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By Dave Kelly

Saturday, May 30, 2026

The Classical Field Audit — Series Summary Findings Across Thirteen Fields of Inquiry

 

The Classical Field Audit — Series Summary

Findings Across Thirteen Fields of Inquiry

Instrument: Classical Field Audit (CFA) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Prose rendering: Claude. 2026.


I. The Series

The Classical Field Audit is an instrument designed to identify the governing presuppositions of a named field of inquiry and audit them against six classical philosophical commitments: Substance Dualism (C1), Metaphysical Libertarianism (C2), Moral Realism (C3), Correspondence Theory of Truth (C4), Ethical Intuitionism (C5), and Foundationalism (C6). Each run produces six commitment-level findings and one synthetic Capacity Loss finding that identifies what the field has lost the ability to produce as a result of displacing the classical commitments.

The series was initiated in connection with Steve Fuller’s observation that American Pragmatism did not join the Western philosophical tradition but redirected it — changing the governing question of philosophy from “What is true?” to “What works?” The CFA series tests that diagnosis across thirteen fields to determine how far the displacement extends and what specifically has been lost in each domain.

The thirteen fields audited, in series order: Psychology, Psychiatry, Education, Law, History, Literary Criticism, Political Theory, Ethics, Epistemology, Theology, Philosophy, Medicine, and Economics.


II. Complete Findings

FIELD               C1           C2           C3           C4           C5           C6           CAPACITY LOSS
Psychology          Contrary     Inconsist.   Contrary     Part. Al.    Contrary     Contrary     Full
Psychiatry          Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Contrary     Part. Al.    Contrary     Contrary     Full*
Education           Contrary     Inconsist.   Contrary     Part. Al.    Contrary     Contrary     Full
Law                 Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Part. Al.    Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Partial
History             Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Part. Al.    Inconsist.   Contrary     Partial
Literary Criticism  Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Part. Al.    Inconsist.   Contrary     Partial
Political Theory    Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Part. Al.    Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Partial
Ethics              Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Partial
Epistemology        Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Non-Op.      Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Partial
Theology            Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Part. Al.    Inconsist.   Part. Al.    Inconsist.   Partial
Philosophy          Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Partial
Medicine            Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Part. Al.    Inconsist.   Contrary     Partial
Economics           Inconsist.   Inconsist.   Contrary     Part. Al.    Contrary     Contrary     Partial

*Reviewed and settled by Dave Kelly. The two Inconsistent findings at C1 and C2 were treated as structurally compromising on the grounds that the brain disease model constitutes the dominant governing framework and the recovery model a counter-pressure rather than a co-equal tradition. This judgment, confirmed by the instrument architect, justifies the Full finding.


III. The Capacity Loss Hierarchy

Full Capacity Loss — Three Fields

Psychology, Psychiatry (pending review), and Education each received Full Capacity Loss findings. These are the fields in which the classical commitments have been most comprehensively displaced at both the theoretical and institutional levels. The field’s governing mainstream practice does not retain significant classical resources that would allow recovery from within existing frameworks.

All three fields share a characteristic pattern: four or more Contrary findings, a Partially Aligned finding at C4 (correspondence truth retained for empirical claims), and an Inconsistent finding at C2 (the clinical or pedagogical domain presupposes genuine agency while the theoretical domain dissolves it).

The Full Capacity Loss fields are also the fields most directly concerned with the human being as a subject of care and formation: psychology addresses the mind, psychiatry addresses the disordered mind, and education addresses the developing mind. The displacement in these fields carries the most immediate human cost, because these are the fields responsible for addressing persons in their most vulnerable and formative conditions.

Partial Capacity Loss — Ten Fields

Ten fields received Partial Capacity Loss findings, each with a distinctive character. The Partial findings are not uniform: they reflect different configurations of displacement, different residual classical resources, and different forms of incapacity. Each character name identifies what has been lost and how.

Law — Theoretical Groundlessness. The field practices classically — criminal doctrine, constitutional rights adjudication, the reasonable person standard, the jury institution — while having lost the theoretical framework that would explain and justify those practices. The law continues to do what it cannot theoretically ground.

History — Internal Incoherence. The structural tradition and the biographical tradition cannot both be right about historical causation. The moral relativist tendency and critical historiography cannot both be right about whether stable moral standards exist. The field has not resolved its own internal contradictions and cannot do so within its current presuppositional structure.

Literary Criticism — Foundational Incoherence. Four governing traditions — evaluative, formalist, post-structuralist, and political — are irreconcilable at the level of presupposition. The field continues to organize itself around individual authors while operating from theories that dissolve individual authorial agency. It makes confident moral evaluations while denying the theoretical basis for moral evaluation.

Political Theory — Foundational Contestation. The field’s central unresolved problem — what constrains legitimate political power — is contested by its own major traditions. Natural law, legal positivism, constructivism, and postmodern theory cannot all be right about what grounds political obligation, and the field has no internal resources for adjudicating between them.

Ethics — Total Internal Contestation. Every foundational question the field addresses — whether moral facts are real, whether moral truth requires correspondence, whether moral knowledge involves direct recognition, whether the moral subject is a distinct rational faculty, whether reasoning has foundational structure — is answered incompatibly by different governing traditions. The field cannot resolve any of its central questions using its own resources.

Epistemology — Self-Referential Contestation. The field that most directly studies truth, knowledge, and the knowing subject is internally divided on all three. The displacement of correspondence truth from the field specifically constituted to examine it is the sharpest single structural finding in the series. The field is contested on the very questions whose resolution is required to adjudicate the disputes within it.

Theology — Philosophical Infiltration. The field’s historic traditions retain the classical commitments comprehensively — Theology is the only field to achieve Partially Aligned findings at C3 and C5, reflecting the historic theological traditions’ long-standing role as carriers of moral realism and natural law. The displacement within Theology is not internal development but the importation of philosophical programs (Kantian limits, Schleiermacherian experience-grounding, Bultmannian demythologization, Whiteheadian process) from a philosophy that had already displaced the classical commitments within its own domain.

Philosophy — Self-Displacement. Philosophy is the field that made the displacement explicit, argued for it deliberately, and implemented it institutionally. The displacement in every other field is traceable, ultimately, to decisions that Philosophy made about itself. Philosophy displaced its own governing purpose: the ancient understanding of philosophy as the cultivation of the rational faculty in pursuit of genuine wisdom and virtue required all six classical commitments, and the dominant modern tradition has explicitly theorized the abandonment of each.

Medicine — Technical Displacement of Vocation. Medicine has not merely lost theoretical coherence; it has displaced the physician’s moral vocation. The Hippocratic commitment to the patient’s genuine good has been progressively replaced by a technical service model. The displacement is experienced as a human cost — by patients who receive technically excellent care while feeling that no one is addressing their actual condition, and by physicians who entered medicine as a vocation and find themselves practicing as protocol-executing service providers.

Economics — Moral Disembedding. Economics deliberately separated itself from its own moral philosophical foundations as the condition of becoming a science. Adam Smith was a moral philosopher; positive economics has almost entirely severed that connection. The field that once asked what genuine economic justice requires now asks only what efficient preference satisfaction produces. Smith’s original questions — what does justice require in economic life, and what arrangements genuinely serve human flourishing — are outside the governing competence of positive economics.


IV. Cross-Series Patterns

The Commitment-Level View

Examined across all thirteen fields, the six classical commitments show markedly different patterns of displacement. Two commitments have been almost universally displaced. One commitment has been almost universally retained, though in a restricted domain. Three commitments show the most complex patterns of partial retention and partial displacement.

C6 — Foundationalism: the most thoroughly displaced. Foundationalism received a Contrary finding in six fields (Psychology, Psychiatry, Education, History, Literary Criticism, Economics) and an Inconsistent finding in six more (Law, Political Theory, Ethics, Epistemology, Theology, Philosophy). Only Theology and Law retained significant foundationalist traditions as load-bearing elements of their governing practice. The anti-foundationalist tendency is the most consistent feature of the modern intellectual landscape: across every field audited, the governing practice treats its claims as revisable rather than as resting on bedrock first principles.

C5 — Ethical Intuitionism: the second most thoroughly displaced. Ethical intuitionism received a Contrary finding in five fields and an Inconsistent finding in seven. Only Theology produced a Partially Aligned finding. The displacement of direct rational recognition as a legitimate epistemic resource is nearly universal. The one structurally significant exception is the persistence of intuitions and thought experiments as philosophy’s primary evidential method — which produces the C5 Inconsistent finding in Philosophy itself: the field simultaneously relies on direct rational recognition and theorizes its unreliability.

C3 — Moral Realism: the most unevenly distributed. Moral realism received a Contrary finding in five fields, an Inconsistent finding in six, and a Partially Aligned finding in one (Theology). No field produced an Aligned finding. The distribution reflects the different proximity of different fields to moral questions: fields most directly concerned with individual conduct and institutional structure (Psychology, Psychiatry, Education, Economics) show the sharpest Contrary findings; fields with live internal traditions defending moral realism (Law, History, Ethics, Political Theory) show Inconsistent findings; only Theology, which historically grounded moral realism in divine nature, shows partial alignment.

C1 and C2 — Substance Dualism and Metaphysical Libertarianism: the most consistently Inconsistent. These two commitments received Inconsistent findings in twelve of thirteen fields each. The pattern is striking: no field has wholly abandoned the rational moral subject or wholly dissolved genuine agency. Every field retains some domain — clinical practice, legal doctrine, pedagogical accountability, philosophical argument — in which the rational agent is presupposed. And every field has a theoretical domain in which that presupposition is dissolved or substantially qualified. The human being is simultaneously a rational moral agent (in every field’s institutional practice) and a biological mechanism, a cognitive architecture, or a structural expression (in every field’s dominant theoretical framework). The Inconsistent finding at C1 and C2 across virtually the entire series is the clearest evidence that the displacement is incomplete: even the most thoroughly modernized field cannot function without some operative presupposition of the rational agent it theoretically dissolves.

C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: the one retained commitment. C4 produced a Partially Aligned finding in nine fields, an Inconsistent finding in three (Ethics, Epistemology, Philosophy), and a Non-Operative finding in one (Epistemology, now corrected: it was Inconsistent). The pattern is the clearest in the series: the modern intellectual world has retained correspondence truth as the governing standard for empirical claims while restricting its domain. Every field that produces empirical knowledge — psychology, psychiatry, medicine, economics, epistemology, law, history — continues to apply the correspondence standard to factual questions: we want to know what actually happens, what is actually true about the world. What the modern world has abandoned is the application of correspondence truth to evaluative and normative questions: whether a life is genuinely flourishing, whether an arrangement is genuinely just, whether a practice is genuinely excellent. The restriction of correspondence truth to the empirical domain while removing it from the evaluative domain is the governing intellectual settlement of modernity.

The Two Fields That Theorized Their Own Displacement

Two fields in the series occupy a position that no others do: they explicitly theorized the abandonment of the classical commitments from within, as a deliberate methodological choice rather than as a downstream consequence of external philosophical pressure.

Philosophy displaced the classical commitments through explicit philosophical argument: logical positivism declared metaphysical claims meaningless, Quine dissolved the analytic-synthetic distinction, Rorty rejected the mirror of nature, Derrida demonstrated the instability of meaning. These were not unintended consequences of other commitments but deliberately chosen philosophical positions. Philosophy changed its own governing framework through the same kind of argument it had used to defend the classical framework. The Self-Displacement is therefore ironic: philosophy used its own tools to dismantle its own foundations.

Economics displaced the classical commitments as the explicit condition of its scientific status. The positive-normative split was a deliberate methodological choice — not a consequence of external pressure but a decision that economics as a science could not engage normative questions without importing value premises from outside the discipline. The Moral Disembedding was theorized, justified, and institutionalized by economists themselves. As with Philosophy, the displacement was self-generated.

The remaining eleven fields received the displacement from outside: as the downstream consequence of philosophical decisions made in Philosophy and as the infiltration of frameworks developed in Philosophy into other fields that had not themselves generated the displacement. Theology explicitly received the displacement from Kant, Schleiermacher, Hegel, and Bultmann. Law received it from legal positivism and critical legal theory. Psychology received it from neuroscience and evolutionary psychology. The philosophical decisions propagated outward.

The Upstream Diagnosis

The series establishes an identifiable causal structure. The displacement of the classical commitments across thirteen fields of inquiry is not a cultural accident, a political development, or a consequence of scientific discovery. It is the downstream consequence of explicit philosophical decisions made within Philosophy itself about what philosophy is, what truth is, what the human being is, and what moral knowledge consists in. When philosophy decided that the soul was a confused hypothesis, that freedom was compatible with determinism, that moral facts were projections or constructions, that truth was pragmatic or deflationary, that intuitions were psychological data to be explained, and that first principles were the most entrenched beliefs in a coherentist web — it produced the intellectual conditions in which every other field was free to make the same replacements. The cascade was not inevitable, but it was traceable.

The displacement can therefore only be reversed through the same kind of explicit philosophical argument that produced it. No field-internal reform can recover the classical commitments for that field alone: the presuppositions that govern each field ultimately rest on philosophical decisions about what the human being is, what truth is, what freedom is, and what moral knowledge consists in. Until those decisions are revisited and revised at the philosophical level, field-level recovery remains partial and theoretically groundless — as Law’s situation demonstrates most clearly: the field already practices classically in its institutions while having no theoretical framework to explain why those practices are appropriate.


V. The Recovered Capacity

The series identifies not only what has been lost but what recovery would make available. The restorative directions in each CFA run specify what each field would be able to do that it currently cannot if the classical commitments were restored. Across the thirteen fields, the recovered capacities converge on a single account of what the classical commitments make possible that their modern replacements cannot provide.

With Substance Dualism restored, every field recovers the capacity to address the human being as a rational subject whose inner life is prior to and not fully constituted by his external conditions. The patient, the student, the citizen, the economic agent, the legal defendant, the knowing subject, the literary character, the historical actor — all recover their status as rational subjects rather than as sophisticated outputs of biological, social, and structural processes.

With Metaphysical Libertarianism restored, every field recovers the capacity to ground genuine responsibility: clinical responsibility, legal responsibility, educational responsibility, economic responsibility, and epistemic responsibility. The person who makes a choice is genuinely responsible for it because he genuinely could have chosen otherwise, and the institutional responses that hold people responsible — punishment, praise, blame, credit, debt — recover their moral foundation.

With Moral Realism restored, every field recovers the capacity to ask what is genuinely the case in the normative domain: what is genuinely good for this patient, what is genuinely just in this legal dispute, what is genuinely choiceworthy in this economic arrangement, what is genuinely excellent in this literary work, what is genuinely required by justice in this political order. The governing question in each field shifts from “what do people prefer?” or “what is efficient?” to “what is genuinely the case?”

With Correspondence Theory of Truth restored in its full domain (including the evaluative and normative), every field recovers the capacity to evaluate its governing frameworks against a standard of reality rather than against coherence, preference satisfaction, or social assertibility. The economist can ask whether his model corresponds to genuine human economic nature. The physician can ask whether his treatment corresponds to genuine patient flourishing. The judge can ask whether his decision corresponds to genuine justice. The theologian can ask whether his doctrine corresponds to genuine theological reality.

With Ethical Intuitionism restored, every field recovers the capacity to treat direct rational recognition as a genuine epistemic resource: the physician’s clinical judgment, the jurist’s perception of genuine injustice, the teacher’s perception of genuine student formation, the philosopher’s perception of what is self-evidently the case, the economist’s perception of genuine exploitation. The training of this perceptual capacity recovers its status as the central professional virtue rather than as an unreliable heuristic to be corrected by protocol.

With Foundationalism restored, every field recovers a stable bedrock from which its central questions are addressed and against which its answers are evaluated. The bedrock is not arbitrary — it is the recognition of what human beings genuinely are and what they genuinely need. Clinical guidelines are evaluated against a prior account of genuine healing. Legal principles are evaluated against a prior account of genuine justice. Economic models are evaluated against a prior account of genuine human economic flourishing. Educational practices are evaluated against a prior account of genuine human formation. The regress of justification terminates at something real rather than at the most entrenched convention of the current consensus.


VI. A Note on the Psychiatry Threshold

The Psychiatry Full Capacity Loss finding was reviewed and settled by Dave Kelly. The instrument’s standard threshold for Full Capacity Loss requires four or more Contrary findings. Psychiatry produced three Contrary findings (C3, C5, C6) and two Inconsistent findings (C1, C2). The settled judgment is that the Inconsistent findings at C1 and C2 function as structurally compromising rather than as genuine instances of competing traditions with equal institutional weight. The brain disease model is the dominant governing framework; the recovery model is a counter-pressure within it, not a co-equal governing tradition. This distinction — between a genuinely co-equal opposing tradition (which produces Inconsistent) and a counter-pressure within a dominant framework (which may justify treating the finding as effectively Contrary) — is a named consideration for future instrument applications involving fields with dominant frameworks qualified by minority counter-pressures.


VII. Series Attribution and Instrument Record

Thirteen CFA runs completed. Instrument version: CFA v1.0. All runs applied the standard four-step protocol with mandatory self-audit at each step transition. Findings produced by analysis; no prior conclusions stated before any run.

Fields producing Full Capacity Loss (as found, pending Psychiatry review): Psychology, Psychiatry, Education.

Fields producing Partial Capacity Loss: Law (Theoretical Groundlessness), History (Internal Incoherence), Literary Criticism (Foundational Incoherence), Political Theory (Foundational Contestation), Ethics (Total Internal Contestation), Epistemology (Self-Referential Contestation), Theology (Philosophical Infiltration), Philosophy (Self-Displacement), Medicine (Technical Displacement of Vocation), Economics (Moral Disembedding).

Fields remaining for future audit: the series is open. Additional fields — sociology, anthropology, architecture, music, journalism — may be audited using the CFA v1.0 instrument without modification.


Series instrument: Classical Field Audit (CFA) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Prose rendering: Claude. 2026.

Classical Field Audit — Economics

 

Classical Field Audit — Economics

Instrument: Classical Field Audit (CFA) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Prose rendering: Claude. 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, Two and One-Half Ethical Systems. 2026.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Field under examination: Economics, understood as the academic and applied discipline concerned with the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services, the behavior of economic agents, and the design and evaluation of economic systems and policies. The audit targets the field’s governing mainstream practice across its major traditions: neoclassical economics as the dominant paradigm, behavioral economics as its primary internal challenger, the Chicago School’s rational choice program, Keynesian macroeconomics, welfare economics, and the development economics tradition including the capabilities approach. Classical political economy is treated as the baseline against which the field’s displacements are measured. The Austrian tradition and Marxist political economy are noted where they bear on the presupposition profile.

Sources constituting the presupposition profile: Adam Smith’s political economy as the classical baseline (both The Wealth of Nations and The Theory of Moral Sentiments); the neoclassical marginalist program (Marshall, Walras, Jevons); the rational choice and positive economics methodology (Friedman); Chicago School price theory and monetary economics; Keynesian and post-Keynesian macroeconomics; welfare economics (Pigou, Pareto, Arrow); behavioral economics (Kahneman, Thaler, Sunstein); the capabilities approach in development economics (Sen, Nussbaum); the positive-normative distinction as a governing methodological principle; the Pareto efficiency criterion as the dominant evaluative standard in welfare analysis. No source is drawn from critic characterizations alone.

Prior conclusion check: None stated or implied. Findings to be produced by analysis.

Self-Audit — Step 0:

  • Corpus in view: ✓
  • Sources restricted to the field’s governing literature: ✓
  • No prior conclusion stated: ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. Proceeding to Step 1.


Step 1 — Presupposition Profile

Stage A — Methodological Record Summary

The classical political economy baseline. Adam Smith was a moral philosopher before he was an economist: The Theory of Moral Sentiments preceded The Wealth of Nations, and the two works constitute a unified account of human social and economic life grounded in moral psychology. Smith’s economic agents are moral beings governed by natural sympathy, the desire for social approval, and the internalized voice of the impartial spectator. The invisible hand operates within a moral framework: it produces social benefit precisely because agents who pursue their self-interest are constrained by genuine moral sentiment and by institutions that reflect natural justice. The political economist’s task included normative evaluation of economic arrangements against standards of genuine justice and genuine human good. This moral embedding is the classical baseline.

The positive-normative split. The dominant methodological commitment of modern economics is the separation of positive economics (descriptive claims about what is the case in economic reality) from normative economics (evaluative claims about what ought to be the case). Positive economics is treated as the scientific core of the discipline; normative economics is treated as a distinct enterprise that requires the addition of value judgments not supplied by economic science itself. Friedman’s influential methodological essay codified this: economics as a positive science aims at the development of predictive theory, not at the derivation of normative conclusions. This is load-bearing for the field’s self-understanding as a science and for its governing methodological standards: positive claims are evaluated by empirical evidence, normative claims by their logical derivation from stated value premises and empirical findings.

The homo economicus model. The governing model of the economic agent in neoclassical economics is homo economicus: a rational utility-maximizer who orders his preferences consistently, acts to maximize his utility subject to budget constraints, and responds predictably to price signals and incentive structures. This model abstracts away from the moral psychology of Smith’s economic agent and treats the agent as a preference-satisfying mechanism. The agent’s preferences are taken as given rather than evaluated; his choices are the revealed expressions of those preferences rather than the product of genuine moral deliberation. This is load-bearing for the entire neoclassical research program.

Behavioral economics. Behavioral economics, the dominant internal challenger to the neoclassical model, treats economic behavior as substantially shaped by cognitive biases, heuristics, framing effects, and evolutionary psychological tendencies that systematically deviate from the rational utility-maximizer model. The behavioral agent is not a preference-satisfying mechanism but a biological organism with a cognitive architecture that evolved for ancestral environments rather than modern economic ones. Nudge theory treats the agent as a subject whose choices can be systematically shaped by the design of choice architecture rather than by genuine rational deliberation. Behavioral economics is load-bearing for regulatory policy, public health economics, and the design of default rules in contract and pension law.

The efficiency criterion. Welfare economics evaluates economic arrangements by efficiency criteria rather than by objective moral standards of justice. Pareto efficiency (no one can be made better off without making someone else worse off) and Kaldor-Hicks efficiency (aggregate gains exceed aggregate losses) are the dominant evaluative standards. These criteria take preferences as given and evaluate arrangements by how well they satisfy those preferences; they do not evaluate whether the preferences themselves correspond to what is genuinely choiceworthy. Efficiency, rather than justice in the classical moral sense, is the governing evaluative standard for policy analysis and economic design. This is load-bearing for welfare economics, cost-benefit analysis, and the economic analysis of law.

The capabilities approach. Sen’s capabilities approach, and its further development by Nussbaum, represents the field’s most significant internal challenge to the efficiency criterion and the preference-satisfaction framework. The capabilities approach evaluates economic arrangements by their impact on genuine human functionings and capabilities — what people are actually able to do and be — rather than by preference satisfaction alone. This approach implicitly requires an objective standard of genuine human flourishing that cannot be reduced to revealed preference. It is load-bearing for development economics, human development indices, and significant strands of international development policy, though it is not the dominant standard in mainstream welfare economics.

The Austrian tradition. Austrian economics treats the economic agent as a genuine creative entrepreneur who discovers and exploits opportunities through genuine judgment and genuine creativity rather than merely optimizing against known constraints. The Austrian emphasis on tacit knowledge, subjective value, and spontaneous order requires a richer conception of agency than homo economicus provides. Austrian economics is a significant minority tradition within the field, load-bearing for its critique of central planning and its account of price signals as bearers of dispersed knowledge.

Stage B — Domain Mapping

Three significant domain tensions require mapping.

Tension One — positive economics versus the normative traditions. The positive-normative split is the field’s governing methodological commitment, but welfare economics, development economics, and the capabilities approach all engage normative questions. The tension is between the field’s scientific self-image (positive, value-neutral) and its pervasive engagement with policy questions that are inherently normative. This generates opposed presuppositions on C3 and C5.

Tension Two — homo economicus versus behavioral and Austrian accounts of agency. Homo economicus treats the agent as a preference-satisfying mechanism. Behavioral economics treats the agent as a cognitive architecture shaped by evolutionary pressures. The Austrian tradition treats the agent as a genuine creative discoverer. These generate opposed presuppositions on C1 and C2.

Tension Three — efficiency criterion versus objective human flourishing. The dominant welfare economics framework evaluates arrangements by efficiency criteria that take preferences as given. The capabilities approach evaluates arrangements by their impact on objective human functionings. These generate opposed presuppositions on C3 and C6.

Self-Audit — Step 1:

  • Presuppositions drawn from the field’s governing practice: ✓
  • Load-bearing test applied throughout: ✓
  • Charity requirement applied: ✓
  • Three domain tensions mapped: ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. Proceeding to Step 2.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

C1 — Substance Dualism

The commitment: The human being possesses a rational faculty categorically distinct from and prior to all external material conditions. The economic agent is not reducible to his biological cognitive architecture, his social conditioning, or his structural economic position.

What economics’ governing practice requires: The homo economicus model abstracts away from the moral psychology of genuine rational agency and treats the economic agent as a preference-satisfying mechanism. The agent’s preferences are taken as given; his choices are their revealed expression. This is not the same as reducing the agent to a biological or social mechanism — the preferences are treated as genuinely the agent’s own — but it is also not the same as the classical account of the rational moral subject whose inner life is categorically distinct from his external conditions. The homo economicus model has no soul; it has preferences and a budget constraint.

Contrary presuppositions across other traditions: Behavioral economics goes further: the agent’s preferences and choices are substantially shaped by cognitive biases, framing effects, and evolutionary heuristics that operate below the level of genuine rational deliberation. The nudge theory that follows from behavioral economics treats the agent as a subject whose choices can be systematically shaped by choice architecture design — a view that is difficult to reconcile with the agent as a rational subject whose inner life is prior to external conditions. Marxist political economy treats the economic agent as substantially constituted by his class position and the ideological formations of his economic moment.

Residual in the Austrian tradition: Austrian economics’ account of the entrepreneur as a genuine creative discoverer who perceives opportunities that others miss requires something closer to the classical account of the rational subject: the entrepreneur’s insight is genuinely his own and is not the predictable output of his cognitive architecture or his structural position. Smith’s original moral psychology, with its account of genuine sympathy and genuine moral judgment, also carries residual classical character.

Governing corpus text: Nine Excerpts, Section 4: “I am my soul/prohairesis/inner self. Everything else, including my body, is an external.” Homo economicus has no soul in this sense; it has preferences. Behavioral economics further reduces the agent to a cognitive architecture shaped by external evolutionary pressures. The Austrian entrepreneur and Smith’s moral agent both require something closer to the classical account.

Finding: Inconsistent. The dominant homo economicus model and behavioral economics treat the economic agent as a preference-satisfying mechanism or cognitive architecture rather than as a rational moral subject prior to external conditions. The Austrian tradition and classical political economy require a richer conception of agency that approaches the classical account. Both presuppositions are load-bearing within the field.


C2 — Metaphysical Libertarianism

The commitment: The agent exercises genuine freedom in assent, judgment, and moral choice. The economic agent is the genuine originator of his economic choices, not a sophisticated output of cognitive architecture, structural position, or institutional incentives.

What economics’ governing practice requires: Neoclassical economics formally presupposes free choice: the agent maximizes utility by choosing from the feasible set according to his preferences. This formal presupposition of choice is the foundation of the entire demand-side analysis: the agent responds to price signals by genuinely choosing more of what becomes relatively cheaper. The model requires that the agent’s choices are genuinely his own in the sense that they express his preferences rather than being externally imposed. Without some form of genuine choice, the concept of revealed preference collapses.

Contrary presuppositions in behavioral economics: Behavioral economics substantially qualifies the genuineness of economic choice. If the agent’s choices are systematically shaped by framing effects, cognitive biases, and the design of choice architecture, then the choices do not genuinely originate in the agent’s rational deliberation — they originate partly in the structure of the choice environment. Nudge theory explicitly treats choice architecture design as a legitimate policy tool precisely because the agent’s choices are substantially influenced by how options are presented. The agent who chooses a pension default because it is the default rather than because he has genuinely deliberated about his retirement savings is not exercising genuine rational origination of choice in any strong sense.

Further qualification by structural analysis: Structural economics and Marxist political economy treat economic choices as substantially determined by institutional constraints, class position, and power relations that the agent did not choose and cannot individually alter. The worker who “chooses” low-wage labor from within a constrained choice set determined by capital ownership patterns is, on this account, expressing the constraints of his structural position rather than genuinely originating his economic choices.

Governing corpus text: Nine Excerpts, Section 7: “Choosing whether or not to assent to impressions is the only thing in our control.” Neoclassical economics formally requires genuine economic choice as the foundation of its demand analysis. Behavioral economics and structural analysis progressively dissolve the domain of genuine choice without the field providing a principled account of what remains genuinely chosen.

Finding: Inconsistent. Neoclassical economics formally presupposes genuine choice as the foundation of demand analysis. Behavioral economics substantially qualifies genuine choice through cognitive architecture and choice environment effects. Structural analysis treats choices as substantially determined by institutional constraints and class position. All three presuppositions are load-bearing within the field.


C3 — Moral Realism

The commitment: Moral truths are real. Economic justice is a genuine moral question with a real answer — not merely a matter of efficiency, preference satisfaction, or distributional convention.

What economics’ governing practice requires: The positive-normative split is the governing methodological commitment of modern economics, and it is load-bearing in a way that directly displaces moral realism. The split does not merely distinguish positive from normative economics as two different activities; it treats positive economics as the scientific core of the discipline and normative economics as an enterprise that requires the addition of value premises from outside the discipline itself. The economist qua scientist makes no evaluative judgments about whether economic arrangements are genuinely just; he derives the normative implications of stated value premises, which are themselves supplied from outside economics. This is not a form of moral realism; it is a form of moral proceduralism that treats the substantive content of moral evaluation as external to economic science.

Efficiency as the substitute evaluative standard: When welfare economics does engage evaluative questions, it substitutes efficiency for justice as the governing criterion. Pareto efficiency and Kaldor-Hicks efficiency evaluate arrangements by how well they satisfy given preferences rather than by whether they correspond to what is objectively just. An efficient arrangement is not thereby a just arrangement; it is one in which preferences are maximally satisfied subject to resource constraints. This substitution is load-bearing for cost-benefit analysis, regulatory policy, and the economic analysis of law: efficiency, not justice, is what the economist evaluates.

The capabilities approach as a significant counter-pressure: Sen’s capabilities approach requires an objective account of genuine human functionings and capabilities that cannot be reduced to preference satisfaction. Sen explicitly argues that welfare evaluation must go beyond preference satisfaction to assess whether people have genuine capabilities for human flourishing. This requires something closer to moral realism: there are objective facts about what genuine human flourishing requires that constrain legitimate economic evaluation. The capabilities approach is load-bearing for development economics and human development indices. However, it is not the governing standard in mainstream welfare economics, which continues to operate from efficiency criteria and preference satisfaction.

Governing corpus text: Two and One-Half Ethical Systems: moral facts are as real as any other facts; the alternative reduces moral evaluation to preference management. The positive-normative split and the efficiency criterion require precisely this alternative: economic evaluation manages preferences rather than recognizing moral facts. The capabilities approach requires the classical position but does not constitute the field’s dominant governing standard.

Finding: Contrary. The positive-normative split and the efficiency criterion are the field’s governing methodological and evaluative commitments, and both require the absence of moral realism as a governing standard. The displacement is load-bearing: positive economics cannot engage normative questions as a scientific matter, and welfare economics substitutes efficiency for objective justice. The capabilities approach constitutes a significant minority counter-pressure but does not alter the governing mainstream finding.


C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth

The commitment: A proposition is true because it corresponds to a mind-independent reality. Economic claims about prices, quantities, behavior, and policy effects are true or false depending on whether they correspond to what actually occurs in economic reality.

What economics’ governing practice requires: Positive economics is built on correspondence truth as its governing epistemic standard. The field aims to establish what is actually true about economic behavior and economic outcomes — whether markets clear, how agents respond to price changes, what the effects of policy interventions are. The empirical research program of modern economics — econometrics, randomized controlled trials in development economics, natural experiments — is designed to produce findings that correspond to what actually happens in the economic world. Friedman’s methodological essay grounds the evaluation of economic theories in their predictive accuracy: theories are good or bad depending on whether their predictions correspond to what actually occurs. This is a robust commitment to correspondence truth for positive economic claims.

Residual divergence: The correspondence standard applies to positive claims about economic behavior and outcomes. It is not applied to normative economic questions, which the positive-normative split removes from the domain of correspondence evaluation entirely. Whether an economic arrangement is genuinely just is not a question that economics treats as answerable by correspondence to moral reality; it is a question that requires the addition of value premises supplied from outside the discipline. The domain of correspondence is thus limited to positive economic claims, with evaluative questions excluded.

Finding: Partially Aligned. Correspondence truth is robustly operative as the governing epistemic standard for positive economic claims about behavior and outcomes. The residual is the domain limitation imposed by the positive-normative split: correspondence truth is not applied to the normative questions that classical political economy treated as answerable by reference to objective moral standards.


C5 — Ethical Intuitionism

The commitment: Certain moral truths can be directly recognized by the trained rational faculty. The political economist’s direct recognition of what genuine economic justice requires — of which economic arrangements are genuinely fair and which are genuinely exploitative — is a genuine epistemic capacity.

What economics’ governing practice requires: The positive-normative split removes direct moral recognition from the field’s governing methodology. Normative economic conclusions must be derived from stated value premises and empirical findings, not recognized directly. The economist who directly perceives that a particular distribution is genuinely unjust is not making a scientific economic claim but expressing a value judgment that lies outside the discipline’s scientific competence. Adam Smith’s original political economy relied substantially on the direct recognition of natural justice: the sympathy-governed impartial spectator directly perceives what genuine fairness requires in economic exchange. This capacity for direct moral recognition was the moral-psychological foundation of Smith’s account of why markets work and when they fail. Modern positive economics has eliminated this foundation from its governing methodology.

Efficiency analysis as the substitute: When welfare economics does make evaluative judgments, it derives them from efficiency criteria applied to revealed preferences rather than from direct recognition of moral truth. The economist who judges an arrangement as suboptimal because it is Pareto-inefficient is not directly recognizing a moral fact; he is applying a formal criterion derived from a preference-satisfaction framework. The judgment has the form of a derivation rather than a recognition, and the criterion from which it is derived (Pareto efficiency) does not correspond to what classical political economy would recognize as genuine economic justice.

Governing corpus text: Stoicism Moral Facts and Ethical Intuitionism (Sterling): direct rational recognition of moral truth is a genuine epistemic capacity; the alternative reduces moral knowledge to mechanism or convention. Modern economics requires the alternative: normative economic conclusions must be derived from stated value premises, not directly recognized. The governing methodology explicitly excludes direct moral recognition as a legitimate source of economic normative judgment.

Finding: Contrary. The positive-normative split and the derivational structure of welfare economics require that normative economic conclusions be derived from stated value premises and efficiency criteria rather than directly recognized. The field’s governing methodology explicitly excludes direct moral recognition as a legitimate source of normative judgment. This is load-bearing for the field’s scientific self-image and for its governing methodological standards.


C6 — Foundationalism

The commitment: Reasoning must ultimately terminate in first principles or bedrock recognitions. Economics requires a foundational account of what genuine economic justice is and what human beings genuinely need that governs economic analysis rather than being itself subject to revision by changing theoretical fashion or political preference.

What economics’ governing practice requires: Modern economics has no governing foundational account of what economic life is for or what genuine economic justice requires. The positive-normative split explicitly removes such foundational questions from the discipline’s scientific competence. Economic models are evaluated by their predictive accuracy and analytical tractability, not by their correspondence to foundational truths about genuine human economic good. Friedman’s instrumentalist methodology treats economic models as useful fictions whose assumptions need not be realistic, provided the models predict accurately. This is explicitly anti-foundationalist: the model’s assumptions are not bedrock recognitions about economic reality but instrumental devices for generating predictions.

The efficiency criterion as a pseudo-foundation: The Pareto efficiency criterion functions as an evaluative standard in welfare economics, but it is not foundational in Sterling’s sense: it is a formal criterion derived from the preference-satisfaction framework rather than a bedrock recognition about what economic arrangements are genuinely just. It is chosen for its formal tractability (it avoids interpersonal utility comparisons) rather than because it corresponds to a foundational moral truth about economic justice. It is also regularly qualified, supplemented, and replaced as theoretical consensus shifts.

Classical political economy’s foundational character: Smith’s political economy was grounded in foundational moral psychology: the natural sympathy that constitutes genuine human sociality, the impartial spectator who recognizes genuine moral truth, and the natural justice that grounds legitimate property and exchange. These were not formal criteria derived from preference-satisfaction frameworks but foundational recognitions about human moral nature from which Smith’s economic analysis proceeded. The displacement of this foundational moral psychology by the positive-normative split removed the bedrock from which classical political economy had operated.

Governing corpus text: Stoicism Foundationalism and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge (Sterling): the foundationalist structure is the precondition for genuine knowledge rather than indefinitely revisable opinion. Modern economics treats all its models and evaluative criteria as revisable instruments for prediction and analysis rather than as expressions of foundational recognitions about what economic arrangements are genuinely just and what human beings genuinely need.

Finding: Contrary. The positive economics methodology explicitly treats economic models as revisable predictive instruments rather than as expressions of foundational recognitions. The efficiency criterion is a formal procedural standard rather than a foundational moral recognition. The field has no governing account of what economic life is for that functions as a bedrock from which economic analysis proceeds rather than as itself subject to revision. This is load-bearing for the field’s governing methodological self-understanding.

Self-Audit — Step 2:

  • All six commitments have received findings: ✓
  • Each finding grounded in specific corpus text: ✓
  • Contrary findings at C3, C5, and C6 grounded in the positive-normative split as a load-bearing methodological commitment rather than a peripheral convention: ✓
  • Inconsistent findings at C1 and C2 reflect genuine tension between neoclassical formal presuppositions and behavioral/structural qualifications: ✓
  • Capabilities approach identified as significant counter-pressure at C3 but correctly excluded from altering the Contrary finding: ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. Proceeding to Step 3.


Step 3 — Displacement Diagnosis

C1 — Substance Dualism: Inconsistent

What the classical commitment made available: A classical political economy grounded in substance dualism treated the economic agent as a moral being whose inner life — his natural sympathy, his desire for social approval, his internalized impartial spectator — was the genuine engine of economic behavior. Smith’s invisible hand works not because agents are preference-satisfying mechanisms but because agents are moral beings whose self-interest is constrained by genuine sympathy and genuine moral sentiment. Economic analysis could address the full moral psychology of the economic actor: his genuine virtues and genuine vices, his susceptibility to corruption and his capacity for genuine moral improvement. The wealth of nations was not merely the aggregate output of utility-maximizers but the product of moral beings whose economic behavior expressed their moral character.

What the inconsistency produces: A field that formally models agents as preference-satisfying mechanisms while conducting policy analysis as though agents were moral beings whose behavior can be shaped by appeal to genuine values, social norms, and genuine deliberation. Behavioral economics’ nudge theory treats agents as cognitive architectures to be shaped by choice design. But the policy conversation around nudges regularly appeals to genuine agent interests and genuine wellbeing — to what is actually good for agents, not merely what their present preferences express. The field cannot coherently maintain both the preference-satisfying mechanism model and the normative policy discourse that treats agents as having genuine interests that may diverge from their expressed preferences.

What the field has lost: The capacity to address the economic agent as a moral being whose inner life matters for economic analysis. Classical political economy could ask: what kind of person does this economic arrangement produce? What virtues and vices does participation in this market cultivate? What does genuine economic justice require of and for beings with this moral nature? These questions are outside the governing framework of positive economics, which takes preferences as given and evaluates arrangements by how efficiently they are satisfied. The field has lost the moral psychology that made economics a branch of moral philosophy.


C2 — Metaphysical Libertarianism: Inconsistent

What the classical commitment made available: A political economy grounded in genuine freedom could treat economic responsibility as genuine moral responsibility. The agent who makes genuinely free economic choices is genuinely responsible for their consequences — for the effects of his consumption choices on his character, for the effects of his investment choices on the communities they affect, for the moral dimension of his economic participation. Smith’s moral psychology required genuine freedom: the impartial spectator who evaluates economic conduct is evaluating genuine choices made by genuine agents who could have chosen otherwise. This gave political economy its moral force: it could evaluate economic arrangements not merely by their efficiency but by whether they facilitated or impeded the genuine exercise of rational economic agency.

What the inconsistency produces: A field that formally presupposes genuine choice as the foundation of demand analysis while progressively dissolving the domain of genuine choice through behavioral and structural analysis. If agent choices are substantially shaped by cognitive biases, framing effects, and structural constraints, then revealed preference is not a reliable guide to genuine agent interests — which is precisely the point that behavioral economists use to justify nudge interventions. But if the agent’s choices do not genuinely originate in his rational deliberation, the entire apparatus of consumer sovereignty and welfare evaluation through preference satisfaction loses its moral foundation. The field simultaneously grounds its normative framework in preference satisfaction and undermines the genuine freedom that preference satisfaction requires.

What the field has lost: The theoretical foundation for consumer sovereignty as a genuine moral principle. Consumer sovereignty — the principle that the consumer’s own choices are the best guide to his welfare — presupposes that those choices are genuinely free. If behavioral economics is right that choices are substantially shaped by cognitive architecture and choice design, consumer sovereignty is not a moral principle but an efficiency convention. The field has lost the account of genuine economic freedom that would ground its governing normative framework.


C3 — Moral Realism: Contrary

What the classical commitment made available: A political economy grounded in moral realism could treat questions of economic justice as genuine questions with real answers. Smith could ask whether the wage paid to a worker corresponds to what genuine justice requires, whether the returns to capital reflect genuine contribution or illegitimate extraction, and whether the distribution of wealth corresponds to what genuine fairness demands — and treat these as genuine questions whose answers are constrained by moral reality rather than by the preferences of whoever happens to have power. The impartial spectator who recognizes genuine economic justice was exercising a genuine moral perceptual capacity. Political economy could claim genuine moral authority over economic arrangements because its normative conclusions corresponded to real moral facts about what justice requires in economic life.

What the modern displacement produces instead: A field that cannot engage questions of economic justice as a scientific matter. Normative economic conclusions must be derived from stated value premises; they cannot claim the authority of recognition of genuine moral facts. The economist who argues that a distribution is unjust is expressing a value judgment, not recognizing a moral fact. The efficiency criterion substitutes for justice by defining economic optimality in terms of preference satisfaction rather than moral correspondence. This substitution has enormous practical consequences: the economic analysis of law, regulatory policy, and social welfare programs is governed by efficiency rather than by genuine justice, and the displacement is treated as a methodological advance rather than a moral loss.

What the field has lost: The capacity to engage the question of genuine economic justice. Modern economics can say whether an arrangement is efficient; it cannot say whether it is genuinely just in a sense that corresponds to moral reality rather than to the preferences of the parties. The field has lost the category of genuine economic justice as a governing analytical concept, replacing it with the technical concept of efficiency. Smith’s central question — what does genuine justice require in economic life? — is outside the governing competence of positive economics.


C5 — Ethical Intuitionism: Contrary

What the classical commitment made available: A political economy grounded in direct rational recognition could treat the impartial spectator’s perception of genuine economic justice as a genuine epistemic capacity. Smith’s moral psychology required this: the person of genuine moral wisdom directly perceives what genuine fairness requires in economic exchange, what genuine exploitation looks like, and what genuine economic justice demands of institutions and markets. This direct recognition was not derived from efficiency calculations or from the formal manipulation of stated value premises; it was the exercise of a genuine moral perceptual capacity cultivated through the formation of moral character. Political economy could appeal to this capacity directly: here is what genuine justice requires, and you can recognize it yourself if your moral perception has been properly formed.

What the modern displacement produces instead: A field whose governing methodology requires that normative conclusions be derived from stated value premises rather than directly recognized. The economist’s normative authority derives not from his genuine perception of economic justice but from his technical competence in deriving the normative implications of stated preferences and efficiency criteria. This changes the character of economic policy advice: it is not the recognition of genuine justice but the derivation of efficient preference satisfaction. The economic advisor who derives efficient policy from given preferences and efficiency criteria has no more moral authority than a sophisticated preference-aggregation algorithm. The genuine moral authority of the political economist who directly recognizes what justice requires has been displaced by the technical authority of the analyst who correctly solves the optimization problem.

What the field has lost: The capacity to claim genuine moral authority for normative economic judgments. Classical political economy claimed genuine authority because its normative conclusions corresponded to what genuine justice requires — and the reader could recognize this directly if his moral perception was properly formed. Positive economics claims only technical authority: its normative conclusions correctly derive the implications of stated preferences and efficiency criteria. The moral weight of the economic normative judgment has been replaced by its technical precision.


C6 — Foundationalism: Contrary

What the classical commitment made available: A political economy grounded in foundational recognitions about human nature had a stable governing account of what economic life is for. Smith’s foundational account — that human beings are genuinely social, moral beings whose economic life is governed by natural sympathy, genuine moral sentiment, and the natural justice that these generate — was not itself subject to revision by changing theoretical fashion or empirical anomaly. It was the framework within which economic observations were interpreted and economic arrangements were evaluated. Economic analysis was not an end in itself but a means of understanding how arrangements that accord with or violate this foundational account of human economic nature produce the outcomes they do.

What the modern displacement produces instead: A field whose models are evaluated by their predictive accuracy rather than by their correspondence to foundational truths about human economic nature. Friedman’s instrumentalism explicitly treats the realism of model assumptions as irrelevant: homo economicus need not correspond to the reality of human economic psychology, provided the model predicts market behavior accurately. The efficiency criterion is a formal convention chosen for its tractability rather than a foundational recognition about genuine economic justice. Economic analysis produces technically sophisticated predictions and policy prescriptions without a governing account of what genuine human economic flourishing requires or what genuine economic justice demands. The foundational questions — what is economic life for, what does genuine justice require in economic arrangements, what does genuine human economic flourishing consist in — are outside the discipline’s scientific competence.

What the field has lost: The capacity to ask whether its own models correspond to genuine human economic reality rather than merely predicting behavior accurately. An economic model that accurately predicts market behavior by treating agents as preference-satisfying mechanisms may be both predictively accurate and fundamentally false about what economic agents are and what economic life is for. Foundationalism gives the discipline the capacity to ask this question; instrumentalism eliminates it. The field has lost the governing account of genuine human economic nature that would allow it to evaluate its own models against something more fundamental than predictive accuracy.

Self-Audit — Step 3:

  • All Contrary and Inconsistent findings from Step 2 have received displacement diagnoses: ✓
  • Diagnoses are specific: ✓
  • Distinction maintained between what the field cannot do and what it does not do by convention: ✓
  • The positive-normative split identified as the load-bearing displacement mechanism across C3, C5, and C6: ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. Proceeding to Step 4.


Step 4 — Restorative Direction

C1 — Restored Substance Dualism

A political economy that operated from substance dualism would recover the moral psychology of the economic agent as a rational moral being whose inner life — his genuine sympathy, his moral sentiments, his susceptibility to virtue and vice — is the primary engine of economic behavior. Economic analysis would address the whole moral person rather than the preference-satisfying mechanism: what kind of person does participation in this economic arrangement produce? What virtues does this market cultivate and what vices does it encourage? What does genuine human economic flourishing look like for beings with this moral nature? These questions, which were central to Smith’s political economy, would recover their analytical status as genuine economic questions rather than as merely rhetorical supplements to technical analysis.


C2 — Restored Metaphysical Libertarianism

A political economy that operated from genuine freedom could ground consumer sovereignty as a genuine moral principle rather than as an efficiency convention. The agent whose economic choices genuinely originate in his rational deliberation is the appropriate subject of consumer sovereignty: his choices deserve respect because they are genuinely his own. Behavioral economics’ genuine insights into the ways choice architecture shapes behavior would be situated within this framework rather than treated as refutations of it: the fact that choice design influences choices identifies the conditions that must be met for genuine economic freedom, rather than constituting a license for technocratic manipulation of the agent’s “better” choices. Economic policy would aim at the conditions that enable genuine rational economic agency rather than at nudging agents toward outcomes that analysts prefer.


C3 — Restored Moral Realism

A political economy that operated from moral realism would recover the capacity to engage questions of genuine economic justice as questions with real answers constrained by moral reality rather than by preference satisfaction and efficiency criteria. The capabilities approach already gestures toward this: Sen’s insistence that genuine human functionings are a better guide to economic evaluation than preference satisfaction implies an objective standard of genuine human flourishing that cannot be reduced to revealed preference. Restoring moral realism would ground this intuition theoretically: there are real moral facts about what genuine economic justice requires, about what constitutes genuine exploitation rather than legitimate economic exchange, and about what a genuinely just distribution looks like — and economic analysis can recognize and be governed by those facts rather than treating normative questions as outside its scientific competence.


C5 — Restored Ethical Intuitionism

A political economy that operated from direct moral recognition would restore the moral authority of the political economist as a person of genuine practical wisdom rather than a technical analyst of preference satisfaction and efficiency. The political economist who directly recognizes that a particular arrangement is genuinely exploitative, that a particular distribution is genuinely unjust, or that a particular policy corresponds to or violates what genuine economic justice requires is exercising a genuine epistemic capacity whose authority derives from the quality of his moral perception rather than from his technical competence. Smith’s impartial spectator recovers its analytical role: genuine economic wisdom requires the formation of a moral perceptual capacity, not merely technical training in optimization and econometrics.


C6 — Restored Foundationalism

A political economy that operated from foundational recognitions about human economic nature would have a governing account of what economic life is for that constrains rather than follows from its technical models. Economic models would be evaluated not merely by their predictive accuracy but by their correspondence to genuine human economic nature: whether they correctly characterize what economic agents are, what they genuinely need, and what genuine economic flourishing requires. The foundational account of the human being as a rational moral agent whose economic life expresses his moral nature would govern how market outcomes are interpreted, how policy interventions are designed, and what counts as genuine economic success rather than merely efficient preference satisfaction.


Capacity Loss Finding

Three commitment-level findings are Contrary (C3, C5, C6), two are Inconsistent (C1, C2), and one is Partially Aligned (C4). Three Contrary findings fall below the Full Capacity Loss threshold of four or more. The pattern of three Contrary findings concentrated in the field’s normative and foundational domains, combined with two Inconsistent findings in its account of the economic agent, produces a distinctive and severe form of incapacity in those domains while leaving the field’s empirical research program substantially intact.

Partial Capacity Loss — Moral Disembedding.

Economics is the field that most deliberately and explicitly separated itself from its own moral philosophical foundations. The separation was not an accidental downstream consequence of broader philosophical displacement; it was a deliberate methodological choice, theorized as the condition of economics’ status as a science. When the positive-normative split became the governing methodological commitment, economics severed the connection to moral philosophy that had given Smith’s political economy its governing purpose. The field that once asked what genuine economic justice requires now asks only what efficient preference satisfaction produces.

This deliberate separation gives Economics a character similar to Philosophy’s Self-Displacement, but applied to the moral philosophical dimension specifically: Economics displaced its own moral foundations as a condition of becoming a science. The cost of that displacement is concentrated in the field’s normative and foundational domains: it can no longer engage questions of genuine economic justice as scientific questions, it can no longer appeal to direct recognition of what genuine justice requires, and it has no governing account of what economic life is for beyond efficient resource allocation and preference satisfaction.

The specific capacities that have been lost: the capacity to address the full moral psychology of the economic agent rather than a preference-satisfying abstraction; the capacity to ground consumer sovereignty as a genuine moral principle rather than an efficiency convention; the capacity to engage genuine economic justice as a question with real moral answers; the capacity to claim genuine moral authority for normative economic judgments rather than merely technical authority; and the capacity to evaluate its own models against a foundational account of what economic life is genuinely for.

What remains: the field retains its extraordinary technical capability in modeling economic behavior, its robust empirical research program for establishing what actually happens in economic systems, its powerful tools for policy analysis and institutional design, and the significant minority traditions of the capabilities approach and institutional economics that carry more of the classical framework than the dominant positive economics mainstream. These are real achievements. What they cannot produce, within the governing positive economics framework, is a coherent account of genuine economic justice or a principled answer to the question of what economic arrangements are genuinely good for human beings — which were Smith’s original questions and the questions for which political economy was originally constituted.

Self-Audit — Step 4:

  • All displaced commitments have received restorative directions: ✓
  • Restorative directions stated as positive accounts: ✓
  • Capacity Loss finding derived from complete pattern of findings: ✓
  • Moral Disembedding identified as the distinctive character of the Capacity Loss: the deliberate separation from moral philosophy as the condition of scientific status: ✓
  • Parallel to Philosophy’s Self-Displacement noted: both fields explicitly theorized the abandonment of classical commitments from within: ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. CFA run complete.


Summary of Findings

  • C1 — Substance Dualism: Inconsistent. Dominant homo economicus model treats economic agent as preference-satisfying mechanism; behavioral economics treats agent as cognitive architecture shaped by evolutionary pressures; Austrian tradition and classical political economy require richer conception of agent approaching the classical rational moral subject.
  • C2 — Metaphysical Libertarianism: Inconsistent. Neoclassical economics formally presupposes genuine choice as foundation of demand analysis; behavioral economics substantially qualifies genuine choice through cognitive architecture and choice environment effects; structural analysis treats choices as substantially determined by institutional constraints and class position.
  • C3 — Moral Realism: Contrary. Positive-normative split removes moral realism from governing methodology; efficiency criterion substitutes preference satisfaction for objective moral standards; capabilities approach constitutes significant counter-pressure but does not alter the governing mainstream finding.
  • C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: Partially Aligned. Robustly operative as governing epistemic standard for positive economic claims; not applied to normative questions which the positive-normative split removes from scientific competence.
  • C5 — Ethical Intuitionism: Contrary. Positive-normative split and derivational structure of welfare economics require that normative conclusions be derived from stated value premises rather than directly recognized; governing methodology explicitly excludes direct moral recognition as a legitimate source of normative judgment.
  • C6 — Foundationalism: Contrary. Positive economics methodology treats models as revisable predictive instruments; efficiency criterion is formal procedural standard rather than foundational moral recognition; field has no governing account of what economic life is for that functions as bedrock from which analysis proceeds.
  • Capacity Loss Finding: Partial Capacity Loss — Moral Disembedding. Economics deliberately separated itself from its moral philosophical foundations as a condition of scientific status. The field retains extraordinary technical capability while having lost the capacity to engage genuine economic justice as a question with real moral answers, to claim genuine moral authority for normative economic judgments, and to evaluate its models against a foundational account of what economic life is genuinely for. Smith’s original questions — what does genuine justice require in economic life, and what arrangements genuinely serve human flourishing — are outside the governing competence of positive economics.

Instrument: Classical Field Audit (CFA) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Prose rendering: Claude. 2026.

Classical Field Audit — Medicine

 

Classical Field Audit — Medicine

Instrument: Classical Field Audit (CFA) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Prose rendering: Claude. 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, Two and One-Half Ethical Systems. 2026.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Field under examination: Medicine, understood as the clinical and scientific discipline concerned with the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of disease and the promotion of human health. The audit targets the field’s governing mainstream practice across its major frameworks: the biomedical model as the dominant explanatory paradigm, evidence-based medicine as the dominant methodological standard, principle-based bioethics as the governing ethical framework, and the patient autonomy norm as the dominant governing clinical value. The Hippocratic tradition is treated as the classical baseline against which the field’s displacements are measured. The biopsychosocial model, palliative care, and narrative medicine are noted as partial counter-pressures within the mainstream.

Sources constituting the presupposition profile: The biomedical model and its governing assumptions about disease as biological dysfunction; Engel’s critique and the biopsychosocial model; evidence-based medicine (Sackett) and its governing methodological commitments; Beauchamp and Childress’s four-principles bioethics (autonomy, beneficence, nonmaleficence, justice); the informed consent doctrine and its institutional framework; the Hippocratic tradition as the classical baseline; palliative care and its governing account of whole-person care; narrative medicine (Charon) as a counter-pressure within academic medicine. No source is drawn from critic characterizations alone.

Prior conclusion check: None stated or implied. Findings to be produced by analysis.

Self-Audit — Step 0:

  • Corpus in view: ✓
  • Sources restricted to the field’s governing literature: ✓
  • No prior conclusion stated: ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. Proceeding to Step 1.


Step 1 — Presupposition Profile

Stage A — Methodological Record Summary

The biomedical model. The biomedical model, which has governed clinical medicine and medical research since the nineteenth century, treats disease as biological malfunction: a deviation from measurable biological norms caused by identifiable biological agents (pathogens, genetic defects, biochemical dysregulation, structural abnormalities). The patient is the body in which the disease occurs. Treatment is correction of the biological malfunction through pharmacological, surgical, or procedural intervention. The model is load-bearing for medical research, diagnostic classification, treatment protocols, and the institutional architecture of clinical medicine. It is the presuppositional foundation of the randomized controlled trial, the diagnostic laboratory, and the pharmaceutical pipeline.

Evidence-based medicine. Evidence-based medicine, the dominant methodological framework since the 1990s, requires that clinical decisions be governed by the best available empirical evidence about treatment effectiveness, derived from systematic reviews and randomized controlled trials rather than from individual clinical experience or expert opinion alone. The clinician who departs from evidence-based guidelines must justify the departure. This framework is load-bearing for the field’s institutional practice: it governs clinical guidelines, regulatory approval, insurance reimbursement, and professional accountability standards. It progressively displaces clinical judgment — the individual physician’s direct assessment of what this particular patient needs — with protocol-governed decision-making.

Patient autonomy as the governing clinical value. The principle of patient autonomy — the patient’s right to make informed decisions about his own medical care — has become the dominant governing value in contemporary medical ethics, displacing the classical Hippocratic emphasis on the physician’s obligation to pursue what is genuinely good for the patient. The informed consent doctrine operationalizes this: the physician must disclose relevant information and obtain the patient’s consent before proceeding. Beneficence — pursuing the patient’s genuine good — remains a governing principle in Beauchamp and Childress’s four-principles framework, but it is regularly subordinated to autonomy when the two conflict. The patient’s expressed preference, not the physician’s judgment of genuine benefit, governs clinical decisions in the dominant framework.

Principle-based bioethics. Beauchamp and Childress’s four-principles framework — autonomy, beneficence, nonmaleficence, justice — is the dominant governing framework for medical ethics in academic medicine and in clinical institutions. It is explicitly presented as a prima facie principles framework: the principles can conflict, require contextual balancing, and are not hierarchically ordered by a foundational prior account of what medicine is for or what human beings genuinely need. The framework is procedural rather than foundational. It is load-bearing for bioethics education, institutional review boards, and clinical ethics consultation.

The Hippocratic tradition. The classical Hippocratic tradition treated medicine as a moral vocation: the physician was obligated to pursue the genuine good of the patient, to do no harm, to maintain confidentiality, and to exercise practical wisdom in the care of particular patients. This tradition grounded the physician’s authority in his genuine knowledge of what is good for the patient and his genuine moral commitment to pursuing it. The physician was not a service provider executing patient preferences but a moral agent pursuing the patient’s genuine wellbeing. This tradition is the classical baseline for the audit. It retains institutional presence in medical oaths, in the continuing emphasis on the physician-patient relationship, and in the practice of palliative care and whole-person medicine.

Palliative care and narrative medicine as counter-pressures. Palliative care explicitly addresses what is genuinely good for the patient when cure is not available: the relief of suffering, the support of the patient’s dignity, and the facilitation of a death that corresponds to the patient’s values and relationships. Narrative medicine (Charon) treats the patient’s story — his experience of illness, his values, his relationships — as clinically essential rather than merely contextual. Both traditions introduce counter-pressures against the pure biomedical model’s reduction of the patient to a biological system. Both are established within academic medicine, though neither constitutes the dominant institutional mainstream.

Stage B — Domain Mapping

Three significant domain tensions require mapping.

Tension One — the biomedical model versus the whole-person traditions. The biomedical model treats the patient as a biological system. The biopsychosocial model, palliative care, and narrative medicine treat the patient as a whole person whose biological condition is one dimension of a richer clinical reality. These presuppositions generate opposed findings on C1.

Tension Two — patient autonomy versus the Hippocratic account of genuine patient good. The dominant patient autonomy framework treats the patient’s expressed preference as the governing clinical standard. The Hippocratic tradition treats the physician’s judgment of genuine patient good as the governing clinical standard. These presuppositions generate opposed findings on C2, C3, and C5.

Tension Three — clinical judgment versus protocol-governed practice. Clinical judgment — the experienced clinician’s direct assessment of what this particular patient needs — has an intuitionistic character: it involves direct recognition of what is clinically appropriate in particular circumstances. Evidence-based medicine progressively replaces this with protocol-governed decision-making. These presuppositions generate opposed findings on C5.

Self-Audit — Step 1:

  • Presuppositions drawn from the field’s governing practice: ✓
  • Load-bearing test applied throughout: ✓
  • Charity requirement applied: ✓
  • Three domain tensions mapped: ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. Proceeding to Step 2.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

C1 — Substance Dualism

The commitment: The human being possesses a rational faculty categorically distinct from and prior to all external material conditions. The patient is a rational subject whose inner life is the primary locus of his experience of illness and his relationship to genuine health.

What medicine’s governing practice requires: The biomedical model treats the patient as a biological organism: disease occurs in the body, treatment corrects the biological malfunction, and clinical success is measured by biological outcomes (laboratory values, imaging findings, physiological parameters). The patient’s inner life — his experience of suffering, his values, his relationship to his own illness — enters the clinical picture insofar as it affects biological outcomes or constitutes relevant history. The patient is not primarily a rational subject but a biological system in which a pathological process is occurring.

Contrary presuppositions in whole-person traditions: Palliative care, narrative medicine, and the biopsychosocial model treat the patient’s inner life as clinically primary rather than as merely contextual. The patient’s experience of suffering, his values, his relationships, and his sense of dignity are treated as the primary clinical reality to which the physician’s intervention must respond. Informed consent presupposes a rational subject capable of genuine understanding and genuine decision: the patient is not merely a biological system consenting to intervention but a rational agent making a genuine choice about his own care. Both presuppositions are load-bearing within the field.

Governing corpus text: Nine Excerpts, Section 4: “I am my soul/prohairesis/inner self. Everything else, including my body, is an external.” The biomedical model requires precisely the opposite prioritization: the body is the primary clinical reality and the patient’s inner life is secondary. The whole-person traditions require something closer to the classical position: the patient’s rational inner life is the primary reality to which clinical intervention must ultimately respond.

Finding: Inconsistent. The biomedical model requires reduction of the patient to his biological condition. Palliative care, narrative medicine, and the informed consent doctrine require a rational subject whose inner life is primary. Both presuppositions are load-bearing within the field’s governing practice.


C2 — Metaphysical Libertarianism

The commitment: The agent exercises genuine freedom in assent, judgment, and moral choice. The patient is a genuine rational agent whose choices about his own care are genuinely his own and genuinely consequential.

What medicine’s governing practice requires: The informed consent doctrine presupposes genuine patient agency: the patient must be capable of understanding relevant information, deliberating about his options, and making a genuine choice. Informed consent is not a formality but the legal and ethical recognition that the patient is a genuine decision-maker whose choices have genuine authority over his own body and his own care. Without genuine patient agency, informed consent is a fiction rather than a moral and legal requirement.

Contrary presuppositions in the biomedical model: The biomedical model treats the patient’s condition as substantially determined by his biological state. His experience of illness, his capacity for decision-making, and his recovery trajectory are substantially caused by his biological condition. The expanding literature on how disease states, medications, and physiological conditions affect cognition and decision-making progressively qualifies the scope of genuine rational agency presupposed by informed consent. The same tension that produced the Inconsistent findings in the Psychiatry run operates across general medicine: the field simultaneously treats patients as genuine agents capable of informed consent and explains their conditions as substantially caused by biological states that affect the very rational agency the consent doctrine presupposes.

Governing corpus text: Nine Excerpts, Section 7: “Choosing whether or not to assent to impressions is the only thing in our control.” Informed consent presupposes that the patient genuinely controls his assent to or refusal of proposed treatment. The biomedical model’s account of how biological states substantially determine patient experience and decision-making qualifies this without the field providing a principled account of the boundary.

Finding: Inconsistent. The informed consent doctrine presupposes genuine patient agency. The biomedical model progressively explains patient experience and decision-making as substantially caused by biological states. The field manages this tension clinically but has not resolved it theoretically.


C3 — Moral Realism

The commitment: Moral truths are real. What is genuinely good for the patient is a real medical and moral question with a real answer — not merely a matter of the patient’s expressed preference or the physician’s cultural assumptions.

What medicine’s governing practice requires: The Hippocratic tradition treated the physician’s obligation to pursue the patient’s genuine good as a real moral obligation grounded in what is objectively good for a human being in this patient’s condition. The physician’s judgment of genuine benefit — not the patient’s expressed preference — was the classical governing clinical standard. Palliative care’s concern for the patient’s genuine wellbeing, dignity, and relief from suffering presupposes that these are real goods, not merely preferred states. The physician who withholds treatment that would prolong life in conditions of genuine suffering is making a judgment about genuine human good that requires moral realism to be coherent as a moral judgment rather than merely as the execution of a patient preference.

Contrary presuppositions in the autonomy framework: The dominant patient autonomy framework shifts the governing clinical standard from the physician’s judgment of genuine benefit to the patient’s expressed preference. The physician’s role is to disclose relevant information and respect the patient’s choice — not to evaluate whether the choice corresponds to what is genuinely good for the patient. This framework does not require moral realism: the patient’s preference is the governing standard regardless of whether it corresponds to what is objectively good for him. A patient who refuses life-saving treatment because of a false belief about the treatment’s burdens has made a choice that the autonomy framework obliges the physician to respect, not to challenge on the grounds that the choice does not correspond to the patient’s genuine good.

Governing corpus text: Two and One-Half Ethical Systems: moral facts are as real as any other facts; the alternative reduces moral evaluation to preference management. The autonomy framework requires precisely this alternative: the patient’s preference is the governing clinical standard, and the physician’s role is preference management rather than genuine benefit pursuit. The Hippocratic tradition requires the classical position.

Finding: Inconsistent. The Hippocratic tradition and palliative care require an objective standard of genuine patient good that grounds the physician’s moral obligation and clinical judgment. The dominant patient autonomy framework replaces this objective standard with the patient’s expressed preference as the governing clinical value. Both presuppositions are load-bearing within the field’s governing practice.


C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth

The commitment: A proposition is true because it corresponds to a mind-independent reality. Medical claims about disease, treatment effectiveness, and clinical outcomes are true or false depending on whether they correspond to what actually happens in the biological world.

What medicine’s governing practice requires: Evidence-based medicine is built on correspondence truth as its governing epistemic standard for empirical claims. The randomized controlled trial is designed to determine what actually happens when a treatment is administered — to establish whether the treatment corresponds to the effect claimed for it. Clinical guidelines summarize the best available evidence about what treatments actually produce what outcomes in what patient populations. The field’s entire empirical research program presupposes that there are facts about treatment effectiveness that clinical research aims to discover, and that those facts constrain what responsible clinicians should do. This is load-bearing for the entire institutional apparatus of evidence-based medicine.

Residual divergence: The correspondence standard applies robustly to empirical claims about treatment outcomes and disease mechanisms. It is not applied to the governing evaluative question of what constitutes genuine patient good: whether a treatment outcome that reduces biological malfunction while failing to restore the patient’s capacity for meaningful life constitutes genuine medical success is not answered by correspondence to biological facts alone. The biomedical model’s restriction of clinical success to biological outcomes effectively limits the domain in which the correspondence standard is applied.

Finding: Partially Aligned. Correspondence truth is robustly operative as the governing epistemic standard for empirical claims about treatment outcomes and disease mechanisms. The residual is the domain limitation: the correspondence standard is not applied to the governing evaluative question of genuine patient good, which the dominant patient autonomy framework removes from the domain of objective evaluation entirely.


C5 — Ethical Intuitionism

The commitment: Certain moral truths can be directly recognized by the trained rational faculty. The experienced clinician’s direct recognition of what this particular patient needs — practical clinical wisdom — is a genuine epistemic capacity that direct recognition rather than protocol-derivation.

What medicine’s governing practice requires: Clinical judgment — the experienced physician’s direct recognition of what this patient needs in these circumstances — is a genuine and historically foundational component of medical practice. The physician who directly perceives that this patient is deteriorating before the laboratory values confirm it, who directly recognizes that this patient’s reported symptom pattern corresponds to a particular condition, who directly perceives that the standard treatment is not the right choice for this particular patient — is exercising a genuine clinical perceptual capacity that cannot be fully captured by protocol-governed decision-making. The Hippocratic tradition treated this practical clinical wisdom as the physician’s central professional virtue. Palliative care explicitly invokes the physician’s direct perception of the patient’s condition, values, and genuine needs as clinically essential.

Contrary presuppositions in evidence-based medicine: Evidence-based medicine progressively replaces clinical judgment with protocol-governed decision-making. The governing methodological principle is that individual clinical experience and expert opinion are unreliable guides to treatment effectiveness and that population-level empirical evidence should govern clinical decisions. The physician who departs from evidence-based guidelines because of his clinical judgment is required to justify the departure against the evidentiary standard. The field thus progressively subordinates clinical judgment — the direct recognition of what this particular patient needs — to the population-level generalizations of evidence-based protocols.

Governing corpus text: Stoicism Moral Facts and Ethical Intuitionism (Sterling): direct rational recognition of what is genuinely the case is a genuine epistemic capacity. Clinical practical wisdom is the medical expression of this capacity: the trained physician directly recognizes what genuine health requires in particular clinical circumstances. Evidence-based medicine’s systematic subordination of clinical judgment to protocol treats this direct recognition as epistemically inferior to population-level statistical evidence.

Finding: Inconsistent. Clinical judgment and the Hippocratic practical wisdom tradition require direct recognition of what is clinically appropriate in particular circumstances. Evidence-based medicine progressively subordinates direct clinical recognition to protocol-governed decision-making derived from population-level evidence. Both presuppositions are load-bearing within the field’s governing practice.


C6 — Foundationalism

The commitment: Reasoning must ultimately terminate in first principles or bedrock recognitions. Medicine requires a foundational account of what healing is and what human beings genuinely need in order to govern its clinical practice.

What medicine’s governing practice requires: The field’s governing ethical framework — Beauchamp and Childress’s four principles — is explicitly presented as a prima facie principles framework: the principles are not hierarchically ordered by a foundational prior account of what medicine is for, they can conflict, and their application requires contextual balancing rather than derivation from foundational recognitions. The four principles are procedural rather than foundational. The field has no governing account of what health genuinely is beyond biological normalcy, of what genuine healing consists in beyond the correction of measurable biological deviation, or of what medicine is ultimately for beyond the technical correction of disease and the facilitation of patient preferences. Clinical guidelines are revised as evidence accumulates. Diagnostic classifications are revised as clinical consensus shifts. The governing clinical value — patient autonomy — is not a foundational recognition about what human beings genuinely need but a procedural principle about who governs clinical decisions.

Residual in palliative care: Palliative care’s governing account of whole-person care — attending to suffering, dignity, and the patient’s values as the primary clinical reality — comes closest to a foundational account of what medicine is ultimately for. But even within palliative care, this account is presented as one approach among others rather than as the foundational recognition that should govern all of medicine. The Hippocratic tradition provides something like a foundational account of medicine’s purpose, but it functions as a historical heritage rather than as an operative governing framework in the field’s mainstream institutional practice.

Governing corpus text: Stoicism Foundationalism and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge (Sterling): the foundationalist structure is the precondition for genuine knowledge rather than indefinitely revisable opinion. Medicine’s governing practice treats its clinical guidelines, diagnostic classifications, ethical principles, and even its governing clinical values as revisable in light of accumulating evidence and shifting clinical consensus. There is no foundational account of what human beings are and what genuine healing requires that governs clinical practice rather than being itself subject to revision.

Finding: Contrary. Medicine’s governing practice is organized around revisable clinical guidelines, procedural ethical principles, and the patient’s expressed preference rather than around foundational recognitions about what human beings genuinely are and what genuine healing requires. The Hippocratic tradition and palliative care provide historical and partial resources for a foundational account but do not constitute the field’s governing framework. This is not a domain tension but a governing absence.

Self-Audit — Step 2:

  • All six commitments have received findings: ✓
  • Each finding grounded in specific corpus text: ✓
  • Inconsistent findings issued where domain tension required them (C1, C2, C3, C5): ✓
  • Contrary finding at C6 grounded in the absence of a foundational governing account of medicine’s purpose in the field’s mainstream practice: ✓
  • Partially Aligned at C4 reflects robust correspondence standard in evidence-based medicine alongside evaluative domain limitation: ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. Proceeding to Step 3.


Step 3 — Displacement Diagnosis

C1 — Substance Dualism: Inconsistent

What the classical commitment made available: A medicine grounded in substance dualism treated the patient as a rational subject whose inner life was the primary clinical reality. The physician was not primarily a technician correcting biological malfunction but a person in genuine moral relationship with another person — the patient — whose rational faculty was the ultimate locus of his experience of illness and his response to care. Hippocratic medicine addressed the whole person: the patient’s experience of suffering, his understanding of his condition, his values and relationships, and his rational engagement with the physician’s recommendations were clinically essential, not merely contextual. Treatment aimed at restoring the patient’s capacity for genuine human flourishing, not merely at correcting measurable biological deviation.

What the inconsistency produces: A field divided between a model that reduces the patient to his biological condition and traditions that recover the whole person but cannot ground that recovery in the field’s dominant theoretical framework. The biomedical model produces extraordinary technical sophistication in diagnosis and treatment of biological pathology while progressively marginalizing the patient as a rational subject. Palliative care and narrative medicine recover the patient as a whole person but are treated as humanistic supplements to real medicine rather than as expressions of medicine’s own foundational commitment to the patient as a rational subject. The field cannot coherently integrate its technical excellence with its whole-person traditions because it has no governing theoretical account of what the patient is.

What the field has lost: The capacity to give a coherent account of what genuine healing is. Biological correction of malfunction is not the same as genuine healing if the patient whose biology is corrected remains unable to flourish as a rational agent. The field has lost the theoretical framework within which the question of genuine healing — as distinct from biological normalization — can be asked and answered.


C2 — Metaphysical Libertarianism: Inconsistent

What the classical commitment made available: A medicine grounded in genuine patient agency could treat the physician-patient encounter as a genuine moral relationship between rational agents. The patient’s genuine capacity to understand his situation and make genuine choices about his care was not merely a legal prerequisite for treatment but the foundational reality of the clinical relationship. The physician who educates, informs, and engages the patient’s rational faculty in the process of care is doing something qualitatively different from a technician who obtains a signature on a consent form. The patient’s genuine rational engagement with his condition — his understanding of what is happening to him, his genuine deliberation about his options, his genuine choice of how to proceed — is part of what constitutes genuine medical care in the classical tradition.

What the inconsistency produces: A field that obtains informed consent while progressively explaining patient decision-making as the output of biological and psychological states that the consent doctrine’s presuppositions cannot accommodate. The patient who signs a consent form is treated as a genuine agent. The research program that explains how his disease state, his anxiety, his cognitive load, and his physician’s framing affect his decision treats his signature as the output of a system of influences rather than a genuine rational choice. The field cannot coherently maintain both the informed consent doctrine and the explanatory framework that progressively dissolves the genuine agency the doctrine presupposes.

What the field has lost: The theoretical foundation for the clinical relationship as a genuine encounter between rational agents. The physician who engages the patient’s understanding, who educates rather than merely informs, who invites genuine deliberation rather than merely obtaining consent — is presupposing a patient whose rational faculty is genuinely present and genuinely engaged. The field has lost the theoretical account of that faculty that would ground the moral significance of the clinical encounter.


C3 — Moral Realism: Inconsistent

What the classical commitment made available: A medicine grounded in moral realism could treat the physician’s judgment of genuine patient good as a genuine moral judgment rather than merely as one perspective competing with the patient’s expressed preference. The Hippocratic physician’s obligation to pursue the patient’s genuine good was not conditional on the patient’s expressed preference: it was a real moral obligation grounded in what is objectively good for a human being in this patient’s condition. When patient preference and genuine benefit conflict — as they regularly do — the classical framework gave the physician both the authority and the obligation to engage the patient’s reasoning and pursue what is genuinely good for him, not merely what he currently prefers.

What the inconsistency produces: A field that cannot give a coherent account of when the physician’s judgment of genuine benefit should override patient preference and when it should not. The autonomy framework says it should not; the Hippocratic tradition says it should when genuine good is at stake. The field manages this tension through the distinction between competent and incompetent patients — a competent patient’s preferences govern; an incompetent patient’s genuine interests govern. But this distinction presupposes precisely what the autonomy framework cannot ground: an objective standard of genuine patient interest against which expressed preferences can be evaluated.

What the field has lost: The capacity to give a principled account of the physician’s moral role. If the physician’s role is to respect patient preference, he is a service provider rather than a moral agent pursuing genuine benefit. If he is a moral agent pursuing genuine benefit, his authority derives from genuine knowledge of what is good for the patient — which requires moral realism. The field has lost the theoretical foundation for the physician’s genuine moral authority in the clinical encounter.


C5 — Ethical Intuitionism: Inconsistent

What the classical commitment made available: A medicine grounded in direct rational recognition could treat clinical practical wisdom as a genuine epistemic capacity: the experienced physician’s direct perception of what this particular patient needs in these particular circumstances. Hippocratic medicine required this: the physician who had cultivated practical wisdom through sustained clinical experience could directly recognize what genuine health required in the particular case before him, in ways that no general protocol could fully capture. This practical wisdom was the physician’s central professional virtue — more important than his technical knowledge of disease mechanisms, because it governed the application of that knowledge to the particular patient in his particular circumstances.

What the inconsistency produces: A field that progressively subordinates the experienced physician’s direct clinical recognition to population-level evidence without a coherent account of the relationship between the two. Evidence-based medicine is correct that individual clinical experience is prone to systematic biases and that population-level evidence provides an important corrective. But it cannot give a principled account of when clinical judgment should govern and when protocol should govern, because it has no governing theoretical account of what clinical practical wisdom is and what makes it a genuine epistemic capacity. The experienced clinician who overrides the protocol because he directly recognizes that the protocol does not fit this patient is doing something that evidence-based medicine can neither justify nor simply dismiss.

What the field has lost: The theoretical foundation for clinical practical wisdom as a genuine epistemic capacity. Medicine has lost the account of the physician as a person of practical wisdom whose direct clinical recognition is a genuine form of knowledge about particular patients that population-level evidence cannot replace. The reduction of clinical excellence to evidence-based protocol compliance treats the most important physician virtue as a methodological error to be corrected rather than as the governing clinical capacity.


C6 — Foundationalism: Contrary

What the classical commitment made available: A medicine grounded in foundational recognitions about human nature had a stable governing account of what it was doing and why. Health was the condition in which the human being could fulfill his rational nature; disease was the departure from that condition; healing was its restoration. The physician’s obligation to pursue genuine patient good was grounded in these foundational recognitions about what human beings are and what they genuinely need. Clinical guidelines were revisable in light of new knowledge about how to achieve the foundational goal; the foundational goal itself was not revisable. The physician who asked “what is this patient genuinely doing to heal this patient?” had a prior account of what genuine healing is that governed the answer.

What the modern replacement produces instead: A field whose governing clinical value (patient autonomy) is procedural rather than foundational, whose governing ethical framework (four principles) is explicitly non-hierarchical and contextually balanced, and whose governing methodological standard (evidence-based medicine) treats all clinical guidelines as revisable. The field has no governing account of what health genuinely is beyond biological normalcy, of what medicine is ultimately for beyond technical correction and preference facilitation, or of what the physician’s moral role genuinely is beyond competent service delivery. Clinical excellence is defined by adherence to evidence-based guidelines rather than by the cultivation of the practical wisdom that would enable genuine healing.

What the field has lost: The capacity to give a principled account of what it is doing. The physician who asks “what is this patient genuinely for?” — what genuine health looks like for this particular human being in these particular circumstances — is asking a question that the field’s dominant frameworks cannot answer. The field has lost the governing account of what medicine is ultimately for that would allow it to evaluate its clinical guidelines, its ethical principles, and its governing values against a prior recognition of what human beings genuinely need.

Self-Audit — Step 3:

  • All Contrary and Inconsistent findings from Step 2 have received displacement diagnoses: ✓
  • Diagnoses are specific: ✓
  • Distinction maintained between what the field cannot do and what it does not do by convention: ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. Proceeding to Step 4.


Step 4 — Restorative Direction

C1 — Restored Substance Dualism

A medicine that operated from substance dualism would treat the patient as a rational subject whose inner life is the primary clinical reality rather than as a biological system in which pathological processes are occurring. Biological correction of malfunction would be situated within a governing account of genuine human flourishing: the treatment succeeds not merely when laboratory values normalize but when the patient is restored to the capacity for genuine rational and human flourishing that the disease had disrupted. Palliative care’s account of whole-person care would become the governing model rather than a humanistic supplement to real medicine: it is already the closest contemporary medicine has come to the classical account of what the physician is actually doing.


C2 — Restored Metaphysical Libertarianism

A medicine that operated from genuine patient agency would treat the physician-patient encounter as a genuine moral relationship between rational agents rather than as a technical service transaction with legally required consent. The physician who educates, engages, and invites genuine deliberation from the patient is not merely obtaining consent but participating in the patient’s own rational engagement with his condition — an engagement that is itself part of what constitutes genuine care. The informed consent doctrine would recover its moral depth: the patient’s genuine rational engagement with his situation is not a legal prerequisite for treatment but the foundational reality that makes the clinical encounter genuinely therapeutic rather than merely technical.


C3 — Restored Moral Realism

A medicine that operated from moral realism could restore the physician’s genuine moral authority in the clinical encounter. The physician’s judgment of genuine patient good is a real moral judgment — not merely a competing preference — that derives its authority from genuine knowledge of what is objectively good for human beings in this patient’s condition. Patient autonomy would be preserved and respected not as the governing clinical value that overrides all others, but as a genuine moral good that must be balanced against the physician’s genuine obligation to pursue the patient’s genuine good. The physician who engages the patient’s reasoning, challenges false beliefs about his condition, and pursues genuine benefit alongside patient preference is not overriding autonomy but exercising genuine moral agency in service of genuine patient good.


C5 — Restored Ethical Intuitionism

A medicine that recognized direct rational recognition as a genuine clinical epistemic capacity would restore clinical practical wisdom to its classical role as the physician’s central professional virtue. Evidence-based medicine would be situated within a governing account of clinical wisdom rather than treated as its replacement: population-level evidence informs the context within which the clinician of practical wisdom directly perceives what this particular patient needs. The formation of this clinical perceptual capacity — through sustained engagement with particular patients in particular circumstances over years of clinical practice — would recover its status as the primary goal of medical education rather than as an unreliable heuristic to be disciplined by protocol compliance.


C6 — Restored Foundationalism

A medicine that operated from foundational recognitions about human nature would have a governing account of what it is doing and why. Health is the condition in which the human being can exercise his rational nature and pursue genuine flourishing. Disease is the departure from that condition. Healing is its restoration. Clinical guidelines, evidence-based protocols, and ethical frameworks would all be evaluated against this foundational account rather than treated as self-grounding procedural standards. The physician’s moral role would be clearly defined: to pursue the patient’s genuine good, grounded in genuine knowledge of what human beings genuinely are and what they genuinely need, using the best available technical and clinical resources in service of that foundational goal.


Capacity Loss Finding

Four commitment-level findings are Inconsistent (C1, C2, C3, C5), one is Contrary (C6), and one is Partially Aligned (C4). The pattern is structurally similar to Law and Political Theory: significant classical resources retained in the Hippocratic tradition, palliative care, clinical practical wisdom, and the physician-patient relationship, while the dominant biomedical model, patient autonomy framework, and evidence-based methodology have progressively displaced the theoretical foundation for those resources.

Partial Capacity Loss — Technical Displacement of Vocation.

Medicine is the field that most directly shows the human cost of the displacement documented throughout this series. Law, History, and Political Theory lose theoretical coherence but continue to produce institutional practice that retains significant classical character. Medicine has not merely lost theoretical coherence: it has progressively displaced the physician’s moral vocation — the Hippocratic commitment to the patient’s genuine good — with a technical service model in which the physician is a competent deliverer of evidence-based interventions to consenting biological systems. The loss is not merely theoretical; it is experienced by patients who receive technically excellent care while feeling that no one is addressing their actual condition, and by physicians who entered medicine as a vocation and find themselves practicing as protocol-executing service providers.

The specific capacities that have been lost: the capacity to give a coherent account of what genuine healing is as distinct from biological normalization; the capacity to treat the physician-patient encounter as a genuine moral relationship between rational agents; the capacity to ground the physician’s genuine moral authority in genuine knowledge of what is objectively good for human beings; the capacity to recognize clinical practical wisdom as the physician’s central professional virtue rather than as an unreliable heuristic; and the capacity to organize clinical practice around a foundational account of what medicine is for.

What remains: the field retains extraordinary technical capability in the biological correction of disease, a robust evidence base for treatment decisions, the institutional infrastructure of informed consent as genuine moral recognition of patient agency, and the living traditions of palliative care and narrative medicine as partial carriers of the classical framework. These are real achievements and genuine resources. What they cannot be organized around, in the field’s dominant institutional practice, is a governing account of what medicine is ultimately for — because that account requires the foundational recognitions about human nature that the dominant frameworks have displaced.

Self-Audit — Step 4:

  • All displaced commitments have received restorative directions: ✓
  • Restorative directions stated as positive accounts: ✓
  • Capacity Loss finding derived from complete pattern of findings: ✓
  • Technical Displacement of Vocation identified as the distinctive character of the Capacity Loss: the displacement is experienced as a human cost, not merely as a theoretical incoherence: ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. CFA run complete.


Summary of Findings

  • C1 — Substance Dualism: Inconsistent. Biomedical model requires reduction of patient to biological condition; palliative care, narrative medicine, and informed consent doctrine require rational subject whose inner life is primary.
  • C2 — Metaphysical Libertarianism: Inconsistent. Informed consent doctrine presupposes genuine patient agency; biomedical model’s account of how biological states affect decision-making progressively qualifies that agency without providing a principled boundary.
  • C3 — Moral Realism: Inconsistent. Hippocratic tradition and palliative care require objective standard of genuine patient good; dominant patient autonomy framework replaces objective standard with patient preference as the governing clinical value.
  • C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: Partially Aligned. Robustly operative as the governing epistemic standard for empirical claims about treatment outcomes; not applied to the evaluative question of genuine patient good.
  • C5 — Ethical Intuitionism: Inconsistent. Clinical practical wisdom and Hippocratic tradition require direct recognition of what is clinically appropriate in particular circumstances; evidence-based medicine progressively subordinates direct clinical recognition to protocol-governed decision-making.
  • C6 — Foundationalism: Contrary. No foundational account of what medicine is for governs the field’s mainstream practice; governing ethical framework is procedural, governing clinical value is patient preference, governing methodological standard treats all guidelines as revisable.
  • Capacity Loss Finding: Partial Capacity Loss — Technical Displacement of Vocation. The field retains extraordinary technical capability and genuine institutional resources while having lost the moral vocation that once governed how that technical capability was deployed. The displacement is experienced as a human cost by patients and physicians, not merely as a theoretical incoherence.

Instrument: Classical Field Audit (CFA) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Prose rendering: Claude. 2026.