconstruction in the series — a full-scale attempt to rebuild Stoicism on naturalist, determinist foundations while preserving the classical value hierarchy. Becker asks what Stoicism would look like if it had continued as an unbroken philosophical tradition, adapting to modern science and philosophy along the way. His answer: a secular, coherentist, compatibilist ethical naturalism that retains the Stoic value hierarchy while explicitly discarding the metaphysical and epistemological architecture the classical system requires.

Five Contrary findings — the series maximum. Becker produces Contrary findings on C1, C2, C3, C4, and C6. The only non-Contrary finding is C5 Partially Aligned.

The C3 and C4 Contrary findings are the most precise in the series. Becker does not merely fail to argue for intuitionism or foundationalism — he names them as philosophical errors he is arguing against. He explicitly identifies “nonnaturalism” and “intuitionism” as philosophical fads that destroyed serious moral philosophy in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. He explicitly states that “Stoics hold that there are no a priori good forms of reasoning.” His normative logic is explicitly coherentist: there are no self-evident foundational moral truths from which ethics is deduced; there are only coherently integrated sets of projects and motivations refined through practical reasoning over a lifetime. No other figure in the series is this direct about what he is rejecting.

No Inconsistent finding — which is the most revealing feature of Becker’s pattern when compared to Pigliucci. Pigliucci sometimes argues as though moral truths are simply apprehended by reason independently of experience — which produces the C3 Inconsistent finding, because his metaethical denial of objective moral facts contradicts his practical moral affirmations. Becker never makes that move. His coherentist naturalism is internally consistent throughout. He is more philosophically disciplined than Pigliucci and consequently more thoroughly divergent from the classical commitments. The right destination — virtue is the only good — arrived at by a route that has replaced every load-bearing structural element of the classical account.


Series Comparative Table

Nine figures. Six commitments. Five verdict categories. One dissolution finding per figure.

Verdict key: C = Contrary — Partially = Partially Aligned — Aligned = Aligned — Inc = Inconsistent

Dissolution key: Full = Full Dissolution — Partial = Partial Dissolution — None = No Dissolution

Becker: C1 Contrary / C2 Contrary / C3 Contrary / C4 Contrary / C5 Partially Aligned / C6 Contrary / Full Dissolution.

Pigliucci: C1 Contrary / C2 Contrary / C3 Inconsistent / C4 Partially Aligned / C5 Partially Aligned / C6 Contrary / Full Dissolution.

Robertson: C1 Contrary / C2 Contrary / C3 Partially Aligned / C4 Partially Aligned / C5 Inconsistent / C6 Partially Aligned / Full Dissolution.

Mamdani: C1 Contrary / C2 Contrary / C3 Partially Aligned / C4 Partially Aligned / C5 Aligned / C6 Partially Aligned / Full Dissolution.

Daltrey: C1 Contrary / C2 Partially Aligned / C3 Contrary / C4 Partially Aligned / C5 Aligned / C6 Partially Aligned / Partial Dissolution.

Hilton: C1 Inconsistent / C2 Inconsistent / C3 Partially Aligned / C4 Partially Aligned / C5 Aligned / C6 Partially Aligned / Partial Dissolution.

Peterson: C1 Partially Aligned / C2 Partially Aligned / C3 Partially Aligned / C4 Partially Aligned / C5 Inconsistent / C6 Partially Aligned / No Dissolution.

Bailey: C1 Partially Aligned / C2 Partially Aligned / C3 Partially Aligned / C4 Partially Aligned / C5 Aligned / C6 Partially Aligned / No Dissolution.

Fisher: C1 Partially Aligned / C2 Partially Aligned / C3 Partially Aligned / C4 Partially Aligned / C5 Aligned / C6 Partially Aligned / No Dissolution.


Series Observations

The dissolution line. Four figures produce Full Dissolution: Becker, Pigliucci, Robertson, Mamdani. Two produce Partial Dissolution: Daltrey, Hilton. Three produce No Dissolution: Peterson, Bailey, Fisher. The division between Full and No Dissolution tracks C1 and C2 exclusively, as the instrument requires. What produces Full Dissolution is not the absence of Stoic content — Becker and Robertson are both deeply Stoic in their conclusions — but the explicit adoption of naturalist and compatibilist presuppositions that dissolve the prohairesis into the natural causal order.

The Pigliucci-Becker contrast. Both produce Full Dissolution. Both are secular naturalists. Pigliucci produces an Inconsistent finding on C3 because he sometimes argues as though the Stoic value hierarchy is simply correct — apprehensible by reason independently of experience — which contradicts his metaethical denial. Becker produces a Contrary finding on C3 because he is philosophically consistent: he never makes the intuitionist move, and he argues explicitly against it. The difference is philosophical discipline. Becker’s framework is more divergent and more coherent. Pigliucci’s framework contains a tension that Becker has resolved — by surrendering the classical conclusions rather than preserving them in inconsistent form.

The Robertson-Becker contrast. Both produce Full Dissolution from explicitly stated philosophical positions. Robertson’s dissolution follows primarily from his therapeutic naturalism and explicit compatibilism. Becker’s follows from a technically sophisticated philosophical reconstruction that engages the relevant commitments directly and rejects them with explicit argument. Robertson’s C5 Inconsistent finding reveals tension between his Stoic epistemic claims (sticking to the facts as a correspondence standard) and his therapeutic validation framework (pragmatist-empiricism). Becker’s C5 Partially Aligned finding reveals no such tension: his correspondence account governs the factual domain cleanly, and his coherentism governs the normative domain cleanly. Becker is more internally consistent and consequently more thoroughly divergent.

The Fisher finding. Chris Fisher is the only Stoicism-space figure in the series to produce No Dissolution with no Contrary findings. His five Partially Aligned findings all trace to the same source: his cosmological-theological grounding introduces a theological dependency the classical commitments do not permit — his conclusions are grounded in the providential rational cosmos rather than in mind-independent necessary truths apprehended by reason independently of cosmological commitments. Fisher gets the destination exactly right. The one thing missing is the cosmology-independent grounding that allows the classical account to defend its conclusions without first winning a cosmological argument.

The closing observation. The series produces a clear gradient. At one end: Becker, whose framework is philosophically rigorous, internally consistent, and maximally divergent from the classical commitments — five Contrary findings, Full Dissolution, right conclusions reached by a route that has replaced every classical load-bearing element. At the other end: Fisher, whose framework is internally consistent in a different direction — no Contrary findings, No Dissolution, right conclusions reached by a route whose only divergence from the classical account is a theological dependency the classical account does not require. Between them: a spectrum of partial alignments, inconsistencies, and domain tensions that map the philosophical landscape of contemporary Stoicism with more precision than any other available instrument.

What the instrument cannot do is what Sterling’s corpus can: establish why the classical commitments are correct. The CPA audits presuppositions against the classical standard. The standard itself — the six commitments as philosophically necessary and sufficient for the classical Stoic account of agency, value, and eudaimonia — is Sterling’s contribution. The instrument borrows its authority from the corpus. Without the corpus, the findings are labels. With it, they are philosophical findings about what is gained and lost in every modern reconstruction of Stoicism.


Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.

Classical Presupposition Audit: Steve Hilton

 

Classical Presupposition Audit: Steve Hilton

Corpus in use: Core Stoicism, Nine Excerpts, Sterling Logic Engine v4.0, Free Will and Causation, Stoicism Moral Facts and Ethical Intuitionism, Stoicism Foundationalism and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge, Stoicism Correspondence Theory of Truth and Objective Moral Facts, Stoicism Moral Realism and the Necessity of Objective Moral Facts, The Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism, A Brief Reply Re: Dualism, Stoic Dualism and Nature, Two and One-Half Ethical Systems.


What Is the Classical Presupposition Audit?

The Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) is a philosophical instrument that identifies the embedded presuppositions a named public figure must hold in order to argue as he does, and audits those presuppositions against six classical philosophical commitments: substance dualism, libertarian free will, ethical intuitionism, foundationalism, correspondence theory of truth, and moral realism. The subject of analysis is the figure’s own argumentative record — his books, policy statements, interviews, and public arguments — not characterizations of him by opponents or media framing of his positions.

The CPA does not issue political verdicts. It does not evaluate whether a figure’s policies are correct, his electoral strategy is sound, or his program should be supported or opposed. It issues philosophical findings about what his argumentative record requires at the level of embedded presupposition, and what those presuppositions entail for an agent who takes up his framework as a governing account of his condition.


Subject: Steve Hilton

Steve Hilton is a British-American political commentator, author, and Republican candidate for Governor of California (2026 election). He served as Director of Strategy to UK Prime Minister David Cameron (2010–2012). He is the author of More Human: Designing a World Where People Come First (2015), Positive Populism (2018), and Califailure. His public record includes his campaign website and policy platform, a PBS interview (February 2026), a C-SPAN policy summit address (August 2025), and his published Fox News writings. Sources for this audit are drawn exclusively from these materials.


Step 1 — Presupposition Profile

Hilton’s argumentative record rests on five load-bearing presuppositions.

P1 — The individual and the family are the primary units of human life, and their flourishing is the proper aim of political organization. Hilton’s title More Human states this directly: the world should be designed around people, not institutions. His campaign platform consistently frames government’s purpose in terms of what it does to real individuals and families. His critique of California’s government is always framed in terms of the family that can’t afford rent, the parent who can’t choose their child’s school, the small business owner crushed by regulation.

P2 — Power concentrated in remote institutions destroys the individual’s capacity for self-determination. The governing diagnosis in both his books and his campaign is that centralization — of government, of corporate power, of bureaucratic administration — is the root cause of the degradation of individual and community life. His remedy is always decentralization: power to the smallest possible unit, closest to the people. This requires the presupposition that the individual’s capacity for genuine self-governance is real and is being structurally suppressed.

P3 — Moral facts about family, community, and work are real and non-relative. Hilton argues explicitly that “cultural norms such as two-parent families and a work ethic play a role in lifting people out of poverty — without being bigoted.” He treats family breakdown as a genuine disaster, not a lifestyle preference. He argues that government should actively support stable families and functioning communities. This requires the presupposition that there are objectively better and worse ways to organize human life.

P4 — Results matter and can be objectively measured; failed institutions must be held accountable to those standards. Hilton’s entire campaign framework rests on the claim that California’s government has failed — demonstrably, measurably, in ways documented with spending figures and outcome data. He proposes a grade for every school and every teacher. This requires the presupposition that there are objective standards of institutional performance against which outcomes can be assessed.

P5 — The individual’s condition is primarily determined by the institutional and structural environment he inhabits. Hilton’s entire remedial agenda — decentralization, school choice, family support, government accountability — is premised on the claim that changing the institutional structure changes human outcomes. He does not argue that the individual can simply choose his way out of a broken system. He argues that the system itself must be reformed to enable genuine individual flourishing. This is a structural-determinist presupposition at the level of diagnosis, even while his remedy is individualist at the level of aim.

Domain mapping: The critical tension in Hilton’s record is between P1 and P2 (individual primacy, genuine self-determination) and P5 (structural conditions as primary determinants of individual outcomes). In the domain of political philosophy and aims, Hilton argues as an individualist — the individual and family are what matter, and institutions should serve them. In the domain of political diagnosis and remedy, Hilton argues as a structuralist — the individual’s condition is substantially determined by the institutional environment, and reform of that environment is what produces better human outcomes. Both presuppositions are load-bearing in their respective domains.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

Commitment 1 — Substance Dualism: Inconsistent

Domain A — Political aims. In his stated aims, Hilton treats the individual and family as irreducible units whose dignity and capacity for self-governance are prior to any institutional arrangement. His title More Human asserts that the individual human person is the measure of political design. His decentralization argument rests on the claim that remote institutions cannot understand the particular circumstances of particular people — which presupposes that the individual’s inner life has particularity and priority that external systems cannot capture or substitute for.

Domain B — Political diagnosis. In his diagnosis, Hilton consistently argues that the individual’s actual outcomes are substantially determined by the institutional environment. California’s broken schools produce uneducated children — not because those children have made bad choices, but because the system has failed them. California’s housing crisis produces unhoused people — not because those individuals have failed to govern themselves, but because regulatory and fiscal structures have made housing unaffordable. The remedy is structural reform, not individual character development.

Both presuppositions are load-bearing. Hilton cannot abandon the individualist presupposition without losing the moral force of his argument. He cannot abandon the structuralist presupposition without losing the practical force of his remedy.

Finding: Inconsistent. Hilton’s record requires the individual to be prior to and irreducible by external conditions (Domain A) and requires external conditions to be the primary determinants of individual outcomes (Domain B). Both presuppositions are load-bearing in their respective argumentative contexts.

Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free Will: Inconsistent

Domain A — Individual responsibility language. Hilton’s argument for school choice, parental rights, and family support all presuppose that parents genuinely can choose, and that their choices matter. His argument against government paternalism presupposes that individuals are genuine agents whose choices should be respected, not optimized by remote bureaucrats.

Domain B — Structural remedy language. His remedial argument presupposes that the individual’s capacity for genuine choice is substantially constrained by structural conditions. California’s broken systems don’t merely fail to serve individuals — they actively prevent individuals from exercising genuine agency. The Parent Trigger Law is significant precisely because it restores to parents a power that the system had removed. Without structural reform, the individual’s capacity for self-determination is structurally blocked.

Finding: Inconsistent. Hilton’s record requires genuine individual causal power (Domain A) and requires structural conditions to substantially constrain or block that power (Domain B). Both are load-bearing.

Commitment 3 — Ethical Intuitionism: Partially Aligned

Hilton argues that family breakdown is a genuine disaster, that a work ethic is genuinely good, that stable communities are genuinely better than atomized ones — and he argues this without grounding those claims in consequences or calculations. When he says two-parent families are good for children, he treats it as a moral fact that can be stated plainly. His decentralization argument has the same structure: power belongs closest to the people not only because it produces better measurable outcomes but because it respects a genuine truth about human dignity.

However, his primary argumentative mode is consequentialist-empirical: he marshals spending figures, outcome data, and measurable results. His case against California’s government is substantially built on the evidence of failure, not on a non-empirical moral argument from first principles.

Finding: Partially Aligned. The moral realist structure of his claims about family and community aligns with the intuitionist conclusion. The residual: his dominant argumentative mode is consequentialist-empirical rather than non-inferential moral apprehension.

Commitment 4 — Foundationalism: Partially Aligned

Hilton does argue from foundational principles: individual dignity is real; power belongs closest to the people; family is the basic unit of society. These function as non-negotiable starting points. His opposition to centralization reflects a foundational claim about where legitimate authority resides.

However, his foundational principles are grounded in outcomes, historical experience — including his family’s experience of communist Hungary — and practical results, not in self-evident necessary truths apprehended by reason independently of experience.

Finding: Partially Aligned. Hilton argues from principles he treats as non-negotiable — structural correspondence with the classical commitment. The residual: his grounding is empirical-historical and outcome-based rather than rational and necessary.

Commitment 5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: Aligned

Hilton’s factual claims — spending figures, outcome data, population trends — are presented as objective facts about California’s condition. His moral claims about family, community, and individual dignity are presented as true regardless of whether believing them is politically convenient. He explicitly argues that two-parent families are good for children “without being bigoted” — meaning the claim is true independently of its political palatability. He does not adopt a relativist or constructivist account of truth.

Finding: Aligned. Hilton’s record consistently treats both factual and moral claims as true or false independently of political preference, social consensus, or consequences.

Commitment 6 — Moral Realism: Partially Aligned

Hilton argues that family breakdown is a genuine disaster, that a work ethic is genuinely good, that functioning communities are genuinely better than atomized ones — and he treats these as objective facts about human flourishing, not expressions of conservative cultural preference. His argument that California’s government has produced genuinely bad outcomes presupposes that there are objective standards of good outcomes the government has failed to meet.

The grounding, as with Commitment 3, is partly consequentialist-empirical. He argues from evidence of outcomes, but the moral claim that certain outcomes are genuinely better rather than merely preferred has the structure of moral realism.

Finding: Partially Aligned. The moral realist structure of Hilton’s conclusions aligns with the classical commitment. The residual: his grounding of moral objectivity is in empirical outcomes and historical tradition rather than in mind-independent moral facts apprehended by reason.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

Commitment 1: Inconsistent. Commitment 2: Inconsistent. Neither is Contrary.

The instrument requires the qualified dissolution formulation: Dissolution where Consistent.

In the domains where Hilton’s framework is consistent on the individualist side — his political aims, his case for individual choice, his defense of parental rights and family integrity — the framework does not require those who adopt it to dissolve the self-governing rational faculty into an external system. In those domains, the individual is prior to and not constituted by external conditions.

In the domains where Hilton’s framework is consistent on the structuralist side — his political diagnosis, his case for institutional reform — the framework does require those who adopt it to locate the primary determinant of their condition in external structures. The agent who fully adopts Hilton’s diagnostic framework has accepted that his outcomes are substantially determined by the institutional environment he inhabits.

This is not a finding about Hilton’s inner life. It is a finding about what his framework requires of those who take it up as a governing account of their condition.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Part A — Commitment Pattern

Substance Dualism: Inconsistent. Libertarian Free Will: Inconsistent. Ethical Intuitionism: Partially Aligned. Foundationalism: Partially Aligned. Correspondence Theory of Truth: Aligned. Moral Realism: Partially Aligned.

Overall pattern: 1 Aligned, 3 Partially Aligned, 0 Contrary, 2 Inconsistent, 0 Non-Operative.

Deepest divergence: the two Inconsistent findings on Substance Dualism and Libertarian Free Will. Hilton’s framework requires contradictory presuppositions about the individual’s relationship to external conditions across its diagnostic and aspirational domains. This is the central philosophical tension in positive populism as an intellectual project: it aims to restore individual agency while diagnosing the individual’s condition as structurally determined.

Strongest alignment: Correspondence Theory of Truth. Hilton operates with a robust correspondence account of truth. His empirical documentation of California’s failures, his straight-faced moral claims about family and community, and his resistance to relativizing those claims all reflect a commitment to mind-independent truth.

Part B — Dissolution Finding

Dissolution where Consistent — in the diagnostic domain. Hilton’s framework does not require dissolution in its aspirational domain (individual agency is real and must be restored). It does require dissolution in its diagnostic domain (the individual’s condition is substantially determined by external institutional structures). An agent who fully takes up Hilton’s framework will have a split self-description: genuine agent in aspiration, structurally determined product in diagnosis.

Part C — Agent-Level Implication

An agent who adopts Hilton’s framework as his governing self-description takes up the following: he is a genuine agent capable of self-governance; his dignity is prior to any institutional arrangement; family, community, and work ethic are genuinely good; power belongs closest to him; California’s government has failed him. This is directionally closer to the classical commitments than a full-structural account. The individualist aspiration — the insistence that the individual person is the measure of political design — aligns with the classical account of the self-governing rational faculty as the locus of the agent’s identity and worth.

But the agent also takes up the following: his actual condition — his housing costs, his children’s education, his employment prospects, his community’s stability — is substantially determined by institutional structures he did not create and cannot individually overcome. His remedy is not the correction of his own false value judgments but the reform of the external structures that constrain him.

The classical philosophical tradition identifies this as the structural error. The agent who locates the governing determinant of his condition in external structures — however accurately he diagnoses those structures as broken — has accepted the premise that externals are genuine determinants of his wellbeing. Hilton’s framework gets the aspiration right: the individual is prior, genuine agency matters. But it embeds the diagnosis in a structuralist account that undermines that aspiration at the foundational level. The agent who takes up this framework may work tirelessly for structural reform — which as a preferred indifferent is worth pursuing — but he will do so while implicitly treating external conditions as genuine determinants of his condition rather than as indifferents to be aimed at with reservation.


Corpus Boundary Declaration: The CPA has not issued findings on whether Hilton’s policies are economically sound, whether his diagnosis of California’s failures is accurate, whether his political program is strategically viable, or whether his candidacy should be supported or opposed. Those questions are outside the instrument’s reach.


Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.

Classical Presupposition Audit: Zohran Mamdani

 

Classical Presupposition Audit: Zohran Mamdani

Source: Public record including campaign materials, interviews, legislative record as New York State Assemblymember, and published statements on housing, economic policy, and political philosophy.

Corpus in use: CPA v1.0. The audit operates exclusively from Mamdani’s own public argumentative record. No source outside his own stated positions enters the presupposition profile.

Political Application Constraint: Sterling’s name is not associated with political applications, political figures, or political products. This analysis is Dave Kelly’s work derived from Sterling’s theoretical foundations.


Preliminary Note: Mamdani’s Position

Zohran Mamdani is a democratic socialist politician, New York State Assemblymember, and 2025 New York City mayoral candidate whose public record represents a well-defined strand of contemporary progressive left politics. His argumentative record is organized around housing justice, tenant rights, economic inequality, climate action, and the structural critique of capitalism as a system that produces and reproduces harm. His positions are consistently and explicitly argued: he holds that external structural conditions determine human flourishing, that the state’s primary moral function is to correct those conditions, and that individual outcomes are substantially explained by the economic and social structures in which individuals are embedded.

Mamdani presents a philosophically interesting case for the CPA because his framework is internally coherent and explicitly argued. Unlike figures whose presuppositions are inferrable only from policy positions, Mamdani has made the philosophical foundations of his political program explicit in his public record.


Step 1 — Presupposition Profile

P1 — External structural conditions substantially determine human outcomes, opportunities, and flourishing. Mamdani’s entire political program rests on this presupposition. His housing justice arguments hold that the inability of New Yorkers to afford housing is not primarily a function of individual choices or judgments but of structural conditions — landlord power, real estate speculation, inadequate public housing investment — that produce housing insecurity regardless of individual effort or decision-making. The same structural logic governs his arguments on healthcare, climate, and economic inequality. The agent’s conditions are produced by forces external to his individual will.

P2 — Structural injustice is a genuine evil whose correction is the central moral project of politics. Mamdani treats housing insecurity, economic inequality, and climate harm not as preferred disprefered conditions that rational agents can navigate through correct judgment, but as genuine evils that the state is morally obligated to address. The language of his public record is consistently realist in moral register: injustice is real, harm is real, the obligation to correct both is real and urgent. He does not treat these as preferences or cultural constructions. He treats them as facts about a morally disordered world.

P3 — The individual agent is substantially constituted by his structural position. Mamdani’s critique of capitalism holds that the economic system produces people — their values, their opportunities, their self-understanding — in ways that serve the interests of those who control the system. Individual agency exists within this structural determination but is substantially constrained and shaped by it. The tenant is not simply a person who has made housing choices; he is a person whose housing situation has been produced by a system designed to extract value from him.

P4 — Political solidarity and collective action are the appropriate mechanisms for addressing structural injustice. Mamdani’s political program consistently emphasizes collective rather than individual solutions. The individual tenant who correctly understands his situation does not respond by governing his own assent to impressions about housing. He organizes with other tenants to change the structural conditions that produced his situation. The appropriate response to structural injustice is structural action — which requires collective identity, solidarity, and shared political purpose.

P5 — Moral truth about justice and injustice is directly apprehensible and not reducible to preference or cultural construction. Mamdani’s language of justice is not relativist. He does not argue that housing insecurity is bad because a majority prefers housing security, or because it is culturally disapproved of. He argues that it is bad as a matter of moral fact — that a system that produces it is unjust in a real and objective sense. His moral language presupposes that injustice is a moral fact that reason can identify directly, without dependence on calculation or consensus.

P6 — Economic and social structures are the primary context within which all other moral and political questions are addressed. Mamdani’s framework is structuralist at its foundation: the analysis begins with the economic structure, identifies how it produces outcomes, and evaluates those outcomes against a standard of justice. Other moral and political considerations are addressed within this structural frame rather than prior to it.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

Commitment 1 — Substance Dualism: Contrary

Substance dualism requires that the rational faculty — the inner life of the individual, his will and judgments — be treated as categorically distinct from and prior to all external material conditions. The self is the prohairesis: the faculty that examines impressions and governs assent, genuinely other than everything external to it, including economic position, housing situation, and structural location.

Mamdani’s P1 and P3 directly contradict this. His framework holds that external structural conditions substantially determine human outcomes and that individuals are substantially constituted by their structural positions. The tenant whose housing insecurity has been produced by a system of landlord extraction is not, in Mamdani’s framework, a self-governing rational faculty navigating external conditions. He is a person whose conditions have been produced by forces external to his individual will, and whose appropriate response is collective structural action rather than individual assent-governance. The categorical priority of the rational faculty over external conditions has no architectural place in this framework.

Finding: Contrary.

Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free Will: Contrary

Libertarian free will requires that assent be a genuine first cause — that the moment between impression and response is a moment of real originating power, not a sophisticated output of structural conditions that precede and substantially determine it. The individual agent is the genuine author of his judgments, independently of the economic and social formations that surround him.

Mamdani’s structural analysis eliminates this as the governing account of practical agency. His framework holds that individual choices and outcomes are substantially explained by structural conditions. The agent who cannot afford housing has not primarily made a false assent to an impression about housing value. He has been placed in a structurally determined situation by forces operating above and beyond his individual judgment. The corrective response is not the governance of his own assents but the transformation of the structural conditions that produced his situation. Genuine originating agency — the kind that makes individual assent-governance the appropriate practical response to one’s condition — is not the governing account of practical life in this framework.

Finding: Contrary.

Commitment 3 — Moral Realism: Partially Aligned

Moral realism requires that there are objective moral facts independent of individual or collective preference. Mamdani’s public record treats injustice as a moral fact — not as a preference, a cultural construction, or a majority position, but as something real that reason can identify directly. His language is consistently realist in moral register: the system that produces housing insecurity is genuinely unjust. This is P5 in operation: direct apprehension of moral fact rather than preference-expression.

The residual divergence is in the content of the moral facts he identifies. Mamdani holds that structural conditions — housing insecurity, economic inequality, climate harm — are genuine evils. The classical commitment holds that only vice is genuinely evil and that externals are neither good nor evil. Mamdani’s moral realism identifies externals as the primary locus of genuine moral evaluation. His realism is genuine; its object is incorrect by the corpus’s standard.

Finding: Partially Aligned. Mamdani’s moral language presupposes objective moral facts directly apprehensible by reason. The facts he identifies as primary are externals, which the corpus identifies as neither good nor evil.

Commitment 4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: Partially Aligned

Mamdani’s factual claims about housing, inequality, and structural conditions are made as claims about how things actually are — claims that could be true or false depending on whether they accurately describe the situation. He is not a constructivist about the facts of housing insecurity or economic inequality. His empirical claims presuppose correspondence theory operationally.

The residual divergence is that his governing evaluative framework is structuralist rather than correspondence-theoretic in the classical moral sense: the standard against which conditions are assessed is structural justice rather than the mind-independent moral facts the corpus identifies. His correspondence theory applies to empirical claims about structural conditions; it does not apply to the moral standard by which those conditions are assessed in the way the classical commitment requires.

Finding: Partially Aligned. Operational correspondence theory for empirical claims about structural conditions. The moral standard applied to those conditions is structuralist rather than derived from mind-independent moral facts in the classical sense.

Commitment 5 — Ethical Intuitionism: Aligned

This is Mamdani’s most significant point of affinity with the classical commitments, and it is the only Aligned finding in the audit. His moral claims — that housing insecurity is unjust, that a system that extracts value from tenants is wrong, that climate harm is a moral emergency — are not argued from consequences alone. They are presented as directly apprehensible moral facts: things that a reasonable person can see to be wrong without an elaborate calculation of outcomes. His moral language consistently appeals to what injustice looks like directly rather than to what it produces statistically.

The intuitionist structure is genuine even though the objects of his moral intuitions are externals rather than facts about virtue and vice. He has the epistemological structure of ethical intuitionism — direct rational apprehension of moral fact — applied to a content the classical commitment would identify as incorrect. The structure is Aligned; the content diverges.

Finding: Aligned. Mamdani’s moral epistemology presupposes direct rational apprehension of moral facts rather than consequentialist calculation or preference-expression. This is the structural requirement of ethical intuitionism, present throughout his public record.

Commitment 6 — Foundationalism: Partially Aligned

Mamdani’s framework argues from a governing structural analysis — capitalism produces inequality, inequality produces injustice, injustice demands structural correction — that functions as a foundational framework from which more specific political positions are derived. His positions on housing, healthcare, climate, and economic policy are all derived from this governing analysis rather than assembled as an unstructured miscellany of preferences. There is an architectural structure to his political thought.

The residual divergence is that his foundational framework is structural-economic rather than grounded in a self-evident first principle about the nature of the agent and the locus of genuine value. The foundationalist architecture is present; the foundational principle is the wrong one by the corpus’s standard — it locates the governing first principle in the analysis of structural conditions rather than in the control dichotomy.

Finding: Partially Aligned. Mamdani argues from a governing structural framework that functions architecturally as a foundational analysis. The foundational principle is structural-economic rather than grounded in the control dichotomy and the agent’s nature.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

Commitment 1: Contrary. Commitment 2: Contrary.

Finding: Full Dissolution.

Mamdani’s framework requires those who adopt it as a governing self-description to understand themselves as substantially constituted by their structural position and substantially determined in their outcomes by forces external to their individual will. The rational faculty as categorically distinct from and prior to all external conditions — the prohairesis as genuinely sovereign over assent regardless of structural location — has no architectural place in this framework. The appropriate response to one’s condition, within Mamdani’s account, is collective structural action rather than individual assent-governance. The space in which the Stoic practical program operates has been closed.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Commitment Pattern

Substance Dualism: Contrary. Libertarian Free Will: Contrary. Moral Realism: Partially Aligned. Correspondence Theory: Partially Aligned. Ethical Intuitionism: Aligned. Foundationalism: Partially Aligned.

Two Contrary findings. Three Partially Aligned findings. One Aligned finding. Full Dissolution.

The Mamdani Pattern and Its Significance

Mamdani’s Aligned finding on C5 — ethical intuitionism — is the most philosophically significant feature of the audit. He is the only figure in the CPA series whose Full Dissolution is accompanied by an Aligned finding on C5. The combination is not paradoxical. It reflects a specific configuration: a framework that correctly grasps the epistemological structure of moral knowledge — that injustice is directly apprehensible as a moral fact, not merely calculated or negotiated — while applying that epistemological structure to the wrong objects. Mamdani’s moral intuitions are genuine intuitions; they are intuitions about externals.

This is the sharpest possible illustration of what the Stoic conversion changes at the political level. The agent who has been converted by the first five sections of the Enchiridion retains the capacity for direct moral apprehension that Mamdani’s framework presupposes. What changes is the object of that apprehension. Instead of directly apprehending that housing insecurity is a genuine evil, he directly apprehends that the false value judgment treating housing security as a genuine good is the source of the disturbance that housing insecurity produces. The epistemological faculty is the same. The object it is directed at has been relocated from the external domain to the domain of judgment.

Mamdani’s framework is also the clearest illustration in the series of the Full Dissolution finding’s practical meaning. An agent who adopts Mamdani’s framework as his governing self-description has not merely adopted a set of policy positions. He has adopted a self-description that makes the Stoic practical program unavailable to him — not because the program is too demanding, but because the framework has closed the space in which it operates. The agent who understands himself as substantially constituted by structural conditions and whose appropriate response to those conditions is collective structural action cannot simultaneously understand himself as a sovereign rational faculty whose contentment depends on nothing external to his own correct assent. The frameworks are alternatives, not supplements.


Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.

Classical Presupposition Audit: Lawrence C. Becker

 

Classical Presupposition Audit: Lawrence C. Becker

Corpus in use: Core Stoicism, Nine Excerpts, Sterling Logic Engine v4.0, Free Will and Causation, Stoicism Moral Facts and Ethical Intuitionism, Stoicism Foundationalism and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge, Stoicism Correspondence Theory of Truth and Objective Moral Facts, Stoicism Moral Realism and the Necessity of Objective Moral Facts, The Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism, A Brief Reply Re: Dualism, Stoic Dualism and Nature, Two and One-Half Ethical Systems.


What Is the Classical Presupposition Audit?

The Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) is a philosophical instrument that identifies the embedded presuppositions a named public figure must hold in order to argue as he does, and audits those presuppositions against six classical philosophical commitments: substance dualism, libertarian free will, ethical intuitionism, foundationalism, correspondence theory of truth, and moral realism. The subject of analysis is the figure’s own argumentative record — his published philosophical works — not characterizations of him by others.

The CPA does not issue verdicts on whether a figure is a good philosopher or whether his practical recommendations are useful. It issues philosophical findings about what his argumentative record requires at the level of embedded presupposition, and what those presuppositions entail for an agent who takes up his framework as a governing account of his condition.


Subject: Lawrence C. Becker

Lawrence C. Becker (1939–2018) was Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at the College of William and Mary, associate editor of the journal Ethics (1985–2000), and co-editor of two editions of the Encyclopedia of Ethics. His primary contribution to Stoic philosophy is A New Stoicism (Princeton University Press, 1998; revised edition 2017), described by its publisher as “a secular version of the Stoic ethical project, based on contemporary cosmology and developmental psychology.” He also published on reciprocity, property rights, and metaethics. Sources for this audit: A New Stoicism (revised edition) and reviews, commentaries, and scholarly discussions of the work that document his stated positions.

Becker is the most academically rigorous figure audited in this series — a professional philosopher of the first rank who engaged the classical commitments deliberately and at length. His positions are explicit, technically developed, and formally stated. The audit accordingly produces the most precisely documented findings in the series on several commitments.


Step 1 — Presupposition Profile

Becker’s argumentative record rests on six load-bearing presuppositions.

P1 — Stoicism should be reconstructed without the metaphysical and psychological assumptions that modern philosophy and science have abandoned. This is Becker’s governing methodological commitment, stated in the subtitle and elaborated throughout the book. His project asks what Stoicism would look like if it had continued as an unbroken tradition, adapting to modern science and philosophy along the way. He explicitly identifies the ancient Stoic theology (the rational World-Soul, Providence, the logos as immanent cosmic principle) and the ancient metaphysics (substance dualism, teleological cosmology) as assumptions that “modern philosophy and science have abandoned” and that his reconstruction therefore leaves behind. This is the most explicit and thoroughgoing methodological secularism in the series — more systematically argued than Pigliucci’s and more philosophically precise than Robertson’s.

P2 — We live in a deterministic universe, and Stoic ethics must be constructed compatibly with determinism. Becker explicitly accepts causal determinism. He states that “we live in a deterministic universe where everything happens as a result of cause and effect” and argues that Stoic agency must be constructed within this framework. He endorses compatibilism as “the only logically viable, and pragmatically useful way around these issues,” explicitly rejecting “free (meaning, independent of causality) will because we don’t believe in miracles, which are suspensions of the laws of nature.” This is the clearest and most philosophically precise statement of compatibilism in the series.

P3 — “Follow nature” must be replaced by “follow the facts,” where the facts are determined by contemporary science. Becker argues that the ancient Stoic injunction to live in accordance with nature was grounded in a teleological view of nature that modern science has abandoned. His replacement maxim — follow the facts — means: derive values from practical reasoning applied to facts about human nature, human psychology, and the social world as revealed by contemporary science. Science (broadly construed to include social sciences and developmental psychology) is the authoritative arbiter of what the facts are.

P4 — There are no a priori good forms of ethical reasoning; ethical reasons are all-things-considered judgments derived from the agent’s projects through a process of coherence-seeking. This is the most philosophically distinctive presupposition in Becker’s record. He argues explicitly that “Stoics hold that there are no a priori good forms of reasoning.” Ethical reasons are whatever all-things-considered judgments the agent arrives at through pruning, integrating, or rank-ordering his first-order and higher-order projects. This is a coherentist rather than foundationalist account of ethical justification — there are no self-evident first principles from which conclusions are deduced; there are only coherently integrated sets of projects, motivations, and commitments.

P5 — Virtue is the only good, and virtue is best understood as “ideal agency” — the optimal coherent integration and expression of one’s projects and motivations over a lifetime. Despite the naturalist and determinist framework, Becker robustly affirms the classical Stoic value hierarchy: virtue is the only thing good in itself; everything else is rank-ordered relative to it as preferred or dispreferred. He also affirms that virtue is sufficient for happiness. His account of virtue as “ideal agency” — relentlessly aimed at achieving and sustaining a coherent, well-integrated form of practical rationality over a whole life — is a sophisticated naturalistic reconstruction of the Stoic sage ideal.

P6 — The fact-value distinction is a philosophical error; Stoic naturalism correctly dissolves it by grounding values in facts about human nature through practical reason. Becker explicitly targets the fact-value distinction — Hume’s is-ought gap — as one of the “fads” that destroyed serious moral philosophy in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. His naturalistic Stoicism argues that practical reason connects facts about human nature and the social world to normative conclusions through a series of conditional imperatives: IF one wishes to live well as the kind of creature one is, THEN certain things follow. This is a means-ends naturalism that attempts to close the is-ought gap without invoking non-natural moral properties.

Domain mapping: Becker’s record is internally consistent in a way that produces clean findings. P2 produces a Contrary on C2. P1 and the absence of any appeal to a distinct rational substance produces a Contrary on C1. P4 produces a Contrary on C6 (moral realism) and C3 (ethical intuitionism), since there are no a priori moral principles and no non-natural moral facts — only coherent practical reasoning from natural facts. P6 is directly relevant to C3 and C6. P5 affirms the correct value conclusions while the grounding diverges systematically from the classical commitments. The only domain tension in Becker’s record is between P5 (virtue is genuinely the only good) and P4/P6 (there are no a priori moral truths; values are grounded in naturalistic practical reasoning). This tension is the same structure as Pigliucci’s C3 Inconsistent finding — but in Becker’s case P4 explicitly rules out the intuitionist route, which produces a cleaner Contrary rather than an Inconsistent finding.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

Commitment 1 — Substance Dualism: Contrary

Becker’s secular naturalism explicitly excludes the ancient Stoic metaphysics — including whatever account of the rational faculty’s ontological distinctness the ancient system contained. His reconstruction is “without the metaphysical and psychological assumptions that modern philosophy and science have abandoned.” His account of agency operates within a determinist causal framework (P2) in which the inner life is a natural process causally continuous with the rest of the physical world. There is no ontological space in his framework for the rational faculty as a distinct substance prior to all external material conditions. Practical reason is the faculty that enables agency — but it is a natural faculty, not a distinct substance.

Finding: Contrary. Becker’s secular naturalism directly contradicts the classical commitment. The contradiction is explicit, load-bearing, and stated in the governing thesis of the work.

Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free Will: Contrary

Becker’s explicit and philosophically careful compatibilism is the most precisely stated Contrary finding in the series. He writes that Stoics “don’t believe in ‘free’ (meaning, independent of causality) will because we don’t believe in miracles, which are suspensions of the laws of nature.” He endorses compatibilism as the only logically viable position. His account of Stoic agency within determinism — that the agent is a genuine causal participant whose character and practical reasoning make a real difference to outcomes — is philosophically careful, but it is not the origination of assent independently of prior causes that the classical commitment requires.

Finding: Contrary. Becker’s explicit rejection of libertarian free will as belief in miracles directly contradicts the classical commitment. The contradiction is stated in the philosopher’s own text with full awareness of what is being rejected.

Commitment 3 — Ethical Intuitionism: Contrary

P4 is decisive. Becker explicitly states that “Stoics hold that there are no a priori good forms of reasoning.” He argues that ethical reasons are all-things-considered judgments derived from the agent’s projects through coherence-seeking, not from direct rational apprehension of necessary moral truths. His replacement of “follow nature” with “follow the facts” is explicitly a move away from any a priori moral epistemology: values are grounded in facts about human nature as revealed by science and social science, not in the self-evident deliverances of reason operating independently of experience.

His explicit targeting of what he calls “nonnaturalism” and “intuitionism” as philosophical fads that destroyed moral philosophy further confirms the Contrary finding. Becker identifies intuitionism as precisely one of the philosophical errors his reconstruction is designed to avoid.

Finding: Contrary. Becker’s explicit denial of a priori moral reasoning and his explicit identification of intuitionism as a philosophical error directly contradict the classical commitment. This is the most clearly stated Contrary on C3 in the series — more explicit even than Daltrey’s, because Becker names intuitionism specifically as a target.

Commitment 4 — Foundationalism: Contrary

P4 is again decisive. Becker’s account of Stoic ethical reasoning is explicitly coherentist rather than foundationalist. There are no a priori first principles from which ethical conclusions are derived; there are only coherently integrated sets of projects, motivations, and commitments that the agent refines through practical reasoning over a lifetime. His normative logic is a system of conditional imperatives — IF-THEN reasoning from facts about the agent’s situation to norms — not a deductive system from self-evident foundations.

His explicit objection to what he calls “a priori principles” as one of the philosophical fads that undermined serious moral philosophy confirms the Contrary finding. Becker treats foundationalism in ethics — the derivation of ethical conclusions from self-evident necessary first principles — as a philosophical error to be rejected, not a feature to be preserved.

Finding: Contrary. Becker’s explicit coherentism and his explicit rejection of a priori principles in ethics directly contradict the classical commitment’s account of foundational self-evident moral truths. This is the most precise Contrary on C4 in the series.

Commitment 5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: Partially Aligned

Becker’s naturalism rests on a correspondence account of factual truth: science tells us what the facts are because scientific claims correspond to reality. His injunction to “follow the facts” presupposes that there are facts to follow — that claims about human nature, the social world, and the physical universe are true or false independently of what we prefer them to be. His critique of relativism and irony as philosophical errors also presupposes correspondence.

However, his coherentist account of ethical justification (P4) limits the scope of correspondence in his moral framework. On his account, moral conclusions do not correspond to mind-independent moral facts — they are whatever the agent arrives at through coherent practical reasoning from natural facts. This restricts the correspondence account to the factual domain and introduces a coherentist account for the normative domain.

Finding: Partially Aligned. Becker’s correspondence account of factual truth aligns with the classical commitment for scientific and empirical claims. The residual: his coherentist account of ethical justification limits correspondence theory to the factual domain and excludes it from the normative domain, which diverges from the classical commitment’s application of correspondence to moral claims as well as factual ones.

Commitment 6 — Moral Realism: Contrary

Becker’s explicit rejection of non-naturalism and his explicitly naturalistic grounding of moral conclusions produces a Contrary finding on C6. The classical commitment holds that moral facts are mind-independent necessary truths — as necessary as mathematical truths — knowable by reason independently of empirical investigation. Becker explicitly rejects this: moral conclusions are derived from natural facts about human nature and the social world through practical reasoning. There are no non-natural moral properties, no mind-independent moral facts of the classical kind, and no a priori moral knowledge. His explicit identification of “nonnaturalism” as a philosophical fad confirms this.

Becker does affirm that virtue is the only genuine good — which is a moral realist conclusion. But he grounds this in naturalistic practical reasoning, not in mind-independent moral facts. This is exactly the structure of naturalistic moral realism, which is a form of moral realism but not the form the classical commitment requires. The classical commitment requires moral facts to be necessary truths independent of natural facts — facts that would remain true even if human nature were different. Becker’s naturalism makes moral conclusions dependent on contingent facts about what human beings are and how they flourish, which falls short of the classical commitment at the decisive point.

Finding: Contrary. Becker’s explicit naturalism and his explicit rejection of non-naturalism directly contradict the classical commitment’s account of moral facts as mind-independent necessary truths. The contradiction is stated in the governing framework of the work.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

Commitment 1: Contrary. Commitment 2: Contrary.

Both C1 and C2 are Contrary.

Finding: Full Dissolution.

Becker’s framework structurally requires those who adopt it to understand themselves as natural agents within a deterministic causal universe, whose choices are compatibilistically determined outputs of their character and circumstances, and whose moral conclusions are derived from coherent practical reasoning applied to natural facts rather than from direct apprehension of necessary moral truths. The self-governing rational faculty — the prohairesis that the classical tradition identifies as the agent’s true identity and the only locus of genuine good — does not exist as a distinct substance in Becker’s framework. It is a natural faculty — sophisticated, causally efficacious, and constitutive of genuine agency — but continuous with and determined by the natural world from which it emerges.

Becker’s dissolution is the most academically rigorous in the series. Unlike Robertson’s therapeutic naturalism or Pigliucci’s secular popularisation, Becker’s Full Dissolution follows from a technically sophisticated philosophical reconstruction that engages the relevant commitments directly and rejects them with explicit argument.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Part A — Commitment Pattern

Substance Dualism: Contrary. Libertarian Free Will: Contrary. Ethical Intuitionism: Contrary. Foundationalism: Contrary. Correspondence Theory of Truth: Partially Aligned. Moral Realism: Contrary.

Overall pattern: 0 Aligned, 1 Partially Aligned, 5 Contrary, 0 Inconsistent, 0 Non-Operative.

This is the most divergent finding in the series, exceeding even Pigliucci’s three Contrary findings. Five Contrary findings, one Partially Aligned, zero Aligned, zero Inconsistent. No figure audited produces five Contrary findings.

Deepest divergence: C3 and C4 together. Becker explicitly targets intuitionism and a priori moral reasoning as philosophical errors, and explicitly endorses coherentism over foundationalism in ethics. These are the two classical commitments that concern the epistemological architecture of moral knowledge — how we know that virtue is the only good and how that knowledge is structured. Becker not only diverges from both but argues against them by name.

Most notable feature: the pattern is entirely consistent. Five Contrary findings and one Partially Aligned trace to the same single governing commitment: secular naturalism applied rigorously to ethics. Unlike Pigliucci’s C3 Inconsistent finding — which reveals a tension between his metaethical denial and his practical moral affirmations — Becker’s pattern produces no Inconsistent findings. His coherentist naturalism is internally consistent: he never argues as though moral truths are simply apprehended by reason independently of experience, because his framework explicitly rules that out. He is the most philosophically consistent secular naturalist in the series, and consequently the most divergent from the classical commitments.

Comparison with Pigliucci: both produce Full Dissolution, both are secular naturalists, both explicitly reject key classical commitments. Pigliucci produces three Contrary findings and one Inconsistent. Becker produces five Contrary findings and no Inconsistent. Pigliucci’s C3 Inconsistent finding reveals that he sometimes argues as though the Stoic value hierarchy is simply apprehended by reason independently of experience, which is the intuitionist structure. Becker never makes that move: he consistently derives the value hierarchy from naturalistic practical reasoning, producing a philosophically cleaner but more thoroughly divergent framework.

Part B — Dissolution Finding

Full Dissolution. Becker’s framework requires those who adopt it to locate themselves within a deterministic natural world in which their choices are compatibilistically determined, their moral conclusions are coherentist outputs of practical reasoning from natural facts, and the classical account of the rational faculty as distinct substance and genuine first cause is explicitly ruled out. The dissolution is the most thoroughly argued in the series.

Part C — Agent-Level Implication

An agent who adopts Becker’s framework as his governing self-description takes up the following: virtue is the only genuine good; everything else is rank-ordered as preferred or dispreferred; eudaimonia follows from virtue alone; he is a natural agent within a deterministic universe; his choices are real and causally efficacious within that universe; his moral conclusions are derived from coherent practical reasoning applied to facts about his nature and situation; and there are no a priori moral truths, no mind-independent moral facts, and no self-evident foundations from which ethics is deduced.

Becker’s framework gets the value hierarchy right — virtue is the only good, externals are indifferent, eudaimonia follows from virtue alone. In practical terms this produces an agent whose aims and commitments align with what the classical system requires. But the philosophical architecture underneath is comprehensively naturalistic, coherentist, and determinist. The agent has arrived at the right destination by a route that has replaced every load-bearing structural element of the classical account along the way.

The consequence: an agent governed by Becker’s framework cannot answer the question “why is virtue the only good?” without circular appeal to the coherence of his own projects, or without invoking facts about human nature that a sufficiently unusual human being might not share. He cannot appeal to necessity — to virtue being good in the way that 2+2=4 is true — because his framework explicitly denies that moral claims have that kind of necessity. He cannot appeal to direct rational apprehension because his framework explicitly rejects a priori moral reasoning. What he can say is: given what I am, given what human beings are, given the social world I inhabit, this is what coherent practical reasoning delivers. That is a sophisticated and serious position. It is not the position the classical commitments occupy.

The classical commitments answer the question differently: virtue is the only good because that is what the rational faculty apprehends directly when it examines value without distortion — a necessary truth, as accessible to any rational agent as the truths of logic and mathematics, and as independent of the contingent facts of human nature. Becker’s framework cannot make that answer available. What it offers in its place is the most rigorous, technically sophisticated secular reconstruction of Stoic ethics available in the modern literature — and a framework whose conclusions are right while its philosophical foundations systematically replace every element the classical account requires.


Corpus Boundary Declaration: The CPA has not issued findings on whether Becker’s philosophical reconstruction of Stoicism is historically accurate, whether his normative logic is technically sound, whether his account of virtue as ideal agency is adequate to the classical Stoic ideal, or whether his practical recommendations are useful. Those questions are outside the instrument’s reach.


Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Political Philosophy Implied by Sterling’s Fully Aligned Commitments

 

Political Philosophy Implied by Sterling’s Fully Aligned Commitments

This is not a political program in the ordinary sense. It is the necessary political posture that follows when all six classical commitments are held consistently:

  • substance dualism
  • libertarian free will
  • ethical intuitionism
  • foundationalism
  • correspondence theory of truth
  • moral realism

What follows is the structure that these commitments force, not a policy platform.


I. First Principle: Moral Sovereignty of the Rational Agent

From dualism and libertarian freedom:

  • The only locus of value is the rational faculty (prohairesis).
  • Each agent is fully responsible for assent.
  • No external condition can determine moral worth.

Political implication:

The primary political fact is not class, group, identity, or outcome. It is the existence of independent rational agents with absolute responsibility for their judgments.

This immediately rules out:

  • structural determinism
  • moral outsourcing to institutions
  • identity-based moral valuation

II. Objective Moral Order Independent of the State

From moral realism, correspondence, and intuitionism:

  • Good and evil are facts, not conventions.
  • They are knowable through reason.
  • They do not depend on law, majority opinion, or cultural norms.

Political implication:

The state does not create moral order. It operates within a moral order it does not control.

This eliminates:

  • legal positivism (law = right)
  • moral relativism in governance
  • “democratic truth” (truth by vote)

III. Internalism: The State Cannot Deliver the Good

From the Stoic value structure:

  • Virtue is the only good.
  • Vice is the only evil.
  • Externals (wealth, health, status, outcomes) are indifferent.

Political implication:

No political system can make people good, harm their moral character, or secure their happiness.

Therefore:

  • redistribution cannot produce the good
  • deprivation cannot produce evil
  • political success or failure is morally secondary

This collapses the core premise of most modern ideologies: that external arrangements determine human flourishing.


IV. Rejection of Political Salvation

From the guarantee of eudaimonia through correct assent:

  • Happiness is guaranteed by right judgment, not conditions.
  • No external arrangement is necessary for flourishing.

Political implication:

Politics cannot save anyone.

This eliminates:

  • utopianism
  • revolutionary salvation narratives
  • progressivist “moral arc” theories
  • technocratic optimization as a moral project

Politics becomes instrumental and limited, not redemptive.


V. Justice Reframed: Role-Based Rational Action

From the action structure (aim, means, reservation):

  • Actions are judged by correctness of aim (virtue).
  • Actions are judged by rational selection of means.
  • Actions are judged by acceptance of outcome (reserve clause).

Political implication:

Justice is not equality of outcomes, distribution of goods, or satisfaction of preferences.

Justice is this: each agent acting rationally within their roles (citizen, official, judge, parent), without assigning value to externals.

This produces:

  • strict role ethics
  • duty without attachment to results
  • impartiality grounded in reason, not sentiment

VI. Freedom Reconceived

From libertarian assent and internalism:

  • True freedom = freedom of judgment.
  • External freedom (political liberty, rights, conditions) is secondary.

Political implication:

A person can be fully free under tyranny and unfree under democracy.

Thus:

  • political liberty is a preferred indifferent, not a good
  • loss of rights is not a moral harm
  • preservation of inner freedom is the only necessity

This sharply diverges from all modern political doctrines.


VII. Minimal but Non-Null Role of the State

The framework does not abolish politics. It constrains it.

The state has a limited instrumental function:

  • coordination of social life
  • maintenance of order
  • provision of conditions that are appropriate to pursue as preferred indifferents

But:

  • it does not produce virtue
  • it does not define value
  • it does not determine happiness

Best characterization:

A rational minimalism, not in the libertarian economic sense, but in the moral scope of politics.


VIII. Structural Comparison to Modern Ideologies

Feature Sterling-Consistent Politics Modern Politics
Source of value Internal (prohairesis) External (conditions, outcomes)
Moral truth Objective, independent Constructed, negotiated
Role of state Instrumental, limited Moral agent, problem-solver
Freedom Inner (assent) External (rights, conditions)
Justice Rational role-action Distribution / equality
Salvation Impossible politically Central assumption

IX. Final Characterization

The political philosophy implied by Sterling’s commitments is:

  • Anti-utopian — denies political salvation
  • Anti-relativist — affirms objective moral truth
  • Anti-collectivist — rejects group-based moral identity
  • Anti-materialist — denies value in externals
  • Radically individual in the Stoic sense — centers moral responsibility in the rational agent

But it is not libertarianism, conservatism, or any modern ideology.


Bottom Line

If all six classical commitments are held consistently, politics is reduced to this: a secondary, external coordination system that has no power over what actually matters — the correctness of judgment.

Everything modern politics treats as primary — outcomes, conditions, distributions, identities — is reclassified as morally indifferent.

The result is not a new political ideology.

It is the collapse of politics as a source of meaning, value, or salvation.

Toward a Virtue-Facilitating Economy: A Proposal

 

Toward a Virtue-Facilitating Economy: A Proposal

The question of what economic system and corporate management structure best facilitates virtue among citizens and employees is not a question standard economic theory can answer. Standard economic theory takes preferences as given and asks how to satisfy them efficiently. It does not ask whether the preferences are the products of correct or false value judgments. The Stoic framework asks precisely that question — and its answer changes everything about how an economy and its institutions should be designed.

This proposal is not a utopian program. It does not aim to make people good by institutional arrangement — that is impossible. The only thing that can make a person good is the correct governance of his own rational faculty. What institutions can do is stop systematically producing and rewarding false value judgments, and create conditions in which the path of correct judgment is the path of least institutional resistance. That is the governing aim of what follows.

The theoretical foundations are Grant C. Sterling’s reconstruction of classical Stoicism. The proposal architecture is Dave Kelly’s. The political application is Kelly’s alone; Sterling is credited for the philosophical foundations only.


I. The Governing Diagnosis

Every modern economic system is organized around a false value judgment. The judgment takes different forms in different systems — maximize preference-satisfaction (market liberalism), maximize collective welfare (socialism), maximize national output (statist developmentalism) — but the underlying error is the same in each case: externals are treated as genuine goods whose production, distribution, or satisfaction is the central moral project of economic life.

The Stoic diagnosis is more precise. Disturbance, vice, and unhappiness arise not from external conditions but from false beliefs about external conditions — the belief that wealth is genuinely good, that poverty is genuinely evil, that status matters, that outcomes determine the quality of a life. An economy organized around the efficient production of externals is not morally neutral with respect to this diagnosis. It is an institutional system that continuously reinforces the false value judgment by treating externals as the measure of success, the object of desire, and the substance of the good life. It makes the false judgment structurally mandatory for anyone who wishes to participate in economic life.

The virtue-facilitating economy does not eliminate externals or their pursuit. Preferred indifferents — health, sustenance, knowledge, shelter, honest exchange, productive work — are rational objects of aim. What the virtue-facilitating economy eliminates is the institutional reinforcement of the belief that these things are genuine goods rather than appropriate objects of rational aim held with reservation. The difference is not in what is produced but in the value structure that governs why it is pursued.


II. Principles of the Virtue-Facilitating Economy

Principle 1 — Role primacy over outcome primacy. The governing standard of economic conduct is not the outcome produced but the correctness of the rational action taken within one’s role. A farmer who plants correctly, tends correctly, and harvests correctly has performed virtuously regardless of whether the harvest is abundant or poor. A manager who identifies the appropriate object of aim, selects rational means, and acts with reservation has performed virtuously regardless of whether the quarterly numbers are favorable. The economy is structured to measure and reward role-correct action, not outcome success.

This is not an abolition of accountability. Outcomes matter as preferred indifferents — they are appropriate objects of aim and genuine information about the quality of means selection. What they are not is the measure of the agent’s moral worth or the primary basis of his compensation and status.

Principle 2 — Sufficiency over accumulation. The virtue-facilitating economy distinguishes between the rational pursuit of preferred indifferents and the desire for externals as genuine goods. Sufficiency — having what one’s roles and rational aims require — is the appropriate economic standard. Accumulation beyond sufficiency, pursued as a genuine good rather than as an appropriate aim held with reservation, is a false value judgment institutionalized as economic behavior. The economy does not prohibit wealth but does not organize itself around its maximization. Tax, compensation, and incentive structures are oriented toward sufficiency in role discharge rather than toward unlimited accumulation.

Principle 3 — Transparency of value claims. Every economic institution makes implicit claims about what is valuable. The virtue-facilitating economy requires these claims to be explicit and subject to rational examination. Advertising, compensation structures, status hierarchies, and performance metrics all embed value claims. Where those claims presuppose that externals are genuine goods — that more is always better, that status is worth pursuing for its own sake, that the successful person is the wealthy person — they are false and their falseness must be statable and examinable within the institutional framework. This does not mean eliminating markets or price signals. It means requiring that the value claims embedded in institutional design be visible and accountable to rational scrutiny.

Principle 4 — Work as role-discharge rather than identity-constitution. Modern economies treat work as a primary source of identity and meaning — what you do is who you are. This is a false value judgment of precisely the kind the Stoic framework identifies as productive of disturbance. The virtue-facilitating economy treats work as the discharge of roles that generate genuine duties and appropriate objects of aim, without treating those roles as constitutive of the agent’s worth or identity. A person who loses his job has lost a role and its preferred indifferents. He has not lost himself. Institutional design — in compensation, in career structures, in the language used about work — reflects this distinction.

Principle 5 — Market scope limitation. Following Sterling’s Aristotelian framework, the virtue-facilitating economy limits the scope of market logic to domains where it does not systematically corrupt virtue. Markets in goods and services that are appropriate preferred indifferents are legitimate and efficient. Markets that commodify the rational faculty itself — that treat judgment, attention, assent, and will as products to be bought and shaped — are outside the legitimate scope of economic activity. The attention economy, in which human cognitive and emotional engagement is the product being optimized and sold, is a direct institutional assault on the prohairesis. It is excluded from the virtue-facilitating economy on principled grounds.


III. Principles of Virtue-Facilitating Corporate Management

Principle 6 — Role-clarity as primary management function. The primary function of management in the virtue-facilitating corporation is to make roles and their duties clear, so that each person in the organization knows what his operative roles are, what preferred indifferents those roles make appropriate to aim at, and what manner of action the roles require. Ambiguity about roles is not merely an operational problem. It is a moral problem: it prevents the agent from identifying the appropriate object of aim and leaves him vulnerable to substituting personal desire for role-duty. Management that creates role clarity enables virtue. Management that creates ambiguity, conflicting incentives, and unclear accountability structures systematically prevents it.

Principle 7 — Separation of outcome judgment from person judgment. The virtue-facilitating corporation distinguishes at every level between the quality of a person’s action and the quality of the outcome it produced. These are not the same. A decision made on the basis of the best available information and correct role-discharge may produce a poor outcome. A reckless or corrupt decision may produce a favorable outcome by luck. Performance management, promotion, and compensation are based on the quality of the action — the correctness of the aim, the rationality of the means, the integrity of the manner — not primarily on the outcome. This is not a prohibition on outcome accountability. It is a subordination of outcome accountability to action accountability.

Principle 8 — Reserve clause culture. The virtue-facilitating corporation cultivates what might be called a reserve clause culture: the habit of pursuing appropriate objects of aim with full effort and zero attachment to outcome. This is not passivity or lack of ambition. It is the recognition that the outcome is not in the agent’s control, that his good does not depend on it, and that the equanimity required for sustained rational action over time depends on not staking his wellbeing on results he cannot guarantee. Management structures, goal-setting frameworks, and organizational narratives all reinforce this orientation. Success is defined as correct action taken with reservation, not as favorable outcome achieved.

Principle 9 — Elimination of false incentive structures. Most corporate incentive structures systematically reward false value judgments. Compensation tied to stock price rewards the belief that shareholder value is the genuine good the corporation exists to produce. Status hierarchies tied to title and salary reward the belief that rank is a genuine good worth pursuing. Performance bonuses tied to individual outcomes reward the belief that external results are the measure of the agent’s worth. The virtue-facilitating corporation replaces these structures with incentives aligned to role-correct action: recognition for honest assessment of uncertainty, for correct identification of appropriate aims, for rational means selection, for integrity of manner in role-discharge.

Principle 10 — Honest speech as institutional norm. Correspondence theory of truth — the commitment to saying what corresponds to the facts — is an institutional requirement of the virtue-facilitating corporation. This means eliminating the systematic dishonesty that characterizes most organizational communication: the optimistic forecast that conceals known uncertainties, the performance review that softens genuine assessment to avoid conflict, the strategic narrative that selects facts in service of a pre-determined conclusion. Honest speech is not merely an ethical preference. It is the institutional expression of the commitment that true impressions are to be assented to and false ones refused. An organization that systematically produces false impressions is an organization that trains its members in the habit of incorrect assent.

Principle 11 — The authority of virtue rather than the virtue of authority. The virtue-facilitating corporation grants authority on the basis of demonstrated correctness of judgment — the Aristotelian principle that the person of superior virtue is the appropriate source of governance — rather than on the basis of tenure, political skill, credential, or social connection. This does not mean that formal hierarchy is abolished. It means that formal hierarchy is legitimate only when it tracks genuine difference in the quality of rational judgment, and that authority which does not track this difference is acknowledged as provisional and subject to correction.


IV. What This System Is Not

It is not socialism. Socialism relocates the locus of economic decision-making from individual agents to collective structures, which requires individuals to identify their interests with the collective. This is a dissolution of the prohairesis into an external system.

It is not libertarianism. Libertarianism treats freedom of preference-satisfaction as the governing economic value, which institutionalizes the pursuit of externals as the purpose of economic life and provides no counterweight to false value judgments.

It is not stakeholder capitalism as currently theorized. Contemporary stakeholder capitalism expands the list of external goods the corporation is responsible for producing — environmental outcomes, social outcomes, employee wellbeing — without questioning whether external goods are genuine goods at all. It is an expansion of the false value judgment, not a correction of it.

It is not asceticism or anti-materialism. Preferred indifferents are real objects of rational aim. The virtue-facilitating economy produces them efficiently. What it does not do is treat their production as the measure of human worth or the substance of human flourishing.


V. The Realistic Assessment

Sterling himself noted that no political party he knew of would ever secure an electoral victory on a platform organized around virtue rather than preference-satisfaction. The same observation applies here. The virtue-facilitating economy is not a policy platform that a political coalition will adopt in the near term. It is a standard against which existing arrangements can be measured, and a direction in which institutions can be nudged by agents who hold the six commitments consistently and occupy roles that give them influence over institutional design.

The Stoic practitioner who understands this framework does not wait for the virtue-facilitating economy to be built before living as though it were. He discharges his economic roles — as employee, employer, consumer, investor, manager — according to the principles above, within whatever institutional constraints he actually faces, with reservation regarding the outcomes. He does not make his equanimity dependent on the economy being organized correctly. He makes his action correct regardless of whether it is.

That is the reserve clause applied to political economy. It is also the most practically useful conclusion the framework produces.


Proposal architecture and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling, including Core Stoicism, the Sterling Logic Engine v4.0, the Sterling Decision Framework v3.3, and Stoicism, Politics, and the Best Form of Government. Prose rendering: Claude.

Classical Ideological Audit: Eric Swalwell

 

Classical Ideological Audit: Eric Swalwell

Instrument: Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v2.0

The CIA audits ideological frameworks for their degree of affinity with six classical philosophical commitments: substance dualism, libertarian free will, moral realism, correspondence theory of truth, ethical intuitionism, and foundationalism. The subject of analysis is propositional content — the presuppositions an ideological record must hold in order to argue as it does. The instrument does not issue political verdicts. It issues philosophical findings. Personal conduct is outside the instrument’s scope. Sources: Swalwell’s documented public record including congressional positions, presidential campaign statements (2019), gubernatorial campaign materials (2026), and legislative record.

Political Application Constraint: Sterling’s name is not associated with political applications, political figures, or political products. This analysis is Dave Kelly’s work derived from Sterling’s theoretical foundations.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

The instrument is not proceeding from memory. Swalwell’s ideological position will be stated in propositional form before the audit begins. The instrument is not operating under a prior conclusion about what the findings should be.


Step 1 — Ideology Statement

Swalwell’s public record represents a well-defined strand of progressive American liberalism. Its core presuppositions, drawn from his documented positions, are these:

First, human flourishing is substantially determined by external conditions — access to healthcare, education, economic opportunity, gun safety, and a stable climate. The state’s primary moral function is to secure and improve these conditions. Second, structural inequalities are genuine evils whose correction is the central project of just governance. Third, individuals are embedded in social conditions that significantly shape their choices, opportunities, and outcomes; these conditions are morally significant and politically actionable. Fourth, the moral arc of political progress is real and directional — better external arrangements produce better human lives. Fifth, democratic accountability and institutional reform are the mechanisms through which the moral project of politics is advanced. Sixth, the state is a moral agent capable of producing genuine goods — not merely a coordinator of individual preferences, but an instrument of collective flourishing.

This is not an idiosyncratic position. It is the governing framework of mainstream progressive American liberalism, consistently expressed across Swalwell’s decade-long legislative record, his 2019 presidential campaign, and his 2026 gubernatorial campaign with its explicit appeal to “the California promise: work hard and dream bigger for your kids.”


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

Commitment 1 — Substance Dualism: Divergent

Substance dualism requires that the rational faculty — the inner life of the individual, his will and judgments — be treated as categorically distinct from and prior to all external material conditions. Swalwell’s entire political framework presupposes the opposite: that external conditions substantially shape the individual, his opportunities, his choices, and his flourishing. Healthcare access, educational quality, economic structure, and environmental stability are treated not as indifferent background conditions but as morally primary determinants of what a person can become and do. The self, in this framework, is not prior to its conditions. It is constituted by them. This is not a peripheral claim in Swalwell’s record — it is the load-bearing presupposition of every major policy position he holds.

Finding: Divergent.

Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free Will: Divergent

Libertarian free will requires that assent, choice, and moral responsibility originate in the rational faculty independently of external determining conditions. Swalwell’s framework consistently treats external conditions — structural inequality, lack of access, environmental degradation, institutional failure — as the causal explanation for compromised human outcomes. This is not a claim that external conditions influence choices; it is a claim that they determine the range and quality of choices available, and that this determination is what politics must address. The moral urgency of his legislative program depends on this presupposition: if individuals were genuinely self-originating agents whose flourishing was independent of external arrangements, the case for state intervention to correct those arrangements would dissolve. His framework requires that external conditions causally constrain genuine agency in ways that the state can and must remedy.

Finding: Divergent.

Commitment 3 — Moral Realism: Partial Convergence

Moral realism requires that there are objective moral facts independent of individual or collective preference. Swalwell’s record presupposes that gun violence is genuinely wrong, that inequality is genuinely unjust, that certain policies are genuinely better than others — not merely that they are preferred by a majority or useful for aggregate welfare. His moral language is consistently realist in register: he speaks of rights, justice, and accountability as though these name real features of a situation rather than expressions of political preference. However, his account of where moral facts come from — and how they are known — is not developed philosophically. His realism is practical and rhetorical rather than grounded. The residual divergence is this: his framework treats moral facts as generated by democratic consensus and institutional accountability rather than as mind-independent truths apprehensible by reason. That is a constructivist drift that limits the convergence finding.

Finding: Partial Convergence. Swalwell’s moral language presupposes objective moral facts. His account of their source and epistemological status is constructivist rather than realist in the classical sense.

Commitment 4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: Partial Convergence

Correspondence theory requires that true beliefs correspond to mind-independent facts about reality. Swalwell’s record shows consistent commitment to factual accuracy, empirical evidence, and institutional accountability — positions that presuppose a fact of the matter to which claims either correspond or fail to correspond. His advocacy for democratic accountability and his opposition to what he characterizes as misinformation both presuppose correspondence theory in their operational structure. The residual divergence is that his political epistemology is fundamentally procedural: truth, in practice, is what emerges from accountable democratic processes and credentialed institutional consensus. That proceduralism is not identical to correspondence theory and in some formulations contradicts it.

Finding: Partial Convergence. Operational presuppositions align with correspondence theory. The procedural account of epistemic authority introduces a residual divergence.

Commitment 5 — Ethical Intuitionism: Divergent

Ethical intuitionism requires that moral truths are directly apprehensible by the rational faculty without dependence on empirical consequences, institutional authority, or democratic procedure. Swalwell’s entire moral epistemology is consequentialist and proceduralist: the rightness of a policy is established by its effects on people’s lives and by its endorsement through legitimate democratic processes. The individual rational faculty apprehending moral truth directly — independently of outcomes, institutions, and collective decision-making — plays no role in his framework. His record contains no moment where he appeals to direct rational apprehension of moral truth as a ground for political action. Every moral claim is grounded in its consequences for human welfare or in democratic legitimacy. This is a clean and consistent divergence from ethical intuitionism.

Finding: Divergent.

Commitment 6 — Foundationalism: Divergent

Foundationalism requires a structured hierarchy of justified beliefs grounded in non-negotiable first principles from which all further commitments derive. Swalwell’s ideological framework is pragmatic and pluralist: it draws on multiple value streams — democratic accountability, economic opportunity, gun safety, climate action, reproductive rights — without deriving them from a single governing first principle. The commitments coexist in a coalition structure rather than a foundational hierarchy. More significantly, his framework treats democratic consensus and institutional process as the governing epistemic authority, which is explicitly anti-foundationalist: if the process produces a different result, the result is different. No single first principle stands outside and above the process to govern it. The “California promise” framing of his gubernatorial campaign is illustrative — it is an aspirational narrative, not a foundational philosophical claim.

Finding: Divergent.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

The CIA’s dissolution criterion asks whether the ideology’s presuppositions dissolve the prohairesis — whether they relocate the locus of genuine value and agency from the rational faculty to the external domain in a way that makes the Stoic practical program incoherent within the framework.

Swalwell’s framework does dissolve the prohairesis, and does so completely. Its foundational claim — that external conditions substantially determine human flourishing and that the state’s moral function is to improve those conditions — presupposes that the external domain is where genuine value is produced and genuine harm is done. Healthcare, education, economic opportunity, and environmental stability are not preferred indifferents in his framework. They are the substance of what a good human life consists in. Their absence is not a preferred dispreferred to be rationally managed; it is a genuine evil that politics must remedy.

This is not a partial dissolution. There is no space within Swalwell’s framework for the Stoic claim that a person can be fully flourishing under conditions of poverty, illness, or institutional injustice through the correct governance of his rational faculty. That claim would render his entire political program motivationally incoherent — there would be no moral urgency to improving external conditions if those conditions were genuinely indifferent to human flourishing.

Finding: Full Dissolution.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Commitment Pattern

Substance Dualism: Divergent. Libertarian Free Will: Divergent. Moral Realism: Partial Convergence. Correspondence Theory: Partial Convergence. Ethical Intuitionism: Divergent. Foundationalism: Divergent.

Four Divergent findings, two Partial Convergence, zero Convergent.

Dissolution: Full.

Interpretive Note

Swalwell’s pattern is characteristic of mainstream progressive liberalism and should be read as such rather than as a finding specific to him personally. The four Divergent findings on C1, C2, C5, and C6 are not idiosyncratic — they reflect the structural presuppositions of any political framework whose central claim is that external conditions determine human flourishing and that improving those conditions is the central moral project of the state. Any figure whose record is organized around that claim will produce this pattern.

The two Partial Convergence findings on C3 and C4 are also characteristic. Progressive liberalism is not relativist or anti-realist in its moral language — it speaks the language of rights, justice, and accountability, which presupposes objective moral facts. And it is not generally hostile to the idea that claims correspond to facts. These are points of genuine partial affinity that the instrument records accurately.

The Full Dissolution finding is the philosophically decisive result. It identifies not a policy disagreement but a foundational incompatibility: the framework that organizes Swalwell’s political life is built on the presupposition that the Stoic practical program systematically denies.


Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v2.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.