Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Sunday, June 21, 2026

The Classical Restoration Instrument (CRI) — Version 1.0

 

The Classical Restoration Instrument (CRI) — Version 1.0

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. Derived from the documented methods of the most fully aligned contemporary philosophers, including Plantinga, Huemer, Finnis, Anscombe, Ross, and Chisholm. 2026.


I. Instrument Definition

The Classical Restoration Instrument is a philosophical instrument designed to evaluate whether a named argument, position, or essay successfully restores one or more of the six classical philosophical commitments in a given domain of inquiry. It serves two functions simultaneously: as an evaluative instrument for auditing existing restorative arguments, and as a prescriptive instrument that specifies what argumentative moves are required for a successful restoration in a domain where one or more commitments have been displaced.

The CRI is the complement of the Classical Field Audit. Where the CFA diagnoses displacement — identifying which commitments have been displaced and what has been lost — the CRI evaluates restoration: whether an argument succeeds in recovering what the CFA found to be missing, by what methods, with what completeness, and with what structural consequence for the domain under examination.

The CRI does not evaluate whether the restored position is politically acceptable, institutionally viable, or consistent with the preferences of the field’s mainstream. It evaluates whether the restoration is philosophically effective: whether the argumentative moves deployed are sufficient to recover the classical commitment in a way that restores the capacities the field lost when the commitment was displaced.


II. The Eight Restoration Methods

The CRI is built around eight methods extracted from the argumentative records of the most fully aligned contemporary philosophers. These are the methods by which figures including Plantinga, Huemer, Finnis, Anscombe, Ross, and Chisholm successfully maintained or recovered the classical commitments against the dominant modern displacements. Each method is a distinct argumentative strategy; the most effective restorations typically deploy several in combination.

M1 — Load-Bearing Demonstration of Loss. Show what becomes impossible or incoherent once the commitment is abandoned — not what is merely inconvenient or philosophically awkward, but what the field can no longer do, say, or coherently presuppose once the classical commitment has been displaced. The demonstration must be specific: it must identify the exact capacity that is lost and show that the loss is structural rather than peripheral. Anscombe’s demonstration that moral “ought” becomes unintelligible without a law-conception of ethics is the paradigm case: she does not merely argue that the modern alternative is inferior; she shows that it cannot do what it claims to do. The power of M1 is negative before it is positive: it establishes what must be recovered before establishing how.

M2 — Self-Defeat Argument. Show that the denial of the classical commitment undermines the epistemic or logical resources needed to mount the denial itself. A position that cannot be coherently stated or argued without presupposing what it denies is self-defeating rather than merely wrong. Huemer’s defense of phenomenal conservatism uses this method: the denial of the claim that seemings justify beliefs must itself be mounted on the basis of seemings, making the denial self-undermining. MacIntyre’s critique of tradition-independent rationality uses the same structure: the claim to reason independently of all traditions is itself a tradition-constituted claim. M2 establishes not merely that the classical commitment is defensible but that its denial is incoherent.

M3 — Open Question Isolation. Rather than defending the classical commitment in the abstract, isolate the specific structural failure mode of the modern replacement that makes the classical commitment necessary. Moore’s open question argument does not argue for moral realism directly; it shows that any naturalistic reduction of moral properties faces an irreducible explanatory gap. Huemer’s response to evolutionary debunking arguments does not argue for moral intuitionism directly; it shows that the debunking argument applies equally to all beliefs, including scientific ones, and therefore cannot selectively undermine moral beliefs. M3 establishes that the modern alternative cannot perform the epistemic work it claims to perform, creating the theoretical space into which the classical commitment is restored.

M4 — Analytical Precision in Positive Account. Provide a detailed, structured account of the classical capacity being restored — not merely asserting its existence but specifying its internal structure, its epistemic role, its relationship to other capacities, and the precise conditions under which it operates. Ross’s structured account of prima facie duties is more effective than a vague appeal to moral intuition because it gives the capacity a specific, evaluable form. Plantinga’s account of warrant and proper function specifies precisely what makes a belief properly basic and how the cognitive faculties that produce it must be functioning for the belief to be warranted. M4 converts the assertion of a capacity into a philosophical theory of that capacity, making it both more defensible and more useful as a practical epistemic resource.

M5 — Corpus Return. Return to primary sources — the Stoics, Aristotle, Aquinas, Ross, Moore, Chisholm — rather than relying on the modern secondary literature’s characterization of the classical position. The secondary literature on classical philosophers is frequently shaped by the modern displacements it documents; it reads the classical figures through frameworks that distort what those figures actually held. Direct engagement with primary texts regularly reveals that the classical position is more sophisticated, more nuanced, and more responsive to contemporary objections than the secondary literature suggests. MacIntyre’s recovery of Aristotle and Aquinas against the characterizations of modern moral philosophy exemplifies M5. The Sterling corpus itself is an instance: the return to Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius, and Stoic primary sources rather than to modern interpretations of Stoicism. M5 is not historically escapist; it is philosophically productive.

M6 — Integration Demonstration. Show that the classical commitments form an integrated system rather than defending them in isolation. A restoration that recovers one commitment while leaving others displaced is vulnerable to the objection that the restoration is incoherent because the recovered commitment requires the others that remain absent. Plantinga’s epistemology integrates C4 (correspondence truth as the aim of warrant), C5 (properly basic beliefs as direct epistemic contact with reality), C6 (foundationalism through properly basic beliefs), and C1 (the rational knowing subject as a being with faculties aimed at truth). Finnis’s natural law integrates C3 (basic goods as objective moral reality), C5 (their self-evidence as direct recognition), and C6 (their foundational status as the bedrock of practical reason). M6 establishes that the recovery of one commitment is not a philosophical anomaly within an otherwise displaced framework but the beginning of a systematic restoration that requires and enables the recovery of the others.

M7 — Positive Capacity Account. Specify precisely what the restored commitment makes available that its modern replacement cannot provide — not in general terms but in terms of the specific capacities and questions the field regains when the commitment is operative. The positive capacity account is the restorative direction made explicit: it tells the reader not only that the classical commitment should be restored but what doing so would enable. Ross’s account of what a foundationalist moral epistemology can do that coherentist moral epistemology cannot. Plantinga’s account of what a libertarian account of free will makes available for the theology of grace and sin that compatibilism cannot provide. M7 gives the restoration a concrete purpose beyond the correction of error: it establishes what becomes possible when the classical commitment is operative.

M8 — Threshold Defense. Establish the minimum recovery required for the field or argument to function coherently, rather than attempting comprehensive recovery of all six commitments simultaneously. A restoration that attempts to recover all six commitments in a single argument faces the objection that the task is too large and the argument too comprehensive to be evaluated. A restoration that focuses on the minimum recovery required for a specific capacity to function — what must be restored for the field to be able to ask a particular question it currently cannot — is more practically achievable and establishes the pattern that fuller recovery follows. Finnis’s recovery of C3 and C5 together (the self-evidence of basic goods) establishes the threshold below which practical reason cannot function, without claiming to recover the entire Thomistic system at once. M8 is the method of practical restoration: it identifies the load-bearing minimum and defends that before attempting the comprehensive.


III. Verdict Architecture

The CRI issues findings at three levels: commitment-level restoration findings, method-level adequacy findings, and one synthetic Restoration Completeness finding.

Commitment-Level Restoration Findings (four categories)

Fully Restored — the argument succeeds in recovering the classical commitment in a way that is load-bearing for the argument’s position and makes available the capacities the field lost when the commitment was displaced. The restoration is not decorative: it is required by the argument’s structure and produces identifiable philosophical consequences.

Partially Restored — the argument recovers some of what was displaced by the commitment’s loss without completing the restoration. The partial restoration produces genuine recovery of some lost capacity while leaving other aspects of the displaced commitment unaddressed. The partial residue must be identified specifically: what remains unrestored, and what capacity remains unavailable as a result.

Restoration Attempted, Unsuccessful — the argument engages the commitment and attempts to recover it but the argumentative moves deployed are insufficient. The failure mode must be identified specifically: which of the eight methods is missing or deployed inadequately, and what would be required for the restoration to succeed.

Not Addressed — the argument does not engage this commitment. The commitment’s domain is absent from the argument’s governing concerns. Not Addressed is distinct from Restoration Attempted, Unsuccessful: the former requires a positive showing that the commitment’s domain is genuinely outside the argument’s scope; the latter applies where engagement was attempted but fell short.

Method-Level Adequacy Findings (three categories)

For each of the eight methods deployed in the argument, the CRI issues an adequacy finding.

Method Fully Deployed — the method is deployed with sufficient precision, load-bearing character, and argumentative rigor to contribute to the restoration of the target commitment.

Method Partially Deployed — the method is present in the argument but is not deployed with sufficient precision or rigor to carry the restoration alone. What additional development the method requires is stated explicitly.

Method Absent — the method is not deployed in the argument. Method Absent is recorded as a finding only when its absence contributes to a Partially Restored or Restoration Attempted, Unsuccessful finding. When an argument succeeds without a particular method, the method’s absence is noted but not treated as a deficiency.

Restoration Completeness Finding (three categories)

Full Restoration — five or more commitment-level findings are Fully Restored. The argument succeeds in recovering the classical framework comprehensively within its domain. The capacities the field lost when the classical commitments were displaced are available again within the argument’s position.

Partial Restoration — two to four commitment-level findings are Fully Restored, or the pattern of Fully Restored and Partially Restored findings produces a genuine expansion of available philosophical capacity within the domain. The argument recovers real ground without completing the restoration. The finding must specify which capacities are recovered and which remain unavailable.

Minimal Restoration — fewer than two commitment-level findings are Fully Restored. The argument addresses the classical commitments without achieving substantive recovery. Minimal Restoration is not a negative finding about the argument’s overall philosophical value; it is a specific finding about the scope of the recovery it achieves.


IV. The Aligned Figure Register

The CRI draws on a register of notable contemporary and modern philosophers whose argumentative records are substantially aligned with the classical commitments. The register establishes the field of demonstrated successful methods: these figures have shown that the classical commitments can be maintained and recovered within the contemporary philosophical conversation, and the methods they deployed are the documented basis from which the eight CRI methods are derived.

The register is organized by the commitments each figure most substantially addresses.

Comprehensive Alignment (most or all six commitments):

Alvin Plantinga. C1: modal argument for substance dualism, body-soul distinctness. C2: libertarian free will, agent causation, the free will defense. C3: theistically grounded moral realism. C4: correspondence truth as the governing epistemic standard. C5: reformed epistemology — properly basic beliefs as foundational direct epistemic contact with reality; the sensus divinitatis as a direct recognitional faculty. C6: warrant and proper function as foundationalist epistemology. Primary recovery methods deployed: M2 (evolutionary argument against naturalism as self-defeating), M4 (detailed account of warrant and proper function), M6 (integration of C1, C2, C4, C5, C6 within a single theistic epistemological framework).

Michael Huemer. C1: explicit defense of substance dualism. C2: political libertarianism grounding genuine personal agency. C3: Ethical Intuitionism (2005) — moral realism as the best explanation of moral knowledge. C4: direct realism in perception — perceptual beliefs as directly justified by correspondence with perceived objects. C5: phenomenal conservatism applied to ethics — moral seemings as prima facie epistemic justification for moral beliefs. C6: phenomenal conservatism as internalist foundationalism — seemings as the basic epistemic source. Primary recovery methods deployed: M2 (self-defeat of phenomenal conservatism’s denial), M3 (isolation of evolutionary debunking argument’s self-defeat), M4 (detailed account of moral seemings and their epistemic structure).

John Finnis. C1: natural law tradition’s account of the human being as a rational moral subject. C2: genuine free choice as itself one of the basic goods — the ability to originate one’s own choices is objectively valuable and presupposed by the entire natural law framework. C3: basic goods (life, knowledge, friendship, practical reason, religion, and others) as self-evidently and objectively choiceworthy — moral realism grounded in human nature. C4: correspondence truth as governing natural law reasoning. C5: self-evidence of basic goods — the trained rational agent directly recognizes their genuine choiceworthiness without inferential derivation. C6: basic goods as self-evident first principles of practical reason — explicit classical foundationalism. Primary recovery methods deployed: M1 (demonstration that practical reason collapses without foundational self-evident goods), M4 (detailed account of basic goods and their structure), M6 (integration of C2, C3, C5, and C6 within natural law), M8 (threshold defense — the minimum required for practical reason to function).

G.E. Moore and W.D. Ross — the intuitionist tradition. C3: moral realism as the metaphysical presupposition of moral discourse. C4: correspondence truth for moral claims. C5: direct non-inferential recognition of moral truth as the foundational moral epistemic resource. C6: moral first principles (Ross’s prima facie duties) as foundational bedrock. Primary recovery methods deployed: M1 (Moore’s demonstration that the naturalistic fallacy makes naturalist moral realism structurally incoherent), M3 (the open question argument isolates the specific failure mode of naturalism), M4 (Ross’s structured account of prima facie duties gives precision to direct moral recognition), M8 (threshold defense of the minimum required for moral discourse to function).

Elizabeth Anscombe. C1: Thomistic soul-body account; the human being as a rational agent irreducible to causal mechanism. C2: intentional agency as categorically distinct from mere event-causation — genuine origination of action through intention. C3: moral realism grounded in natural law. C4: correspondence truth. C5: direct recognition of the intentional character of action and its moral significance. C6: natural law foundationalism. Primary recovery methods deployed: M1 (“Modern Moral Philosophy” demonstrates that moral “ought” is unintelligible without a law conception — the paradigm case of M1), M5 (return to Aristotle and Aquinas against the distortions of modern moral philosophy).

Roderick Chisholm. C4: correspondence theory of truth as foundational to epistemology. C5: direct apprehension — the immediate epistemic contact with reality that grounds all inferential knowledge. C6: classical foundationalism in epistemology. Primary recovery methods deployed: M4 (detailed technical account of the structure of direct apprehension and its relation to inferential knowledge), M6 (integration of C4, C5, and C6 within a single foundationalist epistemology).

Strong Partial Alignment:

Derek Parfit (On What Matters, Vol. 3). C3: non-naturalist moral realism reached through systematic elimination of all rival metaethical positions. C4: correspondence truth for moral claims. C5: quasi-intuitionistic apprehension of rationally required moral truths. Primary recovery method deployed: M3 (systematic isolation of the failure modes of all competing metaethical positions).

Philippa Foot (Natural Goodness). C3: natural goodness as an objective standard of genuine human moral good, grounded in what it is for a being of a given natural kind to flourish. C5: direct recognition of natural good and its moral significance. C6: the naturalistic foundation of goodness as bedrock. Primary recovery methods deployed: M4 (detailed account of natural goodness and its structure), M5 (return to Aristotle’s account of natural function against modern alternatives).

Thomas Nagel (Mind and Cosmos). C1: resistance to physicalist reduction of mind — consciousness, intentionality, and reason are not explicable within the physicalist framework. C3: moral realism as the most plausible account of the objectivity of moral and evaluative claims. Primary recovery method deployed: M3 (isolation of the specific failure modes of physicalism with respect to consciousness and reason).


V. Operational Protocol

Execute all steps in strict sequence. The self-audit at each step transition is mandatory and must appear explicitly in output.

Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Before executing any CRI analysis, confirm:

The full corpus list is in view. The instrument is not proceeding from memory or from association with the aligned figure register. The argument or position under examination has been identified precisely: it is a named argument, essay, position, or philosophical text, not a vague tendency or unattributed view. The CFA findings for the relevant field are in view, so that the CRI analysis addresses the specific displacements the CFA identified rather than general philosophical problems.

The instrument is not operating under a prior conclusion about what the restoration findings should be. The findings are produced by analysis, not confirmed by it.

Self-Audit — Step 0:

  • Is the corpus in view?
  • Has the argument or position been precisely identified?
  • Are the relevant CFA findings in view?
  • Has any prior conclusion about restoration findings been stated or implied?

Self-Audit Complete. State result explicitly. Proceed to Step 1.

Step 1 — Restorative Profile

Governing question: What does the argument actually do with respect to each of the six classical commitments?

Construct the restorative profile in two stages.

Stage A — Commitment Engagement Survey. For each of the six commitments, state whether the argument engages it, and if so, how: does it assert the commitment, defend it, assume it without defending it, partially recover it, or ignore it entirely? This is a descriptive stage: it records what the argument does before evaluating whether what it does is adequate.

Stage B — Method Inventory. Identify which of the eight restoration methods the argument deploys, explicitly or implicitly. For each method identified, state where in the argument it appears and what commitment it addresses. For each method absent, note the absence only if the absence is relevant to a finding at Step 2.

Self-Audit — Step 1:

  • Has each commitment been surveyed for engagement?
  • Has the method inventory drawn on the argument’s actual content, or has the instrument attributed methods the argument does not deploy?
  • Have methods been identified as absent only where their absence is relevant to a Step 2 finding?

Self-Audit Complete. State result explicitly. Proceed to Step 2.

Step 2 — Commitment-Level Restoration Audit

Governing question: Does the argument successfully restore each classical commitment in a way that is load-bearing for its position?

Apply the commitment-level restoration findings to each of the six commitments. Issue a finding (Fully Restored, Partially Restored, Restoration Attempted Unsuccessful, or Not Addressed) for each commitment. State the grounds for each finding with reference to the specific methods deployed and the specific capacities recovered or not recovered.

The load-bearing test applies at this step: a restoration is not Fully Restored merely because the argument asserts the commitment or treats it as given. A restoration is Fully Restored only if the commitment is defended in a way that is required by the argument’s structure — such that abandoning the commitment would require the argument to operate differently.

Issue findings for all six commitments before proceeding to Step 3. Do not derive the Restoration Completeness finding from individual commitment findings prematurely.

Self-Audit — Step 2:

  • Has each commitment received a finding?
  • Is each finding grounded in the specific methods deployed in the argument rather than in general philosophical association?
  • Has the load-bearing test been applied to each Fully Restored finding?
  • Have Partially Restored findings identified specifically what remains unrestored and what capacity remains unavailable as a result?

Self-Audit Complete. State result explicitly. Proceed to Step 3.

Step 3 — Integration and Gap Analysis

Governing question: Does the restoration of some commitments require the restoration of others, and where do the gaps in the restoration leave the argument vulnerable?

M6 (Integration Demonstration) is assessed specifically at this step. If the argument has restored some commitments while leaving others displaced, determine whether the restored commitments can function coherently without the unrestored ones. Where they cannot, this is a structural gap that weakens the restoration: the argument has recovered capacity in one domain while leaving incoherence in another that undermines the recovered capacity.

Where integration is present — where the restoration of one commitment enables or requires the restoration of others and the argument has followed through — this strengthens the restoration and is noted explicitly.

Self-Audit — Step 3:

  • Has the integration pattern been assessed — do the restored commitments cohere with each other and require the unrestored commitments for their full operation?
  • Have structural gaps been identified where unrestored commitments undermine the coherence of restored ones?
  • Has integration been credited where it is present and load-bearing?

Self-Audit Complete. State result explicitly. Proceed to Step 4.

Step 4 — Restorative Directions and Completeness Finding

Governing question: What would complete or strengthen the restoration, and what is the overall restoration completeness of the argument?

For each commitment that received a Partially Restored or Restoration Attempted Unsuccessful finding at Step 2, state:

(a) Which of the eight methods is missing or inadequately deployed that would, if added, advance the restoration toward Fully Restored.

(b) What specific argumentative move the method requires in the domain under examination.

(c) What capacity would be recovered if the restoration were completed.

Issue the Restoration Completeness finding (Full, Partial, or Minimal) at the conclusion of Step 4, derived from the complete pattern of commitment-level findings.

Self-Audit — Step 4:

  • Have restorative directions been stated for each commitment with a Partially Restored or Unsuccessful finding?
  • Are the restorative directions specific — do they name the missing method and the specific argumentative move required?
  • Has the Restoration Completeness finding been derived from the complete pattern of commitment-level findings?
  • Does the Completeness finding specify what capacities are recovered and which remain unavailable?

Self-Audit Complete. State result explicitly. CRI run complete.


VI. Named Failure Modes

Failure Mode 1 — Decorative Restoration. The instrument credits an assertion of the classical commitment as a Fully Restored finding without applying the load-bearing test. A position that states “we believe in free will” or “moral facts are real” without defending those claims or requiring them for its argumentative structure has not restored the commitment. The restoration must be load-bearing: the argument must fail or require significant revision if the commitment is removed. Assertion without argumentative load is decoration, not restoration.

Failure Mode 2 — Method Substitution. The instrument credits a method as deployed when the argument employs only its surface form without its load-bearing substance. An argument that mentions evolutionary debunking without showing that the debunking argument is self-defeating has not deployed M3. An argument that invokes the history of philosophy without returning to primary sources has not deployed M5. Each method has specific requirements; surface mention does not satisfy them.

Failure Mode 3 — Integration Evasion. The instrument fails to assess whether restored commitments cohere with each other and with the unrestored commitments, treating each commitment as independently restored without examining whether the pattern of findings is internally stable. A restoration that recovers C5 (direct moral recognition) while leaving C3 (moral realism) unrestored has not fully recovered the capacity for genuine moral knowledge: direct recognition requires something real to recognize, and if moral facts are not real, the recognition is not genuine moral knowledge. Integration gaps are structural weaknesses that the instrument must identify.

Failure Mode 4 — Threshold Inflation. The instrument issues a Full Restoration finding when the argument achieves only the threshold minimum required for a specific capacity to function, rather than the comprehensive recovery of the classical commitment across the field. M8 (Threshold Defense) achieves Partial Restoration at most: it establishes the minimum recovery, not the complete restoration. Full Restoration requires that the commitment is recovered in its full classical form, not merely that the minimum needed for some specific capacity is in place.

Failure Mode 5 — Corpus Boundary Violation. The instrument issues findings on questions the corpus does not address: whether the argument is institutionally viable, politically acceptable, scientifically orthodox, or consistent with the preferences of the field’s mainstream practitioners. These are outside the corpus’s domain and outside the CRI’s reach. The CRI evaluates philosophical effectiveness of the restoration, not its reception.

Failure Mode 6 — Register Deference. The instrument treats a finding as Fully Restored because the argument resembles the work of a figure in the Aligned Figure Register, without independently verifying that the specific argumentative moves are adequate in the domain under examination. The register documents successful methods in the figures’ own philosophical contexts; those methods must be applied with appropriate adaptation to the domain being restored. An argument that adopts Plantinga’s proper function epistemology wholesale without adapting it to the specific domain under examination may not achieve full restoration in that domain even if Plantinga’s argument succeeds in his own context.

Failure Mode 7 — Completeness Conflation. The instrument treats Restoration Completeness as a verdict on the argument’s overall philosophical value. A Minimal Restoration finding does not mean the argument is philosophically worthless; it means that its restoration of the classical commitments is limited in scope. An argument may be philosophically important for other reasons while achieving only Minimal Restoration. The Completeness finding is a finding about the scope of the restoration, not a comprehensive evaluation of the argument.

Failure Mode 8 — Prior Alignment Assumption. The instrument assumes that an argument produced within a tradition associated with the classical commitments (Thomism, reformed epistemology, natural law) has necessarily restored those commitments, without applying the load-bearing test and method audit to the specific argument under examination. Membership in an aligned tradition is not itself restoration: the specific argument must deploy the methods in a load-bearing way within the domain being examined.


Instrument: Classical Restoration Instrument (CRI) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Derived from the documented methods of Plantinga, Huemer, Finnis, Anscombe, Ross, Chisholm, and allied figures. Prose rendering: Claude. 2026.

The Person and the Variety of Customs: An Anthropology Restoration

 

The Person and the Variety of Customs: An Anthropology Restoration

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Instrument architecture and analysis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude. Layer: Field Restoration Synthesis — second document of this kind in the corpus, modeled directly on “The Person and the Social Bond” (Sociology synthesis) in its corrected form. Built from the complete Anthropology cluster: the Classical Field Audit (corrected to canonical commitment numbering), the founder-generation CRI series (Boas, Tylor, Malinowski, Radcliffe-Brown), and the contemporary CPA series (Girard, Brown, Chagnon). 2026.


I. Governing Principle

This synthesis is grounded directly in Core Stoicism's own theorems (Th 1–29), not in the six philosophical commitments treated as a free-standing telos. The six commitments remain the diagnostic instrument by which displacement and restoration are measured across this corpus's audits; they are not themselves what Anthropology, restored, would be organized around. What Anthropology restored would be organized around is what Core Stoicism is organized around: the control dichotomy (Th 6), the location of all genuine good and evil exclusively in acts of will (Th 10, Th 27), and the classification of everything else — including the entire subject matter of comparative anthropology — as a preferred or dispreferred indifferent (Th 25–26).


II. Anthropology's Subject Matter, Correctly Classified

Anthropology studies kinship systems, ritual, magic, warfare, marriage and reproduction, technology, law, and the entire visible record of how human societies have organized themselves across history and geography. On Sterling's framework, every item on this list is an external: not in our control, in Th 6's strict sense, and therefore never itself good or evil (Th 12). Many of these externals are appropriate objects of aim — Th 26 names life, health, justice, and truth-telling explicitly as such, and kinship, social cooperation, and the rule of law extend naturally from that list — but appropriateness as an object of aim is not the same thing as goodness. A kinship system, a ritual calendar, a body of customary law: these are preferred indifferents when they serve life, health, and just dealing, dispreferred indifferents when they do not, and in neither case are they themselves the location of virtue or vice.

This reclassification is not a demotion of anthropology's subject matter. It is the only classification under which the field's two most basic and well-documented findings — that human customs vary enormously, and that something about human beings nonetheless remains constant across that variation — can both be true without contradiction. The variation is variation in externals. What remains constant, if anything does, is not on the list of externals at all.


III. Where Good and Evil Actually Are

Th 10 and Th 27 together state the position with no remainder: virtue is the only good, vice the only evil, and both are rational and irrational acts of will respectively. Nothing else qualifies, including outcomes anthropology has documented in its most dramatic material.

This bears directly on the cluster's most difficult finding. Chagnon's documented correlation between Yanomamö killing and reproductive success, audited at Non-Operative for both C3 and C6, found that Chagnon's own scientific framework brackets moral evaluation of violence entirely — explicitly modeled, by his own statement, on value-neutral behavioral-ecology research into animal reproductive strategy. Sterling's framework does not share that bracketing, but it also does not supply what a hostile reading might expect: a simple condemnation of Yanomamö violence as such. The killing itself, and its reproductive consequence, are externals — outcomes, like all outcomes, outside the strict scope of Th 6's control dichotomy. What Sterling's framework locates good or evil in is not the killing or its consequence but the will behind it: whether the act proceeded from a rational or irrational judgment about what is genuinely good. A framework that evaluates the act by its reproductive payoff (Chagnon) and a framework that evaluates it by its contribution to social structure (Radcliffe-Brown's eunomia) are both, on Sterling's terms, asking the wrong question — not because the questions are meaningless, but because neither identifies where moral evaluation actually belongs.

Girard's framework comes closer than any other figure in this cluster to locating evaluation correctly, because the scapegoat mechanism's central moral fact — the victim's innocence against the community's false collective judgment of guilt — is, in Sterling's vocabulary, precisely a fact about judgment: the persecuting community's false belief about good and evil (Th 7), acted upon, constituting their vice; the absence of any actual desert in the victim constituting his innocence regardless of what was believed about him. Girard's own framework gets this right in substance. Where it falls short, on the corrected analysis below, is not in the moral content but in how that content becomes knowable.


IV. The Human Nature Question, and What None of the Field's Resources Supply

The Classical Field Audit found the discipline's dominant interpretive tradition guilty of Relativistic Dissolution: it has produced the most comprehensive documentation of human cultural diversity in history while losing the capacity to say what that diversity is a record of. Three of this cluster's strongest resources were built, in whole or in part, to resist exactly this dissolution — Boas's psychic unity of mankind, Brown's catalogue of human universals, Chagnon's continuity between human and animal behavioral strategy — and all three, on independent audit, failed to secure a genuinely irreducible human nature. Boas's instrumental psychic-unity premise could not, by the CRI's finding, sustain the very anti-racist conviction it was built to ground, since consistent cultural relativism forbids the cross-cultural moral standard that conviction requires. Brown's human universals were grounded explicitly and reductively in Darwinian evolution, producing this corpus's second Partial Dissolution finding: a real, comprehensive universal nature, denied at the one point — its ultimate ground — that would make it more than a physical system. Chagnon's account went further in the same direction, explicitly modeling human strategic behavior on animal behavioral ecology, with no domain in his own framework exempted from that continuity.

Sterling's framework affirms what all three were reaching for — a real human nature common across all documented cultural variation — while supplying the one thing none of their own resources could: a ground for that nature that is neither a cultural construction (the dissolution the CFA diagnosed) nor a reduction to genetics and evolutionary history (the dissolution Brown's and Chagnon's own records produced when examined closely). The rational faculty capable of forming true or false judgments about good and evil (Th 7) is universal in exactly the sense Boas, Brown, and Chagnon each wanted their evidence to establish, and it is not, on Sterling's account, the output of any external condition — cultural, historical, or genetic — that fully constitutes it. Cultural diversity, on this account, is not evidence against a stable human nature, and it does not need an evolutionary backstory to explain its existence without remainder: it is the record of a single, invariant rational faculty operating across the entire range of external circumstance — climate, technology, kinship structure, material scarcity, historical accident — that human history has produced. This is precisely the capacity the CFA found the field's dominant tradition had lost: the ability to understand what its own documentation of diversity is a record of.


V. Magic, Ritual, and the Diagnosis None of the Field's Founders Could Offer

Every founder-generation figure in this cluster who engaged magic and ritual explained them functionally: Tylor as a mistaken but rational inference about unseen causes, Malinowski as a psychological technique for managing anxiety under genuine uncertainty, Radcliffe-Brown as a structural mechanism for renewing group solidarity. Each account explains why these practices recur across virtually every documented culture. None of them, on Sterling's framework, correctly diagnoses what is actually going wrong when a person turns to magical practice under conditions of uncertainty and risk.

Th 3 through Th 9 supply that diagnosis directly. All human unhappiness is caused by desiring an outcome outside one's control and then not obtaining it; the sea voyage Malinowski's Trobriand fishermen undertake with magical accompaniment is precisely such an outside-of-control outcome, and the anxiety Malinowski correctly observes is precisely the anxiety Th 4 predicts. But the magical response to that anxiety is not, on Sterling's account, a successful psychological technique to be respected on its own functional terms — it is itself a further instance of the same underlying error the anxiety already reflects: a false judgment (Th 7) that some ritual or invocation has brought what was genuinely outside the fisherman's control back within it. The anxiety is correctly diagnosed; the remedy is not. The Stoic remedy is not a more effective ritual but the correction of the underlying judgment itself — recognizing, accurately, the true boundary of the control dichotomy, and relocating the entire weight of one's desire onto the only things that boundary actually includes: belief and will. Malinowski's functionalism can explain why magic is widespread and can even explain why it "works" in a narrow psychological sense; it has no resource, from within its own framework, for distinguishing a genuinely corrected judgment from a successfully comforting false one, because his framework does not ask whether the belief in question is true.


VI. Girard, Completed

Girard's audit found a moral truth — the scapegoat's innocence against the community's collective false verdict — correctly identified as objective and independent of any culture's self-justifying belief, but disclosed, on Girard's own account, only at a specific point in history, through a specific textual-revelatory tradition. This is the one piece of Girard's framework Sterling's corpus can complete rather than merely affirm. Ethical Intuitionism (C3) holds that moral truths of exactly this kind — the wrongness of punishing the innocent, the falsity of a community's collective verdict against a victim who has done nothing to deserve it — are available to direct, non-inferential rational apprehension, in principle, to any properly functioning rational faculty, in any culture, independent of whether a particular historical revelation has yet reached it. On this account, the persecuting communities behind the myths Girard studied were not lacking access to a truth not yet revealed; they were exercising their own rational faculties badly, forming a false collective judgment (Th 7) about a question that direct moral perception, rightly used, could in principle have answered correctly without waiting on any text. This does not diminish what is genuinely valuable in Girard's account of how that error came to be so widespread and so stable across so many cultures' founding myths — only his account of why it could not, in principle, have been corrected from within reason alone.


VII. What This Restores

The Classical Field Audit identified three things the field's dominant tradition retains without being able to ground: extraordinary ethnographic documentation of human diversity, genuine moral advocacy on behalf of communities the discipline studies, and a felt but theoretically unsupported conviction that some cross-cultural judgments are simply correct. Sterling's framework, applied to this cluster's complete record, supplies exactly these three things a coherent ground. The diversity is the record of one rational nature meeting the full range of external circumstance. The advocacy is grounded the moment good and evil are correctly relocated to acts of will rather than to the structures, strategies, or revelations various frameworks in this cluster have offered in their place. And the cross-cultural judgments the field's own ethical-activist tradition already makes — that colonial violence was a real wrong, that the scapegoating Girard documents was a real injustice, that a society can fail its members even when its structure is stable — are correct, on this account, not despite cultural relativism's prohibition on cross-cultural moral evaluation, but because that prohibition was never true in the first place.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Instrument architecture and analysis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude.

The Person and the Social Bond: A Restoration of Sociology under Sterling's Moral Foundation

 

The Person and the Social Bond: A Restoration of Sociology under Sterling's Moral Foundation

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Instrument architecture, analysis, and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude. 2026.

This is a corrected version of the original synthesis. The first attempt organized the restoration around completion of the six commitments, treated as though they were themselves the goal. They are not. The six commitments are necessary conditions for Sterling's actual moral system, set out in Core Stoicism, to be coherent — and that system has specific, austere content the first draft never brought to bear: virtue, defined as rational acts of will, is the only genuine good; vice, irrational acts of will, the only genuine evil (Th10); everything else — including nearly everything sociology studies as its subject matter, community, institution, culture, reputation, relationship — is an external, and externals are never themselves good or evil (Th12). Some externals are appropriate objects of aim (Th25–26: life, health, knowledge, justice, truth-telling, and by extension the social goods this document discusses), genuinely worth pursuing rationally, but appropriate-to-pursue is not the same as good. Happiness and unhappiness are entirely a function of correct or incorrect judgment (Th3–9), not of whether one possesses community, institutions, or binding moral demand. This version is built from the same nine audited data points as the first, but the restoration itself is reorganized around this distinction rather than around the six commitments as a free-standing telos.


Part I — The Founding Displacement, Resharpened

The CRI and CPA runs against Comte, Durkheim, Marx, and Weber found, in each case, that the founder's own project requires a prior rational subject his official metaphysics forbids him from supplying. The first draft of this document left that finding general — "a real subject," "genuine agency." Sterling's theorems specify what that subject is for: a faculty of judgment whose entire task is correctly sorting virtue from externals, and whose sovereignty over that sorting is not contingent on social circumstance.

Comte's Religion of Humanity, built after his own positive philosophy ruled out the territory it occupies, is evidence that something was needed and not supplied — but what was actually needed was not a new object of devotion. It was a faculty capable of correctly judging that no external object, however collectively venerated, is the genuine good. Comte supplied a substitute external rather than restoring the faculty that would have shown him a substitute external could never have worked.

Durkheim's autonomy clause requires an individual capable of genuine understanding and assent, not mere submission to social force — but his own "social facts as things" gives that individual nothing to be autonomous about except more social facts. Sterling's framework specifies the missing content directly: the autonomy moral education actually requires is the capacity to judge correctly that virtue alone is good, a judgment no social fact, however thoroughly internalized, can supply or replace.

Marx's alienation is the sharpest case for this correction. The standard reading, which the first draft of this document used, treats alienation as estrangement from species-being via external relations of production — requiring a real human nature the theory of ideology cannot secure. Sterling's Stoicism does not merely supply that missing nature; it cuts under the diagnosis. The prohairesis, the faculty of judgment and will, is never actually touched by relations of production. A slave and a Roman senator have identical access to virtue. What capitalism can take from the worker is preferred indifferents — health, security, the conditions of decent life — genuinely worth restoring, since they are appropriate objects of aim. What it cannot take, on Sterling's own account, is the worker's capacity for virtue, which makes "alienation from species-being" the wrong diagnostic category from the start, not merely an under-secured one.

Weber alone diagnosed the gap correctly rather than building an unstable substitute for it: verstehen requires the same real, judging subject, and Science as a Vocation argues directly that reason cannot adjudicate the warring gods. Sterling's framework answers Weber's diagnosis rather than merely matching it: the gods are not actually warring once the discipline of assent is in place, because the question "which value commitment is correct" reduces, finally, to one prior and answerable question — is this object of pursuit virtue, or is it an external mistaken for a good. Weber's pluralism is a symptom of every value-sphere he surveys making the same error Sterling's Th3–9 names directly.


Part II — The Contemporary Recoveries, and a Tension That Cannot Be Smoothed Over

Rieff, Nisbet, Hunter, Berger, and Smith each recover a real piece of what the founders displaced, and the first draft of this document credited each fairly on those terms. What it did not examine is whether their shared central claim is itself compatible with Sterling's moral content, and on inspection it is not, cleanly.

Rieff, Nisbet, Hunter, and Smith all argue, in different registers, that real community — a functioning sacred order, intact intermediate institutions, embedded character formation, the social conditions of personhood — is necessary for virtue and moral formation, not merely useful for it. This is a stronger claim than this corpus can accept as stated. Sterling's sage is self-sufficient: happiness is entirely in the will (Th6), and nothing about correct judgment depends on having a functioning sacred order or intact intermediate institutions. A person can possess every advantage these four allies describe and still judge falsely; a person can possess none of them — Epictetus himself began as a slave — and still judge correctly. Community, family, and institution are not necessary conditions for virtue on Sterling's account. They are strongly preferred indifferents: genuinely worth pursuing, very plausibly the typical and most efficient context in which correct judgment is actually cultivated in practice, but not the thing virtue itself consists in or depends on.

This sharpens rather than discards what these four allies supply. Rieff's sacred order, Nisbet's named institutions, Hunter's character, and Smith's comprehensive goods are real, well-evidenced accounts of what a society's preferred indifferents should look like and why their loss is a genuine privation worth resisting — restored sociology needs exactly this content. What it cannot do is treat their necessity claim as settled. A restored sociology that quietly imported "you cannot become virtuous without real community" would be smuggling in a thesis Sterling's own theorems rule out.

Berger's contribution survives this correction largely unchanged, and is, if anything, strengthened by it. The argument from damnation — that certain deeds warrant absolute condemnation, recognized directly rather than through narrative transmission — is not a claim about what community supplies. It is a claim about a faculty's direct access to moral truth, which is exactly the faculty Sterling's framework needs restored, independent of whether the community asserting the judgment is intact or collapsing.


Part III — The Restoration, Reorganized Around Virtue and Indifferents

A sociology answerable to Core Stoicism specifically, not to the six commitments treated as sufficient in themselves, has two tasks that must not be merged. It must give a true account of preferred and dispreferred indifferents — the entire traditional subject matter of the discipline, genuinely worth studying and genuinely worth getting right. And it must locate genuine good and evil only in the rational or irrational acts of will of the persons within whatever social arrangement is being studied, never in the arrangement itself.

What becomes an indifferent, correctly classified. Family structure, religious community, civic association, cultural cohesion, institutional health, even Rieff's sacred order and Nisbet's named institutions themselves — all of it is preferred indifferent, not good. A restored sociology can and should study which arrangements are more strongly preferred than others, using the same empirical rigor Smith's critical realism and Berger's correspondence-truth commitment already supply (C5, the field's best-secured commitment by a wide margin across all nine sources). It should resist describing any of this in the vocabulary of genuine good — Sterling's own corpus reserves that word exclusively for virtue, and a restored sociology should follow the same discipline rather than reproducing the same conflation, in softer form, that made Rieff's and Nisbet's necessity claims overreach in the first place.

What becomes the discipline's central explanatory variable. Whether persons within a given social arrangement judge correctly — whether they treat virtue as the sole good and externals as externals, or whether they make the error Th3–9 names, treating some external (psychological comfort, social approval, collective belonging, even justice itself if pursued from desire rather than from correct judgment) as if it were the source of happiness. This is the actual content behind Rieff's "triumph of the therapeutic," restated correctly: not the loss of a demand-structure, but a culture-wide instance of the same error every non-Stoic individual makes, at civilizational scale.

The faculty that does the judging (C1, completed). Smith's emergent personalism remains the strongest available resource and the right entry point, for the same reasons given in the first draft — but its restorative purpose is now specific rather than general. The point of completing emergence into substance dualism is not to secure "real personhood" as an end in itself. It is to secure a faculty capable of the discipline of assent: judging, independent of social circumstance, that virtue alone is good. Durkheim's missing subject, Comte's unfillable vacancy, and Marx's wrongly diagnosed alienation all converge on needing exactly this faculty, not a generically irreducible person.

Agency restored to its actual stakes (C2). Weber's verstehen, Marx's qualified agency, and Smith's emergent freedom all require genuine, non-illusory agency — but the corpus's own account specifies what that agency is actually exercised on: the act of assent or withholding assent to an impression about whether some object is genuinely good. A restored sociology should study agency as agency-over-judgment specifically, not agency-over-outcome generally, since outcome belongs to the domain of indifferents.

Direct moral recognition (C3), generalized from Berger's limiting case. The argument from damnation should not remain an isolated example of extreme atrocity. The same direct-recognition structure — unmediated by narrative or tradition — is what the discipline of assent requires for the ordinary case as well: recognizing, in any given impression, whether it represents virtue or an external mistaken for virtue.

The foundation actually supplied (C4). Rieff, Nisbet, Hunter, and Berger each require a real, non-negotiable foundation and decline to specify it. Sterling's theorems are the specification: virtue is the only good, full stop, not one candidate sacred order among others a sociologist might equally have chosen.

Truth, already secured (C5). Unchanged from the first draft. This remains the field's strongest point of contact with the corpus, demonstrated independently by Smith's named methodology and Berger's costly public reversal.

Moral realism, now precisely scoped (C6). Not a comprehensive theory of human goods in Smith's sense, and not Nisbet's named institutional goods treated as ends in themselves. The real, objective, universal moral fact restored sociology is answerable to is narrower and harder than either: virtue is good, vice is evil, and nothing else is either, regardless of how many indifferents a given society or institution successfully secures.


Part IV — The Entry Point, Restated

The entry point is still Christian Smith's emergentism, for the same structural reasons given in the first draft: it is the most technically developed account of irreducibility any of the nine sources supplies, and it sits exactly on the fault line the founders' restorations converged on independently. What changes is the purpose assigned to completing it. The first draft treated the completion of emergence into substance dualism as securing personhood as such. This version treats it as securing nothing more and nothing less than the seat of the discipline of assent — the one faculty every founder needed and could not supply, the one faculty Weber correctly identified as unable to adjudicate value and that Sterling's theorems show was never actually disabled, only misdescribed.

A sociology restored on these terms studies society the way Sterling's framework studies the world: as a vast field of preferred and dispreferred indifferents, genuinely worth understanding and genuinely worth caring about in the way one cares about an appropriate object of aim, while reserving the words good and evil for the one thing the discipline's own founders, in their unstable substitutes, kept needing and never found — the rational or irrational character of an act of will.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Instrument architecture, analysis, and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude.

Saturday, June 20, 2026

Freedom from the Passions: A Pure Restatement in Sterling's Terms


Freedom from the Passions: A Pure Restatement in Sterling's Terms

Theoretical foundations and base theorem chain (Th 1–19, Th 24–29): Grant C. Sterling, “Core Stoicism” (ISF post, September 19, 2005), quoted exactly. Commitment-warrant analysis and synthetic extension (E1–E13): Dave Kelly. Argument restated: Keith Seddon, “The Stoics on why we should strive to be free of the passions” (2000). Prose and notation rendering: Claude. 2026.

v1.1 — Corrects v1.0, which omitted Th 2*, 4, 5, 9, 15, and the whole of Section Four (Th 24–28) while citing Th 25–26 and 29 in Part III without ever stating them. All now restored to Part I. Th 20–23 remain excluded by design, per the stated reason in Part IV. A closing note on Sterling’s own dependency-chain warning is added as Part V.


Note on Method

This restatement removes four defects identified in Seddon's essay: apatheia asserted before it is derived; the good/indifferent distinction defended once by an argument from Plato and thereafter merely reasserted against the hardest cases; the withholding of assent invoked without the free agency it presupposes ever being established; and a closing appeal to determinism, fate, and providence as required completion. Nothing here goes beyond Sterling's own Th 1–19 and 24–29, and the six commitments. Th 20–23 (Nature, Providence, God) are not used — excluded by design, not by oversight. The argument terminates on C1–C6 alone, with no remainder owed to ancient physics.


Part I — The Base Chain (Sterling, Th 1–19, 24–29)

Th 1. Everyone wants happiness.

Th 2. If you want happiness, it would be irrational to accept incomplete or imperfect happiness if you could get complete happiness.

Th 2*. Complete happiness is possible.

Th 3. All human unhappiness is caused by having a desire or emotional commitment to some outcome, and then that outcome does not result.

Th 4. Ergo, if you desire something which is out of your control, you will be subject to possible unhappiness. If you desire many things out of your control, the possibility of complete happiness approaches zero.

Th 5. By 4, 2*, and Th 2, desiring things out of your control is irrational, if it is possible to control your desires.

Th 6. The only things in our control are our beliefs and will, and anything entailed by our beliefs and will.

Th 7. Desires are caused by beliefs (judgments) about good and evil.

Th 8. Ergo, desires are in our control.

Th 9. By 5 and 8, desiring things out of our control is irrational — the conditional of Th 5 now discharged, since Th 8 establishes that desires can in fact be controlled.

Th 10. The only thing actually good is virtue, the only thing actually evil is vice.

Th 11. Ergo, virtue and vice, being acts of will, are in our control.

Th 12. Ergo, externals are never good or evil.

Th 13. Desiring things out of our control is irrational, since it involves false judgment.

Th 14. Ergo, if we value only virtue, we will both judge truly and be immune to all unhappiness.

Th 15. Ergo, if we truly judge that virtue is good, we will desire it.

Th 16. If you desire something and achieve it, you will get a positive feeling.

Th 17. Ergo, if we correctly judge and correctly will, we will have appropriate positive feelings.

Th 18. Some positive feelings do not result from desires, and hence do not result from judgments about value.

Th 19. Ergo, such positive feelings are not irrational, though desiring them to continue would involve a judgment of value, and hence would be irrational.

Section Four — Virtue (Th 24–29)

Th 24. In order to perform an act of will, the act of will must have some content. The content is composed of the result at which one aims.

Th 25. Some things are appropriate objects at which to aim, although they are not genuinely good.

Th 26. Some such objects are things like life, health, pleasure, knowledge, justice, truth-telling, etc.

Th 27. Virtue consists of rational acts of will, vice of irrational acts of will.

Th 28. Ergo, any act that aims at an external object of desire is not virtuous, since all desires for externals are irrational.

Th 29. Ergo, virtue consists of the pursuit of appropriate objects of aim, not the pursuit of the external objects of our desires. Such virtuous acts will give us good feelings (by Th 17), and since we have no desires regarding the actual outcome, they will never produce unhappiness for us.


Part II — Commitment Warrants on the Base Chain

Th 2*, 4, 5, 9 (the conditional-then-categorical irrationality argument). No new commitment is introduced here; this is the chain's own internal hedge-and-discharge structure. Th 5 asserts irrationality only conditionally — “if it is possible to control your desires” — because at that point in the chain C2 has not yet been brought to bear on desire specifically. Th 9 discharges the condition once Th 8 (warranted C1, C2, see below) establishes that desires are in fact controlled. The two-step form exists because Sterling will not assert categorical irrationality before its enabling condition is secured. Th 13 later restates Th 9's conclusion for the external-directed case specifically; both stand.

Th 6 (control = belief and will). Warranted by C1, Substance Dualism — only acts of a faculty distinct from body can be the kind of thing meant by “in our control” — and by C2, Libertarian Free Will — the will must genuinely originate its acts, not merely transmit antecedent physical causes, for “control” to mean anything beyond redescribed determinism.

Th 7 (desire caused by judgment). Warranted by C1. This is the cognitive thesis: passion is an act of the rational faculty, not, as in the ancient corporeal-soul account, a movement of matter that happens also to carry propositional content.

Th 8 (desires in our control). Formally follows from Th 6 and Th 7; materially requires C2. Without libertarian free will, Th 8 reduces to “desires are caused by something internal,” which leaves them as determined as any external cause and removes the practical force of the conclusion.

Th 10 (only virtue good, only vice evil). Warranted jointly by C6, Moral Realism — the claim is a fact about reality, not a preference; C4, Foundationalism — Sterling states it as a postulate from which the system derives, not a conclusion derived from something prior; and C3, Ethical Intuitionism — known, in Sterling's own description, only by “appeal to intuition of their truth.” Th 10 is not defended here by an argument from unconditional benefit, since any such argument already presupposes the standard it claims to establish. It is taken as foundational and intuited, which is the more exact and less circular ground.

Th 12 (externals never good or evil). Follows formally from Th 10–11. That the conclusion describes how things actually are, rather than merely what coheres with the rest of the system, is licensed by C5, Correspondence Theory of Truth.

Th 13 (desiring the uncontrollable is irrational, “false judgment”). The word false has content only under C5: a judgment is false when it fails to correspond to the moral fact established by C6.

Th 14 (true judgment yields immunity to unhappiness). Pure joint consequence of C1, C2, C3, C4, C5, C6 — an agent capable of genuine control (C1, C2) over judgments tested against a foundational (C4), intuitively known (C3), objective (C6) standard, with truth understood as correspondence (C5), is immune to unhappiness when that standard is met.

Th 15 (true judgment of virtue produces desire for virtue). This is the hinge between the negative-happiness branch (Th 1–14, freedom from unhappiness) and the positive-happiness branch (Th 16–19, eupatheia). It is Th 7 run in the direction opposite to its first use: Th 7 said belief about good and evil causes desire; Th 15 applies that same causal claim, now warranted true by Th 10 (C3, C4, C6), to virtue itself. The agent who has truly judged that virtue alone is good (Th 14) thereby comes to desire virtue, by the same mechanism (C1) that earlier explained why false judgment about externals produced the passions. Without Th 15 stated explicitly, Th 16's application to virtue specifically is an unstated step.

Th 16–17 (positive happiness from correct judgment and will). Same six warrants, applied to the successful rather than the failed case.

Th 18–19 (non-evaluative positive feeling). Independently warranted: no judgment of objective good (C6) is involved, so neither C3 nor C5 is invoked, and the feeling is therefore neither passion nor virtue. Th 19's caveat — that desiring such a feeling to continue is irrational — reinvokes Th 7, and with it C1, C5, and C6, the moment that further desire is formed.

Th 24, 27, 28 (Section Four — what virtue is, formally). These three were used in Part III (E10) by citation only, without ever being stated. Th 24 — an act of will has content, an aimed-at result — is warranted by C1 and C2 jointly: only a free act of a faculty distinct from body has the kind of intentional content this theorem describes. Th 27 — virtue is rational acts of will, vice irrational acts of will — is the bridge theorem of the whole system: it is what allows Th 10's moral fact (warranted C3, C4, C6) to be identified with a category of acts of the agency established at Th 6 (warranted C1, C2). Without Th 27 stated, “virtue” in Th 10 and “acts of will” in Th 6 are merely juxtaposed, not identified. Th 28 then follows from Th 27 and Th 13 (warranted C5 against the C6 standard): an act aiming at an external desire cannot be virtuous, since the desire it serves has already been shown irrational.

Th 25, 26, 29 (appropriate objects of aim). Warranted by C6 and C4 together: “appropriate object of aim” is a distinct, non-foundational category built on top of the Th 10 foundation, naming what is rational to pursue without claiming it is itself good. Th 29 is the synthesis already used at E10: virtue is the pursuit of such objects, not the pursuit of the desired outcome itself, which is why the virtuous agent's positive feeling (joy) attaches to the pursuit rather than to securing any particular external result.


Part III — Synthetic Extension: The Passions and Their Replacements

E1. By Th 7, every impulse is caused by a judgment of good or evil. Such a judgment may concern either an anticipated object or a present object.

E2. Judgment that an anticipated object is good, joined to impulse toward it: desire (epithumia).

E3. Judgment that an anticipated object is evil, joined to impulse away from it: fear (phobos).

E4. Judgment that a present object is good, joined to impulse toward it: delight (hēdonē).

E5. Judgment that a present object is evil, joined to impulse away from it: distress (lupē).

E6. By Th 12, externals are never good or evil.

E7. Ergo (E2–E6, Th 13): any instance of desire, fear, delight, or distress directed at an external is a false judgment under C5 against the C6 standard, and is therefore, by Th 13, irrational. These four are the primary passions.

E8. By Th 6 and Th 7 (warranted C1, C2), judgment is genuinely in our control. Ergo (E7): the passions, being false judgments about externals, can be withheld, not merely felt and afterward managed. This is established here, on Th 6–8, before being used — not assumed at the point of practical application as in the source essay.

E9. By Th 10 (warranted C3, C4, C6) and Th 14: the agent who judges truly — who judges that only virtue is good and only vice is evil — neither desires, fears, delights in, nor is distressed by any external. This agent is apathēs, without passion. Apatheia is here a derived theorem, not a premise asserted in advance of its argument.

E10. By Th 16–17, correct judgment joined to correct will yields appropriate positive feeling. Applied to E2–E4:

  • in place of desire: wish (boulēsis) for an appropriate object of aim (Th 25–26), held without the false judgment that achieving it is good;
  • in place of fear: watchfulness (eulabeia) regarding an anticipated dispreferred indifferent, held without the false judgment that its occurrence is evil;
  • in place of delight: joy (chara) at virtuous action successfully performed (Th 29), since this alone is a true judgment that something good has been achieved.

E11. No eupatheia corresponds to distress. By Th 10, the only genuine evil is vice, and vice is an act of will already excluded by E9 in the virtuous agent; no external loss supplies a true judgment of present evil for a positive counterpart to attach to. The position is empty by derivation from Th 10, not by stipulation.

E12. By Th 18–19, the wise agent retains ordinary physiological and phenomenological responses to sudden present circumstance — the startle, the felt jolt — since these involve no judgment that an external is good or evil (E6) and are therefore neither passion nor in need of eupatheia. The objection that the sage is reduced to something inhuman is answered from theorems already established, not by separate appeal.


Part IV — Closure

E13. The chain Th 1–19, 24–29, E1–E12 is closed under C1–C6 alone. Th 20–23 (Nature, Providence, God or the gods) are not invoked at any step. The appreciation-of-the-world feeling those theorems support remains available as a third, optional source of positive feeling for an agent who additionally holds a providential view of nature, but apatheia (E9) and the eupatheiai (E10) do not depend on it. The argument is complete on the six commitments, with nothing owed to the ancient physics Seddon's essay treats, at its close, as required.


Part V — Sterling's Own Warning on Dependency

Sterling closes “Core Stoicism” with a warning against what he calls Smorgasbord Stoicism — extracting individual theorems for use in combination with other systems while discarding the rest. He gives the example load-bearing for this entire restatement: deny Th 7 — that desires are caused by judgments of good and evil — and Th 8, 9, 13, 14, 28, and 29 all collapse with it, since the argument that desiring externals is irrational, and the argument that virtue alone is rational pursuit, both run through Th 7. His own words: denying one theorem can make “the whole house of cards, regarding both virtue and happiness, crumble into dust.”

This is the propositional-level statement of exactly what the commitment-warrant table in Part II makes explicit at the level of philosophical commitments. Sterling names Th 7 as the chain's most load-bearing single theorem; Part II independently identifies C1 (Substance Dualism) as Th 7's warrant. The two findings converge: the cognitive thesis that passion is judgment, not mere physical movement, is the single point of greatest fragility in the entire system, whether stated as a theorem dependency or as a commitment dependency.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Commitment-warrant analysis and synthetic extension: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude.

Friday, June 19, 2026

The Six Commitments as Necessary Conditions for Epictetus’s Ethical Psychology — A Load-Bearing Demonstration

 

The Six Commitments as Necessary Conditions for Epictetus’s Ethical Psychology — A Load-Bearing Demonstration

Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Analysis and instrument architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.

Revision note: section order and labels corrected to align with canonical commitment numbering — C1 Substance Dualism, C2 Libertarian Free Will, C3 Ethical Intuitionism, C4 Foundationalism, C5 Correspondence Theory of Truth, C6 Moral Realism. Argumentative content unchanged from the ratified original; only ordering and labeling were in error.


I. The Evidential Question

Sterling’s reconstruction of Stoicism makes a specific and strong claim. It is not that the six philosophical commitments — substance dualism, libertarian free will, ethical intuitionism, foundationalism, correspondence theory of truth, and moral realism — are consistent with Epictetus’s ethical psychology. Consistency is a weak standard. A position is consistent with many things it does not require. The claim is stronger: the six commitments are the necessary philosophical conditions for what Epictetus actually argues. They are load-bearing. Remove any one of them and a specific element of Epictetus’s argument fails. Not weakens. Fails.

This is the evidential question the present document addresses: not whether Epictetus anticipates the six commitments, and not whether the commitments are consistent with his positions, but whether his arguments structurally require them. The standard for a positive finding is strict. For each commitment, the document must identify a specific Epictetan argument or passage, specify what the commitment makes possible in that argument, and demonstrate that without the commitment the argument cannot proceed as Epictetus states it.

The document works in two stages. It first draws on corpus documents that have already made parts of this case explicitly — principally the Six Commitments document, the Six Commitments Integrated document, and the Dogmata essay. It then fills the gaps where the load-bearing relationship was established at the level of foundational claims but not yet mapped to specific Epictetan passages. The result is a complete commitment-by-commitment demonstration at the passage level.


II. The Structure of Epictetus’s Ethical Psychology

Epictetus’s ethical psychology has a precisely identifiable structure. It rests on three foundational claims Sterling identifies as its heart and soul: that only internal things are in our control; that unhappiness is caused by falsely believing that externals are good or evil; and that correct assent guarantees eudaimonia. These three claims are not independent. They form a single integrated structure whose operative unit is the dogma.

A dogma is not a belief in the passive sense of a proposition held. It is the determinative evaluative verdict the rational faculty passes on an impression, which then generates desire, aversion, impulse, and action. Epictetus states the causal claim without qualification in Enchiridion 5: men are disturbed not by things, but by the dogmata they form concerning things. The claim is not that dogmata influence disturbance. They are its exclusive cause. External events arrive as raw impressions carrying no evaluative content of their own. The evaluative content — the verdict that this is a loss, that this is humiliating, that this is unbearable — is added entirely by the agent’s own dogma. Remove the false dogma and the disturbance has no cause.

In Discourses 1.29, Epictetus makes the identity claim that grounds the whole: “What are you? A collection of dogmata.” The agent is not his body, his reputation, his circumstances, or his history. He is the governing judgments lodged in his rational faculty. Stoic reform is therefore not modification of behavior but reconstruction of the person. Change the dogmata and you change who the person is.

The six commitments are what make this structure philosophically possible. Each one does specific work. None is decorative. What follows demonstrates this commitment by commitment, in canonical order.


III. Commitment One — Substance Dualism (C1)

The Epictetan passage: Enchiridion 1 opens with the absolute binary: “Some things are under our control, while others are not under our control. Under our control are conception, choice, desire, aversion, and, in a word, everything that is our own doing; not under our control are our body, our property, reputation, office, and, in a word, everything that is not our own doing.”

What the commitment makes possible: The dichotomy of control is the foundational claim from which everything in Epictetus’s practical framework proceeds. It draws a line between the self and everything external to the self. For that line to be a real ontological boundary — and not merely a useful preference or a therapeutic distinction — the rational faculty must be genuinely distinct from the body and from all external conditions.

The load-bearing argument: If the mind is a brain state — a product of physical causation, as materialism holds — then mental events are physical events. Physical events are subject to physical determination. Therefore, beliefs, desires, and acts of will are determined by prior physical causes. Therefore, they are not in our control in the sense Epictetus requires. The dichotomy dissolves. There is no principled boundary between self and external because the self is constituted by physical processes that are themselves external to the agent’s sovereign origination. Substance dualism is what makes the boundary real by establishing that the rational faculty has its own ontological status and its own causal powers, not reducible to physical causation. Discourses 4.1.172 extends this to the identity claim: “What is yours? Your dogmata.” The agent just is his rational faculty and its governing judgments. This identity claim requires the rational faculty to be ontologically distinct from the body, not merely functionally differentiated from it.

Without substance dualism: The line Epictetus draws in the first sentence of the Enchiridion has no ontological ground. The entire framework loses its foundational distinction before the second sentence can be read.


IV. Commitment Two — Libertarian Free Will (C2)

The Epictetan passages: Enchiridion 1 classifies what is in our control as “by nature free, unhindered, and unimpeded.” Enchiridion 2 instructs the agent to withdraw aversion from all things not under our control. Enchiridion 5 assigns full causal responsibility to the agent for the dogmata he forms. Discourses 4.1 confronts the philosopher who says “let me think about it” when the tyrant calls, and identifies this hesitation as evidence that the claimed dogmata are not genuinely held.

What the commitment makes possible: “In our control” means that the agent is the originating cause of his own assents — not a determined output of prior physical causes passing through an interior that merely appears to choose. The distinction between genuine freedom and genuine enslavement that Epictetus draws is not a distinction between two types of external causation. It is a distinction between what is truly authored by the agent and what is not.

The load-bearing argument: If assent is a determined output of prior physical causes, then the agent who “corrects his dogmata” was always going to do so, and the agent who does not was equally determined not to. The corrective project Epictetus describes — examine the impression, test it, refuse the false dogma, assent to the true one — is not transformative training but a description of a process unfolding as it was always going to unfold. The instruction to withdraw aversion from things not in our control presupposes that this withdrawal is genuinely available to the agent at every moment as a real act. The assignment of causal responsibility in Enchiridion 5 presupposes that the agent could have formed a different dogma — that the false dogma was his error, not his fate. Libertarian free will is what makes “in our control” mean genuine origination rather than the appearance of choice within a determined sequence. It is also worth registering Sterling’s own note in Harshness and Beauty in Epictetus: the first five sections of the Enchiridion make no mention of Chrysippus’s determinism. The framework Epictetus presents in those sections does not require determinism and is in structural tension with it.

Without libertarian free will: The guarantee of Foundation Three becomes meaningless. Those who achieve eudaimonia were always determined to do so. Those who fail never had a real alternative. The practical instruction of the Enchiridion is addressed to no one who could act on it.


V. Commitment Three — Ethical Intuitionism (C3)

The Epictetan passage: Discourses 4.1 provides the most direct passage in the entire Epictetan corpus for this commitment. A philosopher hesitates when the tyrant asks him to say something unworthy. Epictetus confronts him: “What kind of inquiry is it, to raise the question whether it is fitting, when it is in my power to get for myself the greatest goods, not to get for myself the greatest evils? Such an inquiry is never made.” Then the decisive claim: if the agent had honestly held the classification — disgraceful things are bad, death and imprisonment are indifferent — “you would have been able to settle the question on the spot, by intuition, just as in a case involving sight. Why, when do you stop to think about it, if the question is, Are black things white, or, Are heavy things light? Do you not follow the clear evidence of your senses? How comes it, then, that now you say you are thinking it over, whether things indifferent are more to be avoided than things bad?”

What the commitment makes possible: The examination procedure Epictetus prescribes in the Enchiridion — test every impression against the foundational classification — must be immediately executable. The moral standard must be directly available to the rational faculty at the moment of examination. If foundational moral truths required inference from prior premises or empirical investigation, the examination would stall before it could begin. An agent who must reconstruct a philosophical argument before he can test an impression is not performing the Stoic examination Epictetus describes.

The load-bearing argument: The Discourses 4.1 passage makes this explicit and uses the language of intuition directly. Epictetus distinguishes two categories of question. Questions about the relative weight of things already genuinely classified require no deliberation. The answer is available on the spot, by intuition, just as in a case involving sight. Questions that require deliberation reveal that the foundational dogmata are not genuinely held — they are verbal endorsements without operative force. The visual analogy is not decorative. It is the epistemological claim: moral apprehension of foundational truths operates like perceptual apprehension of obvious facts, except that it is rational rather than empirical. The agent who truly holds the classification that disgraceful speech is bad does not deliberate about whether to comply when the tyrant calls. He sees the answer, just as he sees that black things are not white. Ethical intuitionism is what makes this kind of direct seeing possible — the foundational moral truth is not inferred but apprehended, and once genuinely apprehended it is immediately operative at every decision point. This passage also identifies the failure mode precisely: the agent who says “let me think about it” has the verbal form of the dogma without genuine apprehension. He studied the questions and reached the right conclusions — but the propositions did not become operative knowledge. They remained inert. The distinction between genuine intuitionist apprehension and mere verbal endorsement is exactly what Epictetus is diagnosing here.

Without ethical intuitionism: The examination procedure becomes a deliberative procedure requiring reconstruction of arguments at each decision point. The immediacy Epictetus describes — settling the question on the spot, just as in a case involving sight — becomes impossible. The fully educated agent is not distinguished by direct correct perception but by faster argument retrieval. This is not Epictetus’s account.


VI. Commitment Four — Foundationalism (C4)

The Epictetan passages: Enchiridion 1’s examination procedure operates against a fixed binary standard: in our control, or not. This standard does not change with circumstances, does not admit of exceptions, and cannot be overridden by sophisticated argumentation. Enchiridion 5 states the causal claim about dogmata as a foundational structural truth, not as an empirical generalization. The guarantee — that correct assent produces eudaimonia — is presented as unconditional throughout.

What the commitment makes possible: The stability of Epictetus’s corrective project depends on the stability of the standard. The agent who has genuinely located the foundational truths — only virtue is good, only vice is evil, everything else is indifferent — has a non-negotiable standard against which every impression can be tested. That standard does not shift. Sophisticated rationalizations cannot dislodge it because it is not the conclusion of an argument subject to counterargument. It is a directly apprehended foundational truth whose authority does not derive from the arguments that point toward it.

The load-bearing argument: A coherentist epistemology — in which the standard is revisable in light of other beliefs with which it must cohere — cannot sustain the guarantee Epictetus offers. A sufficiently sophisticated coherent set of false beliefs could rationalize any dogma. The agent who has convinced himself that his family’s welfare requires him to speak unworthily to the tyrant has a coherent belief-set. Coherentism has no resources to identify the foundational error. Foundationalism closes this gap: the standard is not revisable by the coherence of the beliefs stacked on it. The bedrock is the bedrock. Epictetus presents the foundational claims — that dogmata are the exclusive cause of disturbance, that externals are neither good nor evil, that correct assent guarantees eudaimonia — with exactly the unconditional force that foundationalism requires. They are not offered as generalizations subject to empirical revision. They are offered as the fixed points around which everything else must be organized.

Without foundationalism: The examination standard is revisable. The guarantee is conditional on the coherence of the agent’s belief-set. The unconditional character of Epictetus’s practical instruction — its harshness, as Sterling names it — disappears. What remains is a framework of strong recommendations, not a demonstration of necessary truths.


VII. Commitment Five — Correspondence Theory of Truth (C5)

The Epictetan passages: Enchiridion 1 instructs the agent to say to every harsh external impression: “You are an external impression and not at all what you appear to be.” After that, the instruction is to examine it and test it by the rules: does this impression concern something in our control or not? Enchiridion 5 identifies three stages of education: the uneducated agent blames others, the partially educated agent blames himself, the fully educated agent blames neither. This progression is toward correct alignment with how things actually are.

What the commitment makes possible: The examination Epictetus prescribes is a test of truth, not of preference. The impression makes a claim — it presents itself as bearing genuine evaluative content. The examination tests whether that claim corresponds to reality. The verdict is correspondence success or failure. Without a truth standard external to the agent’s own preferences, the examination has no fixed target. It becomes adjustment of feelings, not correction of false judgments.

The load-bearing argument: The graduated account of epistemic progress in Enchiridion 5 is correspondence-theoretic throughout. The standard is how things actually are, and progress consists in bringing dogmata into closer correspondence with that standard. The agent who blames others has a dogma that fails to correspond to the actual causal structure of his disturbance. The agent who blames himself has a dogma that corresponds more closely. The agent whose education is complete has dogmata that correspond fully. Each stage is defined by its proximity to the way things actually are, not by the agent’s comfort or preference. Correspondence theory provides the standard that makes the stages intelligible as stages of truth rather than stages of attitude adjustment.

Without correspondence theory: The examination procedure has no fixed standard. The question “is this impression accurate?” becomes “is this impression useful?” — a therapeutic question, not a philosophical one. The entire corrective structure loses its claim to be truth-tracking.


VIII. Commitment Six — Moral Realism (C6)

The Epictetan passage: Enchiridion 1 classifies body, property, reputation, and office as genuinely neither good nor evil — not as things the agent should learn to prefer less, but as things that are not on the good-evil axis at all. Enchiridion 5 states that the agent’s dogmata are not merely unhelpful but false. Discourses 4.1 makes the moral classification explicit: righteous and excellent things are good, unrighteous and disgraceful things are bad, and this classification was not open to revision when the tyrant arrived.

What the commitment makes possible: The corrective demand Epictetus issues throughout the Enchiridion and the Discourses is not a therapeutic suggestion. It is a truth-based requirement. The agent who believes that imprisonment is a genuine evil is wrong — not merely maladapted, not merely strategically disadvantaged, but factually in error about the evaluative structure of the world. Moral realism is what makes the word “falsely” in Foundation Two mean what it must mean.

The load-bearing argument: If moral value were subjective or conventional — if “only virtue is good” were a useful organizing principle rather than an objective moral fact — then the dogma that money is good or that reputation is worth protecting would not be false. It would be a different preference, equally valid on its own terms. The corrective demand would have no normative force. Why should the agent correct a preference that is no more false than the alternative? Moral realism is what makes the demand rational rather than arbitrary: the agent is being asked to bring his dogmata into correspondence with an objective evaluative structure that holds independently of what he prefers or what his culture endorses.

Without moral realism: The word “falsely” softens into “unhelpfully.” The corrective project softens into a therapeutic program. The normative force of the entire framework dissolves.


IX. The Demonstration Completed

The six commitments have been shown to be load-bearing for Epictetus’s ethical psychology at the passage level. The demonstration meets the strict evidential standard stated at the outset: for each commitment, a specific Epictetan argument or passage has been identified, the commitment’s function in that argument has been specified, and the failure that results from removing the commitment has been named.

The pattern across all six commitments is consistent. In each case, the commitment is not an external philosophical addition that happens to be compatible with what Epictetus says. It is the philosophical condition that makes what Epictetus says mean what it must mean. Without substance dualism, the dichotomy of control has no real boundary. Without libertarian free will, the corrective project has no agent who can genuinely act on it. Without ethical intuitionism, the immediacy of correct perception Epictetus describes becomes impossible. Without foundationalism, the fixed examination standard becomes revisable and the guarantee becomes conditional. Without correspondence theory, the examination has no fixed truth standard. Without moral realism, the dogmata are not false but merely different.

This is what Sterling’s reconstruction actually asserts: not that the six commitments are a modern philosophical framework imposed on an ancient practical teacher, but that they are the philosophical skeleton that was always required to make Epictetus’s practical account correct rather than merely useful. Epictetus presents the psychological grammar. The six commitments explain why that grammar is not a therapeutic technique but a demonstration of necessary truths about the structure of the self, the nature of value, and the conditions under which eudaimonia is genuinely achievable.

Epictetus and Sterling are the same system at two different levels of analysis. This document has shown, at the level of specific passages and specific arguments, why that claim is not a synthesis but a demonstration.


Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Analysis and instrument architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.