Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Sunday, April 05, 2026

The Six Commitments and the Three Foundations

 

The Six Commitments and the Three Foundations

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


Sterling’s Stoicism rests on three foundational claims: that only internal things are in our control; that unhappiness is caused by falsely believing that externals are good or evil; and that getting our assents right guarantees eudaimonia. These three claims are not merely the entry points to Stoic practice — they are its entire architecture. Every theorem, every instrument, every discipline derives from them. What is less immediately visible is that the three foundations themselves require philosophical support. They are not self-standing assertions. The six philosophical commitments — substance dualism, libertarian free will, moral realism, correspondence theory of truth, ethical intuitionism, and foundationalism — are what the three foundations require in order to stand. Each commitment is the philosophical ground of a specific structural element. Remove any one of them and a specific element of the three foundations gives way.


Foundation One: Only Internal Things Are in Our Control

The first foundation draws a line. On one side: beliefs, desires, acts of will — everything the agent originates in the rational faculty. On the other side: body, property, reputation, outcomes, the behavior of others. Epictetus calls this distinction the most fundamental fact about the human situation. Sterling’s Theorem 6 formalizes it: the only things in our control are our beliefs and our acts of will.

The line requires substance dualism to be real. If the mind is a brain state, then mental events are physical events, subject to physical causation, determined by prior physical conditions. On that account, “beliefs and acts of will” belong to the same causal web as the body, property, and external events. There is no principled boundary. The dichotomy of control dissolves into a difference of degree — some things more directly accessible, some less — rather than a genuine ontological divide. Substance dualism is what makes the boundary a boundary: the rational faculty is a distinct substance with its own causal powers, not reducible to or constituted by anything external to it. The line is real because the distinction between substances is real.

The first foundation also requires libertarian free will. “In our control” cannot mean merely “caused by internal states rather than external compulsion.” That is the compatibilist reading, and it is insufficient for Sterling’s purposes. If the agent’s assent is determined by prior causes — even internal ones — then the agent who judges correctly was always going to do so, and the agent who judges falsely could not have done otherwise. The dichotomy describes a topology of causation, not a domain of genuine origination. Libertarian free will is what makes “in our control” mean that the agent is the genuine first cause of the act — that he could have judged otherwise, that the correct judgment is something he achieves rather than something that happens to him. Without this, the first foundation produces a map of the self that the agent cannot actually use.


Foundation Two: Unhappiness Is Caused by Falsely Believing That Externals Are Good or Evil

The second foundation is the causal heart of the framework. Theorem 10 establishes that virtue is the only genuine good and vice the only genuine evil. Theorem 12 follows: things not in our control are never good or evil. Therefore all beliefs that externals have value are false beliefs, and the pathological emotions caused by those beliefs are responses to false judgments. The agent who fears the loss of his reputation is not responding appropriately to a real threat. He is responding, with the full force of an emotion, to something that is not there.

The word falsely carries the entire normative weight of the framework. The claim is not that believing externals are good or evil is psychologically counterproductive, or strategically unwise, or socially conditioned. The claim is that it is factually false. This requires moral realism. Theorem 10 must state a fact about moral reality — an objective truth that holds independently of what any agent believes, prefers, or constructs. If “only virtue is good” is a useful organizing principle, or a cultural preference, or a hypothesis adopted for its therapeutic effects, then the belief that externals are good or evil is not false. It is simply a different preference, equally valid from within its own framework. The demand that false value beliefs be corrected loses all force the moment moral realism is abandoned. There is no longer anything to be corrected against. Moral realism is what makes the correction rational rather than an imposition.

The identification of beliefs as false requires correspondence theory of truth. A belief is false when it fails to correspond to reality. The impression that a reputation loss is a genuine evil makes a truth claim about the moral status of reputation. Correspondence theory is what makes that claim testable: does it correspond to how things actually are? Theorem 10 specifies that it does not. The verdict of the framework is not “this impression is unhelpful” but “this impression fails to correspond to moral reality.” Without correspondence theory, the framework has no account of what makes value impressions false rather than merely inconvenient or unfashionable.

The recognition of which beliefs are false requires ethical intuitionism. The agent must be able to apprehend directly that virtue is the only genuine good. Sterling identifies the foundational theorems of Core Stoicism as unprovable fundamental postulates defensible only by appeal to intuition of their truth. Theorem 10 is foundational in exactly this sense: it is directly apprehended, not derived from prior premises. Without ethical intuitionism, the agent examining an impression has no secure epistemic access to the moral facts against which the impression is to be tested. He can reason toward those facts, but reasoning from disputed premises produces conclusions of uncertain standing. The examination requires a standard the agent can actually see to be true. Ethical intuitionism is what makes that seeing possible.

The systematic organization of which beliefs are false requires foundationalism. False beliefs are not an undifferentiated mass. They are organized in a dependency structure. Theorem 12 derives from Theorem 10. Theorem 13 — that desiring things out of our control is irrational — derives from Theorems 9 and 12. When the agent examines a specific value impression, the examination traces it to the foundational theorem it contradicts. Without foundationalism, the agent knows something is wrong but cannot locate the structural source of the error. Corrections remain peripheral, addressing the symptom rather than the root. Sterling notes explicitly in Core Stoicism that denying one theorem collapses others, because they interconnect in a foundational dependency structure. Foundationalism is what makes the correction of false beliefs systematic rather than case-by-case.


Foundation Three: Getting Our Assents Right Guarantees Eudaimonia

The third foundation is the practical payoff. Assent — the act of the rational faculty in response to an impression — is the only thing fully in the agent’s control. Everything critical to the best possible life is contained in that one act. Getting it right consistently produces no pathological emotions, virtuous action, and the continual positive feeling appropriate to the agent who sees and acts on the truth. This is eudaimonia. The guarantee is unconditional: not “if external conditions cooperate” but “if the agent judges correctly.”

The guarantee requires that correct judgment actually be available to the agent regardless of external conditions. This returns all five of the preceding commitments to the analysis, now in their positive mode rather than their defensive one.

Substance dualism makes the rational faculty prior to all external conditions. A slave, a prisoner, a person dying of illness can judge correctly, because the rational faculty is not constituted by any of those conditions. The guarantee extends to every possible external situation because the seat of judgment is distinct from the situation.

Libertarian free will makes the guarantee a real promise rather than a predetermined outcome. If assent is determined by prior causes, the agent who gets his assents right was always going to do so — and the agent who fails was always going to fail. The guarantee becomes a description of how things will turn out, not a prescription the agent can act on. Libertarian free will is what makes it meaningful to say: the agent can choose to judge correctly, and if he does, the consequences follow necessarily.

Ethical intuitionism makes the correct assent immediately accessible. The agent does not need extended inference, empirical investigation, or favorable social conditions to know what the moral facts are. The foundational truth that virtue is the only genuine good is available to the rational faculty that attends to it, at any moment, in any external circumstances. This is what makes the guarantee immediate rather than conditional on philosophical preparation: the access is direct.

Foundationalism makes the correct assent stable. The agent who has located the foundational truths has a standard that does not shift. Sophisticated rationalizations cannot dislodge a directly apprehended foundational truth, because it is not the conclusion of an argument — it is the premise from which arguments proceed. The stability of the guarantee across a life of practice depends on the stability of the standard.

Correspondence theory makes the correct assent meaningful. Getting one’s assents right means aligning them with how things actually are. The joy that follows correct assent is not a psychological trick. It is the appropriate response to genuine good, apprehended as such. The guarantee is not that correct judgment will feel better. It is that correct judgment will be correct — aligned with moral reality — and that such alignment constitutes the best possible life.

Moral realism closes the guarantee. The third foundation works because virtue is objectively good. If virtue were merely a preferred organizing principle, then the joy produced by virtuous action and the distress produced by external loss would be equally legitimate expressions of the agent’s preferences — and the guarantee would collapse into a preference for one emotional register over another. Moral realism is what makes the guarantee asymmetric: virtuous action produces appropriate positive feeling because virtue is genuinely good; external loss does not produce genuine harm because externals are genuinely indifferent. The asymmetry is not chosen. It is a fact about how things are.


The Structure as a Whole

The six commitments are not additions to the three foundations. They are what the foundations require to stand. Substance dualism and libertarian free will provide the ontological account of what “in our control” means. Moral realism and correspondence theory provide the alethic account of what makes value beliefs false. Ethical intuitionism and foundationalism provide the epistemic account of how the agent can know which beliefs are false and systematically correct them.

None of this is philosophical ornamentation. Ancient Stoic ethics was grounded in ancient Stoic physics: a materialist cosmology in which the universe was a single rational organism, matter permeated by pneuma, everything determined by the divine logos. That physics is not defensible. Sterling’s reconstruction strips it away and replaces it with six commitments drawn from defensible classical philosophy. What remains is not Stoicism weakened by the loss of its foundations. What remains is Stoicism with its philosophical skeleton made visible — the skeleton that was always present beneath the ancient cosmology, now articulated in terms that do not require anyone to believe in fiery pneuma or the rational fire that permeates the cosmos.

Remove any commitment and a specific element of the three foundations gives way. Remove substance dualism and there is no principled boundary between self and external; the first foundation collapses. Remove libertarian free will and “in our control” becomes compatibilist description rather than genuine agency; the guarantee of the third foundation is vacuous. Remove moral realism and “falsely” in the second foundation loses its force; the correction has nothing to be correct against. Remove correspondence theory and there is no account of what makes value impressions false rather than merely unhelpful. Remove ethical intuitionism and the examination of impressions has no secure epistemic access to moral reality; it stalls at the point of needing a standard. Remove foundationalism and corrections remain peripheral rather than structural; the false beliefs are addressed case-by-case rather than at their root.

The framework holds because all six commitments hold together. Each is load-bearing. Each sustains a specific element of the foundational structure. The three foundations state what Sterling’s Stoicism claims. The six commitments state what the three foundations require to be true. Together they constitute a single philosophical structure — rigorous, integrated, and indivisible.


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

The Mental Actions of the Six Commitments

 

The Mental Actions of the Six Commitments

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


The six philosophical commitments are not merely positions the Stoic practitioner holds. Each one, when operative, requires a specific mental action — something the agent actually does with his rational faculty, not simply something he believes about the world. The question of what those actions are, individually and together, is the question of what Stoic practice actually consists of at its most fundamental level.


Substance Dualism: The Act of Self-Location

Substance dualism, when operative, requires the agent to perform an act of self-location. He identifies himself as the rational faculty — the prohairesis — and explicitly distinguishes that faculty from everything else: his body, the impression arriving at the faculty's boundary, the external event that occasioned the impression, and everything in the world that is not his own act of judgment. This is not a theoretical position the agent recalls. It is a cognitive act he performs in the moment of engagement.

The mental action has a specific structure: the agent draws a line and places himself on one side of it. On his side: beliefs, judgments, acts of will. On the other side: everything else, including bodily states that feel as though they are him. The distinctively dualist element of this act is that the line is ontological, not merely functional. The agent is not organizing experience by preference. He is recognizing that his rational faculty is categorically different in kind from what it is examining. He is the examiner, not what is being examined.

When this act fails, the agent finds himself merged with the impression. He does not experience the impression as something that arrived at him; he experiences it as what he is. The boundary between subject and content disappears, and with it the possibility of any subsequent examination.


Libertarian Free Will: The Act of Origination

Libertarian free will, when operative, requires the agent to originate an act — specifically, to stop the determined sequence that an impression would otherwise complete. The mental action here is not deliberation in the ordinary sense. It is the exercise of causal power: the agent intervenes in what would otherwise proceed automatically, and he does so as the genuine first cause of the interruption.

The specific phenomenology of this act is the experience of genuine openness. The agent stands at a fork, not at a point on a rail. Both paths — assenting to the impression or withholding assent — remain genuinely available until the will moves. The act of origination is the act of holding that openness rather than allowing the process to close it automatically. And at the Decision, it is the act of closing the openness from the agent's own initiative rather than from the impression's momentum.

When this act fails, what presents itself as a pause is a longer delay, and what presents itself as a decision is the arrival of a predetermined outcome. The agent believes he is choosing; he is completing a sequence. The difference is not behaviorally visible from outside. It is the difference between genuine agency and a sophisticated appearance of agency.


Moral Realism: The Act of Discovery

Moral realism, when operative, requires the agent to orient himself toward something he did not make: the moral facts that exist independently of his beliefs, preferences, and constructions. The mental action is discovery rather than construction. The agent does not ask what he prefers to value or what his culture has trained him to regard as good. He asks what is the case — what the moral order actually is — and he orients his examination toward the answer as something to be found rather than something to be decided.

This has a specific consequence for how the agent holds an impression. When moral realism is operative, an impression presenting an external as genuinely good or evil is received as a claim about moral reality — a claim that can succeed or fail at corresponding to how things actually are. The agent's posture toward the impression is that of someone asking whether it is true, not whether it is useful, comfortable, or culturally sanctioned.

When moral realism fails, the examination is transformed. The agent is no longer asking whether the impression is true but whether he prefers to adopt it. The whole project of correction loses its normative force: there is no longer anything to be corrected against. The framework becomes a preference management system rather than a truth-tracking one.


Correspondence Theory of Truth: The Act of Gap Registration

Correspondence theory of truth, when operative, requires the agent to register the gap between an impression and the reality it purports to represent. The mental action is explicit recognition that the impression is a proposition — a claim standing between the agent and reality, pointing toward something it may or may not accurately depict. The agent does not treat the impression as reality itself. He treats it as an assertion about reality, which means he registers that there is something the assertion could fail to match.

This act occurs at multiple moments. At the reception of an impression, the agent registers that something is being asserted. At recognition, he explicitly identifies the impression as a claim rather than a fact. At decision, he brings his assent into correspondence with what the examination revealed — aligning his cognitive state with how things actually are, rather than with what the impression claimed. In this last moment, correspondence theory specifies the character of the final act: it is a truth-aligning act, not a preference choice.

When correspondence theory fails, the impression is never registered as a claim. It arrives as a brute psychological event to be managed. What follows cannot be genuine examination because there is nothing to examine — no proposition that could be true or false, only a force to be regulated or reinforced.


Ethical Intuitionism: The Act of Seeing

Ethical intuitionism, when operative, requires the agent to turn his rational faculty directly toward a moral truth and see it — not infer it, not derive it from premises, not decide to accept it as a useful postulate. The mental action is direct cognitive apprehension: the agent holds the foundational theorem before the rational faculty and the faculty recognizes it as true in the same way it recognizes any self-evident proposition, without requiring a chain of justification.

Sterling identifies the foundational theorems of Core Stoicism — including Theorem 10, that virtue is the only genuine good — as unprovable fundamental postulates defensible only by appeal to intuition of their truth. The act of intuitionism is the act of appealing to that intuition: the agent turns attention toward the moral fact and the rational faculty sees it directly. This seeing is what makes the examination authoritative. The agent's standard is not something he has argued himself into. It is something he can see to be true. A sophisticated rationalization that arrives alongside a false impression — arguing that this particular external really is a genuine good, given the circumstances — cannot dislodge a directly apprehended truth. The argument is tested against the fact, not the fact against the argument.

When intuitionism fails, the agent has only arguments, and arguments can be countered with arguments. The examination stalls or is overridden by the most sophisticated rationalization available. The standard that should be fixed becomes negotiable.


Foundationalism: The Act of Tracing

Foundationalism, when operative, requires the agent to trace a false impression back through the structure of moral knowledge to the foundational theorem it contradicts. The mental action is navigation: the agent locates the impression's failure not merely as a general wrongness but as a specific conflict with a specific derived proposition resting on a specific foundational truth. The examination moves from the particular false claim to its source in the architecture.

A false value impression typically fails at Theorem 12 — it presents an external as genuinely good or evil when externals are genuinely indifferent. That proposition derives from Theorem 10. The foundationalist act traces the failure: this impression fails here, because it conflicts with this derived proposition, which rests on this foundational theorem. That tracing is what makes correction foundational rather than peripheral. The agent who identifies only that something is wrong without locating where the wrongness originates will find the same class of false impression recurring. The same root generates the same fruit. Foundationalism is what allows the agent to address the root.

When foundationalism fails, the agent can detect error but not locate it. Corrections remain surface corrections — this impression refused, the next one of the same kind arriving unchallenged because the foundational false judgment that generates them has not been addressed.


The Commitments in Concert: One Continuous Act

A single act of correct engagement with an impression is not six separate operations. It is one continuous act with distinguishable moments, each requiring specific commitments to be operative. The architecture of the joint action is precise: each commitment does its work at the moment the act requires what it specifically provides, and not all commitments are active at every moment.

The act begins before the agent has done anything. An impression arrives. Moral realism is already operative: the impression carries a truth value, making a claim about something real. Correspondence theory is already operative: the impression is a proposition, a claim rather than a brute event. These two commitments make the arriving impression something that can be engaged rather than merely absorbed.

The agent then acts. He performs the Three-Way Separation: he distinguishes himself, the impression, and the external event. Substance dualism makes this possible — the subject pole is categorically distinct from what arrives at it. Correspondence theory deepens the act — the agent registers the impression not just as content distinct from himself but as a claim about a reality distinct from the impression. The mental action at this moment is a double act: self-location and gap registration simultaneously.

He then stops. He holds the process open at the point where automatic assent would otherwise proceed. Libertarian free will makes this a genuine interruption rather than a longer delay. Substance dualism locates the interruption in the right domain: it is the rational faculty exercising its own causal power, not the body slowing down. The mental action at this moment is origination directed at suspension — the agent causes the process to pause rather than close.

He then examines. Three commitments are simultaneously active. Moral realism supplies what the examination is directed toward: the moral facts that exist independently of the impression and constitute the standard against which it will be tested. Foundationalism organizes that target so the examination can be conducted precisely rather than globally: the agent can locate where in the moral architecture the impression fails. Ethical intuitionism provides the epistemic access that makes the examination authoritative: the agent sees directly whether the impression matches the foundational moral fact, rather than merely inferring a verdict from arguments. The mental action at this moment is the most complex of the five: directed attention, architecturalI6 navigation, and direct cognitive apprehension all occurring together.

He then acts again. He withholds assent from the false impression — or, if the impression proves accurate, he assents to it. Libertarian free will makes this a genuine act: the agent closes the open moment from his own initiative rather than from the impression's momentum. Correspondence theory specifies the character of what he does: he aligns his assent with the moral fact the examination revealed. The mental action at this moment is origination directed at alignment — the agent causes his own cognitive state to correspond to reality.

The total act is: receive the claim, locate oneself as the examiner, register the gap between claim and reality, interrupt the automatic process, navigate the structure of moral facts, see directly whether the claim matches them, and close the open moment by aligning assent with the fact. Six commitments, five steps, one continuous act.

What this reveals is that the six commitments are not six independent philosoph

ical positions that happen to cluster in the same system. They are six distinct instruments, each providing what a specific moment in the act requires and not what another moment requires. Substance dualism is not active at Examination — the act of self-location is complete; what is needed there is the target, the architecture, and the epistemic access that moral realism, foundationalism, and ethical intuitionism respectively provide. Moral realism is not active at the Pause — what the agent needs there is not a target but causal power and the domain in which to exercise it. Correspondence theory threads through multiple moments but does different work at each: making the impression a testable claim at Reception and Recognition, specifying the character of the aligning act at Decision.

This precision is not incidental. It reflects the fact that a single act of correct engagement is genuinely complex — not a single uniform mental motion performed six different ways, but a sequence of distinct mental actions, each requiring what it specifically requires. The practitioner who understands this is not simply someone who holds six philosophical beliefs. He is someone who can perform six distinct mental acts, at the right moments, in the right sequence, as a single integrated exercise. That is what Stoic training consists of at the level of the individual act. And that act, repeated with increasing reliability across a lifetime of practice, is what character formation consists of at the level of a life.


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

Friday, April 03, 2026

C3 — Moral Realism (Objective Value Structure)

 

C3 — Moral Realism (Objective Value Structure)

Within Sterling’s Stoicism, moral realism is the claim that value is a real feature of the world. Not a projection of human preference onto a value-neutral reality. Not a construction produced by rational procedure or social agreement. Not an expression of emotion mistaken for a truth-apt statement. A real feature of the world — as real as any physical feature, as independent of the observer as any mathematical truth, as binding on the agent as any fact of logic. This is what moral realism means in this framework, and every term in its core vector space specifies a dimension of that claim.


Objective Value

The first and most basic dimension is objective value itself. Value is not subjective in the sense of varying with the valuing subject. It is not intersubjective in the sense of being fixed by agreement. It is objective: it is what it is independently of what any agent or any community believes, prefers, or decides. The agent who believes that money is a genuine good is not expressing a preference. He is making a claim about reality, and that claim is false. The agent who recognizes that only virtue is genuinely good is not adopting a useful framework. He is tracking how things actually are. Objective value is the condition that makes both error and correct judgment possible in the moral domain at all.

Moral Facts

Moral facts are the specific contents of objective value. They are the states of affairs that constitute the moral structure of reality: that virtue is good, that vice is evil, that externals are indifferent, that role-duties are genuine obligations. These are not rules we impose on experience. They are features of experience we can either recognize or miss. Sterling states this in Document 19 with maximum directness: if there are no objective moral facts, the Stoic project fails utterly. The project of examining impressions, identifying false value judgments, and correcting them presupposes that there are facts to be gotten right or wrong. Moral facts are those facts.

Virtue as Good

This is Theorem 10 stated as a moral fact rather than a theorem: virtue is the only thing actually good. Not good as a means to something else. Not good because it produces preferred indifferents reliably. Not good because rational agents would agree to value it under idealized conditions. Good in itself, constitutively, by the nature of what virtue is. Sterling’s self-interest argument in Document 24 establishes this by elimination: the Smith/Jones case, the Ring of Gyges, and the dying molester each strip away one layer of the instrumental account until nothing remains. The only position that survives all three cases is that virtue is intrinsically and definitionally the only good. Virtue as good is therefore not an axiom adopted for convenience — it is the conclusion that every attempt to ground morality non-morally fails to reach.

Vice as Evil

The correlate claim is equally precise: vice is the only thing actually evil. Losing property is not evil. Dying is not evil. Being humiliated is not evil. These are dispreferred indifferents — appropriate to avoid when possible, inappropriate to treat as genuine evils. Vice alone is genuinely evil because it alone is the agent’s own failure to be what he is as a rational being. The asymmetry between vice as evil and dispreferred indifferents as merely unwelcome is the hinge on which the entire corrective structure of Stoicism turns. Without it, there is no principled distinction between the grief that follows a false value judgment and the appropriate regret that follows a genuinely vicious act.

Mind-Independent Truth

Moral facts hold independently of what any mind believes about them. The agent who has never heard of Stoicism and sincerely believes that wealth is a genuine good is still wrong. His sincerity does not make his belief true. His cultural formation does not make his belief true. The near-universal human tendency to treat health, reputation, and pleasure as genuine goods does not make that treatment true. Mind-independence is the dimension that closes off every appeal to consensus, custom, or intuitive plausibility as a standard of moral truth. It is also what makes the Stoic revisionary project rational rather than merely contrarian: the agent is not asked to abandon a perfectly good set of values in favor of a different set. He is asked to recognize that the values he holds are factually false.

Normativity

Moral realism carries normativity: it binds the agent. If value were merely a matter of preference or construction, then the demand to correct false value judgments would be a recommendation at most — something the agent might or might not take up depending on whether he found it useful. Normativity makes the demand binding: the agent is required to correct false value judgments not because doing so serves some further end but because the false judgment is wrong in a way that is not contingent on his endorsement. This is why Sterling resists every account that grounds moral obligation in consequences, social utility, or rational agreement: all of these make the bindingness of moral claims conditional on something external to the moral fact itself. Moral realism makes it unconditional.

Correctness

Correctness is the evaluative property that moral judgments either have or lack. A judgment that a loss is a genuine evil is incorrect — not unhelpful, not maladaptive, not culturally inappropriate, but incorrect in the same sense that a factual judgment about the weather can be incorrect. Correctness as a dimension of moral realism is what makes examination a truth-seeking procedure rather than a preference-adjustment exercise. When the agent examines an impression and finds that it represents an external as genuinely good, the finding is that the impression is incorrect. Without the concept of correctness as a real property of moral judgments, the examination has no standard against which to issue its verdict.

Evaluative Truth

Evaluative truth is the specific form that truth takes in the moral domain. It is distinct from descriptive truth (the cat is on the mat) but not of a different metaphysical kind. Both are cases of a judgment corresponding to how things are. Evaluative truth is what makes it possible for a moral judgment to be true or false in the full sense: not merely coherent or incoherent within a framework, not merely useful or useless in practice, but true or false as a representation of evaluative reality. Sterling holds that moral truths are necessary rather than contingent — stated in Document 19, they have no source in the way empirical facts have sources, just as 2+2=4 has no source. They could not have been otherwise. This modal status is carried by the dimension of evaluative truth.

Moral Ontology

Moral ontology is the claim that value is part of the furniture of the world. It is not a projection onto a value-neutral substrate. The world contains, among its real features, the fact that virtue is good and that vice is evil. This requires that the ontological inventory of the world include evaluative properties alongside physical ones. Sterling’s substance dualism supports this: a framework that already holds that the rational faculty is a real non-physical entity, that mental causation is genuine, that intentionality is irreducible to physical description, has the ontological resources to accept that evaluative properties are real features of the world that the rational faculty can apprehend. The resistance to moral ontology comes most naturally from physicalism, which is already excluded by C1.

Value Asymmetry

Value asymmetry is the specific structure of moral ontology in Sterling’s framework. The value space is not symmetric: there is not a continuous spectrum from most good to most evil with externals distributed across it. The structure is sharply asymmetric. Virtue occupies the entire domain of genuine good. Vice occupies the entire domain of genuine evil. Everything else — the entire range of externals from life and health at one end to death and illness at the other — falls outside the good/evil axis entirely. This asymmetry is not a Stoic quirk. It follows from taking moral realism seriously: if only virtue is genuinely good, then the entire evaluative structure is organized around that fact, and everything else is classified by its relation to it, not by an independent evaluative property of its own.

Intrinsic Good

Intrinsic good is goodness that does not derive from anything else. Virtue is intrinsically good: good in itself, not good because of what it produces or what it enables or what rational agents would choose under ideal conditions. This dimension does the most direct work against the Epicurean account that Document 24 targets. The Epicurean makes virtue instrumentally good — a generally reliable means to pleasure or preferred indifferents. Sterling’s three cases show that instrumental goodness collapses under unusual circumstances. Intrinsic goodness does not: if virtue is good in itself, its goodness does not vary with the circumstances in which it appears. The dying man who acts virtuously is doing something genuinely good regardless of the consequences that follow. Intrinsic good is the dimension that secures the unconditional character of virtue’s value.

Intrinsic Evil

Intrinsic evil is the correlate: vice is evil in itself, not because of its consequences. The agent who commits an act of vice has done something genuinely evil even if the consequences are favorable, even if no one knows, even if he avoids all social penalties. This dimension is what closes the dying molester case. On any instrumental account, Smith’s molestation spree is not evil if the consequences for him are net positive and the victims are unable to retaliate. Intrinsic evil answers that the act is evil regardless: vice is evil in itself, and what follows from it does not determine its moral character.

Universal Validity

Universal validity is the claim that moral facts hold for all agents in all circumstances without exception. The fact that only virtue is good is not indexed to a particular culture, historical moment, personality type, or set of life circumstances. It holds for the slave and the emperor, the ancient Athenian and the contemporary professional, the person raised in Stoic philosophy and the person who has never heard of it. Universal validity follows from mind-independence: if moral facts hold independently of what any mind believes, they hold independently of whose mind, when, and where. This dimension is what gives the framework its claim to be a genuine account of human flourishing rather than a culturally specific orientation.

Non-Relative Judgment

Non-relative judgment is what universal validity makes possible at the level of practice. The agent who examines an impression does not ask whether the impression is false relative to Stoic commitments or false relative to his cultural background. He asks whether it is false — whether it fails to correspond to how things actually are. Non-relative judgment is the epistemic dimension of universal validity: not only do moral facts hold for all agents, but the verdicts issued in their light apply without qualification to the case at hand. The verdict that a specific impression represents an external as a genuine good is not a Stoic verdict. It is a correct verdict.

Moral Error

Moral error is the possibility of being factually wrong about value. If moral facts are objective, mind-independent, and universally valid, then it is possible to be wrong about them — not merely to prefer different values, not merely to hold a different framework, but to be wrong in the way one can be wrong about any fact. The near-universal human tendency to treat externals as genuine goods is, on this account, a massive and pervasive moral error. The Stoic revisionary project is the project of correcting that error. Moral error is the dimension that makes correction something more than preference change: the agent who replaces a false value judgment with a true one is not upgrading his preferences. He is eliminating an error.

Obligation

Obligation is the practical face of normativity. Given that moral facts are objective and binding, the agent is under genuine obligation to align his judgments with them. This obligation is not contingent on his endorsement, his cultural formation, or the consequences of compliance. It follows from the nature of moral facts themselves. The agent is obligated to examine impressions, identify false value judgments, and correct them — not because doing so is useful or because a rational procedure recommends it, but because the false judgment is objectively wrong and the obligation to correct it is part of the moral structure of reality.

Rational Requirement

Rational requirement is the cognitive form of obligation. Moral realism makes the correction of false value judgments not merely obligatory but rationally required: the agent who persists in a false value judgment in the face of its falsity is not merely failing morally. He is failing as a rational agent. His rationality is impugned by his persistence in error. This dimension connects moral realism directly to the Stoic account of rationality: reason is not merely a tool for achieving desired ends. It is a truth-tracking faculty, and its operation is assessed by whether it tracks truth. To be rational is to align one’s judgments with reality. Moral realism specifies that this requirement extends to evaluative judgments.

Evaluative Realism

Evaluative realism is moral realism stated at the level of metaphysics rather than ethics. It is the thesis that there are real evaluative properties in the world — that goodness and evil are not merely terms we apply but features we can accurately or inaccurately attribute. Evaluative realism is the metaphysical foundation that makes every other dimension in this vector space possible. Without it, objective value becomes a useful fiction, moral facts become regulative ideals, and the entire structure loses its claim to be about how things actually are. Sterling’s moral realism is evaluative realism in the full sense: the world really contains goodness and evil as features, and the rational faculty can apprehend them.

Fact-Value Unity

Fact-value unity is the dimension that distinguishes Sterling’s moral realism from Humean accounts that sharply separate descriptive and evaluative claims. In this framework, to know the facts about the world correctly includes knowing the evaluative facts. There is no separate evaluative domain floating free of factual reality. The fact that virtue is the only genuine good is a fact about the world, not a value added to a neutral factual description. This has a direct implication for the is/ought problem that Sterling addresses in Document 17: the gap between is and ought is not closed by deriving moral conclusions from non-moral premises. It is dissolved by recognizing that the evaluative facts are already part of the factual structure of reality. The agent who sees how things actually are sees both their descriptive and evaluative character simultaneously.

Normative Authority

Normative authority is the final dimension: moral realism gives the framework genuine authority over the agent’s judgments. The framework does not merely offer a perspective or a strategy. It issues verdicts with the authority of truth. When the SDF or the SLE issues a finding that an impression represents an external as a genuine good, that finding carries normative authority: the agent is not merely advised to reconsider his preference. He is informed that his judgment is wrong. Normative authority is what transforms Stoicism from a therapeutic technique into a truth-governed practice. It is also what makes the framework’s demand on the agent unconditional: the authority does not derive from the agent’s consent, his cultural formation, or the instrument’s persuasive force. It derives from the moral facts themselves.


The Three Foundations

Foundation One — only internal things are in our control — is supported by moral realism indirectly but essentially. The claim that externals are indifferent is a moral fact: not merely a Stoic recommendation, not merely a useful reframing, but a true statement about the evaluative structure of the world. Moral realism is what makes the control dichotomy more than a practical distinction. It is an ontological claim: externals are genuinely neither good nor evil, and therefore the agent’s concern for them represents a factual error about where value lies.

Foundation Two — unhappiness is caused by falsely believing externals are good or evil — is the foundation most directly dependent on moral realism. The word “falsely” is load-bearing. The belief that a loss is a genuine evil is not merely unhelpful or maladaptive. It is factually false. Moral realism is what makes that word mean what it must mean: the belief fails to correspond to the objective evaluative structure of reality. Without moral realism, “falsely” softens into “unhelpfully,” the corrective demand softens into a therapeutic suggestion, and the entire normative force of the framework dissolves.

Foundation Three — correct assent guarantees eudaimonia — depends on moral realism for the asymmetric character of the guarantee. The guarantee works because virtue is objectively good and its possession constitutes genuine flourishing. If value were subjective or constructed, the guarantee would reduce to: correct assent produces the state the agent prefers or the state a rational procedure endorses. That is not a guarantee of eudaimonia. It is a guarantee of preference satisfaction. Moral realism ensures that the state produced by correct assent is genuinely superior — not comparatively preferred but objectively the only good — and therefore that the guarantee is real rather than conditional on what the agent happens to value.


Integration with the Other Commitments

Moral realism requires correspondence theory (C4) to specify what “corresponds to moral reality” means: a judgment is true when it aligns with the objective evaluative structure of the world. Without correspondence theory, moral realism has no account of what makes a moral judgment true rather than false.

Moral realism requires ethical intuitionism (C5) to give the agent access to moral facts: the rational faculty must be able to apprehend directly that virtue is the only genuine good. Without intuitionism, moral realism posits facts the agent cannot reach, and the corrective project has no epistemic ground to stand on.

Moral realism requires foundationalism (C6) to organize moral facts into a structure the agent can navigate: Theorem 10 is foundational, Theorem 12 derives from it, and when a specific false value judgment is examined, the examination traces it back to the foundational fact it contradicts. Without foundationalism, moral facts are available but unstructured, and correction remains case-by-case rather than systematic.

Moral realism requires substance dualism (C1) to establish the ontological resources for evaluative properties in the world: a framework that accepts non-physical mental reality and irreducible subjectivity has the resources to accept evaluative properties as real. A physicalist framework that has already denied the reality of non-physical mental substance has no principled basis for accepting objective moral facts.

Moral realism requires libertarian free will (C2) for moral responsibility and rational requirement to be genuine. If the agent does not genuinely originate his assents, then the obligation to correct false value judgments cannot be genuinely binding on him: a determined output cannot be obligated. Libertarian free will is the condition that makes the normative authority of moral realism applicable to the specific agent rather than to a causal system he instantiates.


The Discriminatives

Relativism holds that moral truth is indexed to a culture, community, or individual. It fails on the universal validity dimension: if value is objective and mind-independent, then what any culture happens to affirm is evidence about moral belief, not about moral fact. Relativism is excluded by the framework not as a competing preference but as a factual error about the nature of value.

Constructivism holds that moral facts are produced by rational procedures — what rational agents would agree to, what a properly constructed procedure endorses. It fails on the mind-independence and intrinsic good dimensions: a constructed value is dependent on the procedure that generates it, and therefore on the agents who execute the procedure, and therefore not independent of minds. Constructivism also cannot ground intrinsic goodness: a constructed good is good because the procedure endorses it, which is a form of instrumental goodness relative to the procedure’s design.

Subjectivism holds that value is constituted by individual attitudes or preferences. It fails on the moral error dimension: if value is constituted by my preferences, I cannot be wrong about what I value — I can only have different preferences than others. Moral error, which is the corrective core of Stoic practice, presupposes that the agent can be wrong about value in a way that subjectivism forecloses.

Expressivism holds that moral claims are expressions of emotional attitudes rather than truth-apt assertions about the world. It fails on the evaluative truth and correctness dimensions: if moral claims do not express propositions that are true or false, then examination cannot issue verdicts and correction cannot be the correction of error. The entire Stoic practice of testing impressions against foundational moral truths requires that moral claims be truth-apt. Expressivism makes that requirement impossible to satisfy.


Sterling/Kelly Philosophical System. C3 — Moral Realism (Objective Value Structure). Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Analytical judgments are Dave Kelly’s; prose rendering is Claude’s.

C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth (Truth as Alignment with Reality)

 

C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth (Truth as Alignment with Reality)

 

Core Vector Space

  • truth
  • falsity
  • correspondence
  • reality
  • representation
  • accuracy
  • mismatch
  • belief-content relation
  • world-directedness
  • truth conditions
  • objective standard
  • verification (in principle)
  • error detection
  • propositional content
  • alignment
  • fact-bearer relation
  • semantic evaluation
  • correctness of judgment
  • cognitive fit
  • descriptive adequacy

Discriminates against:

  • coherence-only theories
  • pragmatism (strong forms)
  • deflationism

C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth (Truth as Alignment with Reality)

 

C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth (Truth as Alignment with Reality)

Core Vector Space Integrated with Sterling’s Stoicism

Within Sterling’s Stoicism, the correspondence theory of truth is the account that makes judgment intelligible, error detectable, and correction possible. It holds that truth  consists in a relation of correspondence between a judgment’s propositional content and reality. A judgment is true when there is alignment between what is asserted and what is the case; it is false when there is mismatch. This establishes truth as a relation of cognitive fit between mind and world.

This relation is not metaphorical. It is a structured belief-content relation in which a belief represents the world and is evaluated in terms of its accuracy. The belief is a representation that is inherently world-directed: it aims at how things actually are. The success or failure of that aim is determined by truth conditions, which specify what must be the case in reality for the belief to be true. When those conditions are satisfied, the belief exhibits descriptive adequacy; when they are not, the belief is false.

This yields an objective standard of evaluation. Truth is not defined by coherence within a system, usefulness in practice, or expressive force. It is defined by whether the belief stands in the right fact-bearer relation to the world. This is what makes semantic evaluation possible: judgments can be assessed as correct or incorrect independently of the agent’s preferences or psychological states. The result is a robust notion of the correctness of judgment.

This account is essential to Foundation Two: that unhappiness is caused by false value beliefs about externals. The claim that such beliefs are false requires a clear distinction between truth and falsity. Correspondence theory supplies that distinction. A belief that externals are genuinely good fails because it does not correspond to evaluative reality. It is not merely unhelpful; it is a failure of alignment. This makes error detection possible: the agent can identify precisely where a judgment fails to match reality.

The theory also grounds verification (in principle). While not all truths are empirically testable, every truth has conditions under which it would be recognized as corresponding to reality. In Sterling’s system, these conditions are often accessed through ethical intuitionism and grounded in foundational truths. But the logical structure remains: a belief is true if it matches reality, and false if it does not. This preserves the intelligibility of correction.

Correspondence theory is equally necessary for Foundation Three: that right assent guarantees eudaimonia. “Right assent” must mean more than psychological consistency or internal coherence. It must mean that the agent’s judgments align with reality. The guarantee holds because alignment with evaluative reality produces correct valuation, eliminates false belief, and thereby removes the basis of pathological emotion. Without correspondence, “right assent” would lose its meaning, and the guarantee would collapse into subjective satisfaction.

The theory also supports Foundation One by clarifying the function of the rational faculty. The faculty is not merely a processor of impressions but a truth-tracking system. Its role is to evaluate impressions by determining whether their propositional content corresponds to reality. This connects correspondence theory directly to agency: the agent’s task is to produce judgments that achieve cognitive fit with the world.

This commitment integrates with the others. With moral realism, it provides the structure by which evaluative truths are identified as true or false. With ethical intuitionism, it ensures that these truths are accessible to the agent. With foundationalism, it organizes truth into a hierarchy where basic truths ground others. With substance dualism and libertarian free will, it situates truth evaluation within a real agent capable of originating judgments.

Correspondence theory explicitly discriminates against competing accounts.

Coherence-only theories define truth in terms of consistency within a system of beliefs, but this allows an entirely coherent system to be false if it fails to match reality.

Pragmatism (strong forms) defines truth in terms of usefulness or success, but usefulness does not guarantee alignment with reality.

Deflationism reduces truth to a logical or linguistic device, stripping it of substantive explanatory role and leaving no basis for error detection or correction.

Against all three, correspondence theory maintains that truth is a real relation between thought and world. It preserves the distinction between appearance and reality, between seeming and being, and therefore between correct and incorrect judgment.

In Sterling’s Stoicism, this is decisive. The entire system depends on the possibility that the agent’s judgments can either align with reality or fail to do so. The rational faculty evaluates impressions by testing their propositional content against the structure of the world. When alignment is achieved, judgment is correct; when mismatch occurs, error is present. The correction of that error is the central task of Stoic practice.

Thus, correspondence theory is not merely an epistemological option. It is the condition that makes the system a truth-governed practice rather than a psychological technique. It secures the meaning of falsity, the possibility of correction, and the guarantee that right assent—understood as alignment with reality—produces eudaimonia.

C3 — Moral Realism (Objective Value Structure)

 

C3 — Moral Realism (Objective Value Structure)

Within Sterling’s Stoicism, moral realism is the claim that there exist objective value (see C3) facts that are independent of the agent’s beliefs, preferences, or cultural context. These are not projections, constructions, or useful fictions. They are elements of reality itself. In t20-23his framework, moral facts are as real as any other feature of the world, and they ground all claims about good and evil.

The central thesis is that virtue as good and vice as evil are not contingent or relative but expressions of a mind-independent truth. This establishes a robust form of normativity: judgments about how one ought to think and act are not optional or preference-based, but answerable to reality. A judgment is correct not because it is useful or widely accepted, but because it reflects evaluative truth grounded in the structure of the world.

This gives moral realism its defining feature: correctness. When the agent evaluates an impression, the evaluation is either right or wrong depending on whether it aligns with the actual moral ontology of reality. There is a real difference between accurate and inaccurate value judgment. This allows for the possibility of moral error: the agent can be mistaken about what is good or evil, and that mistake is not merely pragmatic but factual.

The structure of value within this ontology is sharply asymmetric. Intrinsic good is located solely in virtue, and intrinsic evil solely in vice. Everything else—health, reputation, wealth, and all externals—falls outside the good/evil axis. This establishes universal validity: the claim that only virtue is good holds for all agents in all circumstances. It is not indexed to perspective or situation. This is what allows Stoicism to reject non-relative judgment in favor of objective evaluation.

From this follows normative authority. If value is objective, then the demand to correct false beliefs is rationally binding. The agent is not merely encouraged to adopt Stoic judgments; he is required to do so by the nature of reality. This transforms Stoicism from a therapeutic strategy into a truth-governed system of evaluation.

This commitment is essential to Foundation Two: that unhappiness is caused by false value beliefs about externals. The claim that such beliefs are false presupposes that there are objective standards against which they fail. Without moral realism, calling a belief “false” reduces to saying it is unhelpful or dispreferred. With moral realism, it means the belief fails to match the actual evaluative structure of reality.

It is equally necessary for Foundation Three: that right assent guarantees eudaimonia. The guarantee depends on the fact that aligning with virtue produces a state that is genuinely good. If value were subjective or constructed, then the resulting state would have no special status over alternatives. The guarantee would collapse into preference satisfaction. Moral realism ensures that the outcome of right assent is objectively superior because it aligns with what is truly good.

Moral realism also supports Foundation One indirectly by clarifying what the agent is responsible for. If value is objective, then the agent’s task is to align his judgments with that structure. This reinforces the role of the rational faculty as a truth-tracking mechanism and ties agency directly to evaluative correctness.

This commitment integrates with the others. With correspondence theory, it defines truth as alignment with evaluative reality. With ethical intuitionism, it ensures that these truths are directly apprehensible. With foundationalism, it provides a structured hierarchy in which basic moral truths ground derived judgments. With substance dualism and libertarian free will, it gives the agent both the capacity and responsibility to align with moral reality.

Moral realism explicitly discriminates against competing views.

Relativism denies universal validity and reduces value to cultural or individual frameworks.

Constructivism treats value as produced by rational procedures or agreements rather than discovered.

Subjectivism grounds value in individual attitudes or preferences.

Expressivism interprets moral claims as expressions of emotion rather than truth-apt statements.

All of these positions reject or weaken the claim that value is an objective feature of reality. Sterling’s Stoicism cannot accept them, because each removes the possibility of genuine moral error and thereby undermines the corrective structure of the system.

The inclusion of fact-value unity is decisive. In this framework, evaluative facts are not separate from reality’s structure but part of it. The world is not value-neutral; it contains within it a normative dimension that the rational faculty can apprehend. This unifies epistemology and ethics: to know reality correctly is simultaneously to grasp what is good.

In sum, moral realism establishes that value is real, objective, and binding. It grounds the distinction between true and false judgment, supports the correction of error, and secures the guarantee that right assent leads to eudaimonia. Without it, Stoicism loses its claim to truth and becomes merely a way of organizing preference. With it, the system stands as a unified account of reality, judgment, and flourishing.

C3 — Moral Realism (Objective Value Structure)

 

C3 — Moral Realism (Objective Value Structure)

 Core Vector Space

  • objective value
  • moral facts
  • virtue as good
  • vice as evil
  • mind-independent truth
  • normativity
  • correctness
  • evaluative truth
  • moral ontology
  • value asymmetry
  • intrinsic good
  • intrinsic evil
  • universal validity
  • non-relative judgment
  • moral error
  • obligation
  • rational requirement
  • evaluative realism
  • fact-value unity (in this system)
  • normative authority

Discriminates against:

  • relativism
  • constructivism
  • subjectivism
  • expressivism

C2 — Libertarian Free Will (Origination of Assent)

 

C2 — Libertarian Free Will (Origination of Assent)l

Within Sterling’s Stoicism, libertarian free will is the condition that makes agency real rather than apparent. It is the claim that the agent (See C2) is the genuine source of action, such that acts of assent are not determined outputs of prior causes but instances of true origination. This is not merely a thesis about freedom in a weak sense. It is a claim about authorship: the agent does not merely undergo decisions but produces them.

The core of libertarian freedom is agency understood as self-determination. When the agent encounters an impression, there is a real decision point—what Sterling calls the Pause—at which deliberation occurs. At that point, multiple alternative possibilities are genuinely open. The agent could have done otherwise. This is not epistemic uncertainty but metaphysical openness. The resulting act is a non-determined act, an instance of internal causation (strong sense), where the cause terminates in the agent rather than in prior external or physical conditions.

This structure grounds choice as a real event. A choice is not simply the unfolding of prior states but an action initiation attributable to the agent. This is why libertarian freedom is inseparable from control. To say that assent is “in our control” is to say that it originates from us, not merely that it passes through us. Without origination, control collapses into passive participation in a causal chain.

This has direct implications for responsibility and accountability. If the agent is the true origin of assent, then the agent is properly subject to moral responsibility. Praise and blame are not projections but accurate evaluations of what the agent has authored. If, by contrast, every act were determined by prior causes, then responsibility would be misplaced. The agent would be a locus of events, not their originator.

This commitment is essential to Foundation One: that only internal things are in our control. Libertarian free will ensures that internal acts are not merely internal in location but internal in authorship. Combined with substance dualism, it establishes that the rational faculty is both distinct from externals and actively originating its responses. Without libertarian freedom, the dichotomy of control reduces to a distinction between types of causes, not a distinction between what is truly up to us and what is not.

It is equally necessary for Foundation Two: that unhappiness is caused by false value judgments. The framework claims that agents are responsible for assenting to false propositions about externals. That claim presupposes that the agent could have withheld assent. If assent were causally inevitable, then false judgment would not be an error attributable to the agent but an unavoidable outcome. The entire structure of correction—identifying, rejecting, and replacing false judgments—requires genuine freedom at the point of assent.

Most critically, libertarian free will is indispensable for Foundation Three: that right assent guarantees eudaimonia. The guarantee only holds if the agent can actually produce right assent. If every assent were fixed by prior causes, then the guarantee would collapse into fatalism: those who achieve eudaimonia were always determined to do so, and those who fail never had a real alternative. Libertarian freedom preserves the guarantee as a meaningful claim: the agent can, at each decision point, align with reality or fail to do so.

Thus libertarian free will integrates with the other commitments. It works with substance dualism to establish a genuine agent; with moral realism and correspondence to give assent something real to align with; with intuitionism to make correct judgment accessible; and with foundationalism to make correction systematic. It is the action-theoretic core of the system.

This position explicitly discriminates against three alternatives.

Determinism denies that alternative possibilities are real and reduces action to causal inevitability. Under determinism, the agent never truly originates anything.

Compatibilism redefines freedom as action flowing from internal states without external constraint. But this preserves neither origination nor genuine alternatives; it replaces authorship with internal causation in a weak sense.

Causal inevitability more broadly denies that anything could occur otherwise than it does, eliminating the possibility of real choice at the point of action.

Against all three, libertarian free will asserts that the agent is a true source of action. The rational faculty does not merely process impressions—it determines its response to them.

In Sterling’s Stoicism, therefore, libertarian free will is not optional. It is what makes assent a genuine act, control a real property, responsibility a justified attribution, and eudaimonia a reachable state. It secures the claim that flourishing depends on what the agent does because what the agent does is truly up to the agent.

C2 — Libertarian Free Will (Origination of Assent)

 

C2 — Libertarian Free Will (Origination of Assent)


Core Vector Space

  • agency
  • origination
  • choice
  • alternative possibilities
  • could have done otherwise
  • assent
  • control
  • authorship
  • responsibility
  • self-determination
  • indeterminacy (at point of choice)
  • voluntary action
  • deliberation
  • decision point (the Pause)
  • non-determined act
  • moral responsibility
  • accountability
  • autonomy
  • internal causation (strong sense)
  • action initiation


Discriminates against:

  • determinism
  • compatibilism
  • causal inevitability

Thursday, April 02, 2026

Core Vector Space: Explanation

 

Core Vector Space: Explanation

In this framework, a core vector space is a structured conceptual field that defines the meaning, function, and boundaries of a philosophical commitment. It is not a mathematical vector space in the strict formal sense, but an analogical extension: a set of interrelated concepts that cohere around a central theoretical axis and jointly determine how that commitment operates within the system.

Each term in the vector space functions like a dimension. No single term is sufficient to define the commitment on its own. Instead, the commitment is constituted by the simultaneous activation of all of them. To understand substance dualism, for example, is not merely to assert “the mind is non-physical,” but to grasp a network: subjectivity, intentionality, irreducibility, mental causation, unity of consciousness, and so on. Remove enough of these dimensions, and the concept collapses into a weaker or different view, such as property dualism, functionalism, or physicalism.

The core vector space therefore serves three functions:

1. Conceptual Content (What the commitment is)

The vector space specifies the internal structure of a commitment. It tells you what must be present for the concept to exist in its intended form. For substance dualism, this includes the rational faculty as a distinct substance, the first-person perspective, and independence from the body. These are not optional features; they define the commitment’s identity.

2. Dependency Role (What the commitment does in the system)

Each vector space is positioned within a larger dependency structure. The terms are selected not just for descriptive richness, but for functional necessity. For instance, “locus of control” and “agency substrate” are included because substance dualism must ground Foundation One (control). Likewise, “epistemic access” connects dualism to intuitionism, and “mental causation” connects it to libertarian free will. The vector space encodes how the commitment supports the system’s foundations.

3. Discriminative Boundary (What the commitment is not)

A vector space also defines exclusion zones. By specifying neighboring but incompatible concepts, such as reductionism, identity theory, and eliminativism, it clarifies the boundaries of the view. These opposing positions occupy adjacent conceptual regions but lack key dimensions, such as irreducibility or ontological distinction. This gives the vector space sharp edges rather than vague overlap.

A useful way to think about this is geometrically: a commitment is a point in a high-dimensional conceptual space. Its coordinates are given by the presence and weighting of specific terms. Competing theories occupy nearby but distinct regions because they share some dimensions while lacking others. The more dimensions you include, the more precisely you locate the commitment.

This approach has a major advantage over traditional definition-by-essence. Instead of trying to reduce a concept to a single necessary and sufficient condition, it recognizes that philosophical positions are structurally complex. Their identity lies in a pattern of interdependence, not a single clause.

Finally, when all six commitments are expressed as vector spaces, their intersections reveal the deep structure of the system. Shared dimensions, like truth, agency, and access, form higher-level clusters. At that level, the entire framework can be seen as a unified semantic field centered on one core idea:

agent-originated, truth-tracking judgment within a structured reality.

That is the conceptual center toward which all vector spaces converge.

Substance Dualism in Sterling’s Stoicism

 

Substance Dualism in Sterling’s Stoicism

Within Sterling’s Stoicism, substance dualism is not an ornamental metaphysical thesis. It is the condition that makes the whole structure intelligible. The claim is that the rational faculty (prohairesis) is a distinct substance, genuinely different in kind from the body and from all external conditions. It is therefore non-physical, not in the sense of being vague or ghostly, but in the precise sense that it is not reducible to bodily states, not identical with neural events, and not exhaustively describable in the terms of physical process. This is the first and most basic ontological distinction in the system.

Sterling’s Stoicism begins from the claim that only internal things are in our control. That claim requires a real internal vs external boundary. If the mind is just a bodily process, then there is no principled point at which the self ends and the external world begins. Brain state, bodily condition, environmental cause, and outward event all belong to one continuous physical order. In that case the dichotomy of control becomes, at best, a practical convenience. But Sterling’s framework does not treat it as a convenience. It treats it as a fact about reality. For that fact to hold, the self / agent must be genuinely distinct from the body. Substance dualism makes that distinction real.

The self, on this view, is not the organism taken as a whole. It is the rational faculty as the seat of judgment, assent, and will. That faculty is the true agency substrate of Stoic ethics. The body may be affected, injured, exhausted, imprisoned, praised, or disgraced; but the rational faculty remains the locus of control because it is not constituted by those states. This is what Sterling means when he treats the person dying of illness, the slave, or the prisoner as still fully capable of correct judgment. Their conditions alter the body and circumstances, but not the essential agent. Substance dualism thus secures the independence from body required by Foundation One and by the guarantee of eudaimonia in Foundation Three.

This is also why the rational faculty must be understood as a center of genuine mental causation. It does not merely register events that have already been fixed elsewhere. It judges, assents, withholds, and originates acts. If its operations were wholly reducible to bodily events, then its causal role would collapse into physical determination. The framework’s claim that assent is truly “up to us” would become illusory. By contrast, if the rational faculty is a distinct substance, then its acts can belong to it in the strong sense. The agent is not merely where a process happens; the agent is what does the judging.

Several features of consciousness make this dualist account not only useful but necessary. First is subjectivity. Experience is given from a first-person perspective. There is something it is like to think, to doubt, to assent, to feel shame, to grasp a theorem, to resist an impression. No third-person physical description captures that first-person givenness. Second is intentionality. Thoughts are about things: I think about justice, fear death, consider a proposition, or assent to an impression. Physical states, described physically, do not contain aboutness in this intrinsic sense. Third is qualitative experience (qualia). Pain as felt, joy as experienced, recognition as inwardly present, are not identical to structural descriptions of neural activity. These features reveal the irreducibility of mind to body.

That irreducibility matters because the entire Stoic system turns on the difference between what merely happens and what is judged. Impressions occur; assent evaluates them. If both are merely physical events of the same order, then Stoic examination loses its footing. But if the rational faculty is a distinct substance, then the faculty can stand over against impressions and assess them. This is where ownership of thought becomes central. A thought, on Sterling’s model, is not simply a passing neural configuration. It is presented to a subject who can take responsibility for it, reject it, or endorse it. The possibility of such ownership presupposes a real subject, not merely a bundle of processes.

The same is true of the unity of consciousness. The system assumes one center that receives impressions, compares them to foundational truths, remembers prior judgments, and issues a verdict. That unity is not well explained by a mere aggregate of physical events unless one smuggles unity in without explanation. Dualism makes the unity basic: the self is one because the rational faculty is one. From that follows also the persistence of self. The same agent who judged wrongly yesterday can correct himself today because there is enduring identity through changing bodily states and external conditions. Stoic moral practice presupposes this persistence. Without it, accountability fragments.

Substance dualism also secures epistemic access. Ethical intuitionism says that the agent can directly apprehend foundational moral truths. But direct apprehension requires a knower capable of more than passive reception of physical stimuli. The rational faculty must be able to see, in the strict sense of rational insight, that virtue is the only genuine good. If mind were only brain function, then every judgment would stand inside the same causal chain as every appetite and fear, and the distinction between apprehending truth and merely instantiating a state would blur. Dualism preserves the faculty as a genuine knower.

This is why C1 integrates so tightly with the other commitments. With libertarian free will, it yields real control: dualism supplies the self that can act, and freedom supplies the origination of the act. With moral realism, it yields a real object of judgment: the rational faculty apprehends an objective moral order. With correspondence theory, it yields a meaningful standard of correctness: judgment either corresponds to reality or fails to. With ethical intuitionism, it yields direct access to first principles. With foundationalism, it yields a stable architecture in which the rational faculty can trace impressions back to the theorem they contradict. Dualism is therefore not isolated; it is the metaphysical ground of the whole operating system.

The position also explicitly discriminates against three opposing views.

First, it rejects reductionism. Reductionism says that the mental is nothing over and above the physical. But Sterling’s framework cannot accept this, because reductionism collapses the ontological boundary between self and external, thereby undermining the dichotomy of control.

Second, it rejects identity theory. Identity theory says that mental states just are brain states. On Sterling’s account, that makes assent a bodily event among bodily events, and therefore not uniquely in our control. It also makes the first-person act of judgment identical to a third-person describable process, which fails to account for subjectivity, intentionality, qualia, and ownership of thought.

Third, it rejects eliminativism. Eliminativism treats beliefs, intentions, and similar mental categories as folk-psychological illusions to be replaced by neuroscience. Sterling’s Stoicism cannot survive such a move at all, because its central categories are precisely assent, impression, judgment, desire, and rational correction. If these are eliminated, the system is not revised; it is destroyed.

The positive thesis, then, is clear. The rational faculty is an immaterial center of judgment, a genuinely distinct substance, the enduring self and true agent. Its immateriality is not a decorative metaphysical add-on but the condition that makes it possible for the self to stand apart from bodily and external conditions. Its non-physical character is what allows it to remain the proper subject of moral evaluation. Its mental causation is what allows assent to be truly ours. Its subjectivity, first-person perspective, intentionality, qualia, and epistemic access are all signs that it cannot be reduced to physical description. Its unity, persistence, and ownership of thought make moral accountability and sustained correction possible. And its position as the locus of control establishes the fundamental Stoic distinction between what belongs to us and what does not.

In Sterling’s Stoicism, then, substance dualism is definitive because it makes possible all three foundational claims at once. It makes Foundation One real by establishing the self-external boundary. It makes Foundation Two examinable by preserving a rational faculty capable of apprehending and correcting false judgments. And it makes Foundation Three possible by ensuring that the capacity for right assent remains intact regardless of external condition. Remove substance dualism, and the prohairesis becomes either a useful fiction or a bodily process. Keep it, and the framework has a genuine self, a genuine boundary, and a genuine basis for Stoic agency.

That is why C1 is not merely one commitment among others. It is the metaphysical anchor of Sterling’s Stoicism: the claim that the person, in the strict sense, is the rational faculty, a distinct and irreducible substance whose truth-tracking acts of assent determine whether he flourishes or fails.

The Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism

 

The Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism

Based on Sterling’s Stoicism and the Six Philosophical Commitments. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026.


Prompt: Integrate the six commitments with the most basic foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism.


Sterling’s Stoicism rests on three foundational claims that he 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 if we get our assents right, we have guaranteed eudaimonia. Everything in the framework derives from these three claims. The six commitments are not additions to this foundation. They are what the foundation requires in order to stand. Each commitment is the philosophical ground of a specific element in the foundational structure. Remove any commitment and a specific element of the foundation collapses.


Foundation One: Only Internal Things Are in Our Control

This is the dichotomy of control — Epictetus’s opening claim in the Enchiridion and Sterling’s Theorem 6: the only things in our control are our beliefs and our acts of will. Everything else — body, property, reputation, the behavior of others, outcomes in the world — is not in our control.

This foundational claim requires substance dualism. The line between what is and is not in our control falls at the boundary of the rational faculty — the prohairesis. For that line to be a real ontological boundary rather than a useful distinction, the rational faculty must be genuinely distinct from the body and from all external conditions. If the mind is a brain state — a product of physical causation — then mental events are themselves physical events, subject to physical determination, and the dichotomy of control dissolves. There is no principled boundary between self and external. Substance dualism is what makes the boundary real.

The same foundational claim requires libertarian free will. “In our control” means that the agent is the originating cause of his act, not a determined output of prior physical causes. Theorem 8 — that desires are in our control — depends on this. If assent is a determined output, then the dichotomy is illusory. The agent appears to choose but does not genuinely originate anything. Libertarian free will is what makes “in our control” mean something stronger than the compatibilist “flowing from one’s own character without external compulsion.” It means: the agent is the genuine first cause of the act.


Foundation Two: Unhappiness Is Caused by Falsely Believing That Externals Are Good or Evil

This is the core causal claim. Theorem 7: desires are caused by beliefs about good and evil. Theorem 10: the only thing actually good is virtue, the only thing actually evil is vice. Theorem 12: things not in our control are never good or evil. Therefore, all beliefs that externals have value are false, and all pathological emotions caused by those beliefs are based on false judgments.

The word falsely is load-bearing. The claim is not that believing externals are good or evil is unhelpful, or unconstructive, or psychologically counterproductive. The claim is that it is factually false. This requires moral realism.  Theorem 10 must be a fact about moral reality — an objective truth that holds independently of what anyone believes, prefers, or constructs. If “only virtue is good” is merely a useful organizing principle or a cultural preference, then the belief that externals are good or evil is not false — it is simply a different preference. The normative force of the entire framework — the demand that false value beliefs be corrected — rests entirely on their being objectively false. Moral realism is what makes that demand rational rather than arbitrary.

The identification of false beliefs⁷ requires correspondence theory of truth. A belief is false when it fails to correspond to reality. The impression that a reputation loss is a genuine evil makes a truth claim about the moral status of reputation loss. Correspondence theory is what makes that claim testable: does it correspond to how things actually are? Theorem 10 specifies that it does not. The verdict is not “this belief is unhelpful” but “this belief fails to correspond to moral reality.” Without correspondence theory, the framework has no account of what makes value impressions false rather than merely inconvenient.

The recognition of which beliefs are false requires ethical intuitionism. The rational faculty must be able to apprehend directly that virtue is the only genuine good — not infer it from prior premises, not derive it from empirical observation, but see it as a necessary truth. Sterling identifies the foundational theorems of Core Stoicism as unprovable fundamental postulates defensible only by appeal to intuition of their truth. Theorem 10 is foundational in this sense: it is directly apprehended, not derived. Without ethical intuitionism, the agent has no epistemic authority to call value impressions false. The examination stalls because there is no secure access to the moral facts against which the impression is to be tested.

The systematic organization of what is false requires foundationalism. The false beliefs are not an undifferentiated mass — they are organized in a dependency structure. Theorem 12 (externals are indifferent) derives from Theorem 10 (only virtue is good). Theorem 13 (desiring things out of our control is irrational) derives from Theorems 9 and 12. When a specific value impression is examined, the examination traces it to the foundational theorem it contradicts. Without foundationalism, the agent knows something is wrong but cannot locate the source. Corrections remain peripheral rather than foundational. Foundationalism is what makes the correction systematic rather than case-by-case — what Sterling warns about in the closing note to Core Stoicism: denying one theorem collapses others, because they interconnect in a foundational dependency structure.


Foundation Three: If We Get Our Assents Right We Have Guaranteed Eudaimonia

This is the practical payoff. Assent — the act of the rational faculty in response to an impression — is the only thing in our control. Everything critical to the best possible life is contained in that one act. Getting it right consistently produces: no pathological emotions, virtuous action, and continual appropriate positive feeling. This is eudaimonia.

The guarantee requires that the agent can actually get his assents right — that correct judgment is genuinely available to him. This returns to all six commitments already in play.

Substance dualism makes the rational faculty real and prior to all externals, so that correct judgment is possible regardless of external conditions. A slave, a prisoner, a person dying of illness — all can judge correctly, because the rational faculty is not constituted by any of those conditions.

Libertarian free will makes the act of assent the agent’s own genuine origination, so that the guarantee is not an illusion. If assent is determined by prior causes, the agent who “gets his assents right” was always going to do so — and the agent who gets them wrong was always going to do that too. The guarantee would be meaningless. Libertarian free will is what makes the guarantee a real promise: the agent genuinely can choose to assent correctly, and if he does, the consequences follow necessarily.

Ethical intuitionism makes the correct assent accessible. The agent can see directly what the moral facts are, without requiring extended inference or empirical investigation. At any moment, the foundational truth that virtue is the only genuine good is . to the rational faculty that attends to it. This is what makes the guarantee immediate and unconditional: not “you can guarantee eudaimonia if you have the right social conditions” or “if you have access to the right philosophical education” but “you can guarantee it right now, by judging correctly.”

Foundationalism makes the correct assent stable. The agent who has located the foundational truths — Theorem 10 and its derivatives — has a non-negotiable standard against which every impression can be tested. The standard does not shift. Sophisticated rationalizations cannot dislodge it because it is not the conclusion of an argument; it is a directly apprehended foundational truth. The stability of the guarantee depends on the stability of the standard.

Correspondence theory makes the correct assent meaningful. Getting one’s assents right means aligning them with how things actually are — with the moral facts that moral realism specifies and that correspondence theory makes testable. The joy that follows correct assent is appropriate not because the agent prefers it but because virtue is genuinely good and joy in the presence of genuine good is the correct response. The guarantee is not a psychological trick. It is the natural consequence of correct perception of reality.

Moral realism closes the loop. The guarantee works because virtue is objectively good. If virtue were merely a preferred organizing principle, then the joy produced by virtuous action would be the joy of acting in accordance with one’s preferences — and the grief produced by external loss would be no less legitimate, since it would equally reflect the agent’s preferences. Moral realism is what makes the guarantee asymmetric: virtuous action produces appropriate joy because virtue is genuinely good; external loss does not produce genuine harm because externals are genuinely indifferent. The asymmetry is not imposed by the agent’s choice of framework. It is a fact about moral reality.


The Structure as a Whole

Sterling is explicit in the closing note to Core Stoicism: the theorems interconnect in important ways. Denying one undermines others. The six commitments are related to the foundational claims in exactly this way — not as external additions but as the philosophical ground of the claims themselves.

The three foundational claims of Sterling’s Stoicism — only internal things are in our control; unhappiness is caused by false value beliefs; getting our assents right guarantees eudaimonia — are not self-evident assertions. Each requires a philosophical account of what makes it true. Substance dualism and libertarian free will account for what “in our control” means. Moral realism and correspondence theory account for what makes value beliefs false. Ethical intuitionism and foundationalism account for how the agent can know which beliefs are false and how he can be systematically corrected. All six commitments are required. None is optional. The foundational claims do not stand without the commitments that ground them, and the commitments have no purpose without the foundational claims they sustain.

This is why Sterling’s reconstruction is not Stoicism with philosophical decoration. It is Stoicism with its philosophical skeleton visible — the skeleton that was always there but that ancient Stoic physics had obscured behind an indefensible cosmology. Strip the ancient physics, and what remains is not a weakened Stoicism. What remains is the ethical core, now resting on the six commitments that make it philosophically rigorous without requiring anyone to believe in fiery pneuma or the rational fire that permeates the cosmos.


Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Analytical judgments are Dave Kelly’s; prose rendering is Claude’s.

 

 

Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism

Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Mind map architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026.


SIX-FOUNDATIONS
│
├─ 1. CONTROL-DICHOTOMY
│   ├─ Boundary
│   │   ├─ Internal
│   │   ├─ External
│   │   └─ Prohairesis
│   ├─ Substance-Dualism
│   │   ├─ Ontological
│   │   ├─ Non-physical
│   │   └─ Self-external
│   └─ Libertarian-Will
│       ├─ Origination
│       ├─ Genuine-choice
│       └─ Non-determined
│
├─ 2. FALSE-BELIEF
│   ├─ Core-claim
│   │   ├─ Falsely
│   │   ├─ Externals
│   │   └─ Pathological
│   ├─ Moral-Realism
│   │   ├─ Objective
│   │   ├─ Independent
│   │   └─ Normative
│   ├─ Correspondence-Theory
│   │   ├─ Testable
│   │   ├─ Factual
│   │   └─ Reality-match
│   ├─ Intuitionism
│   │   ├─ Direct-access
│   │   ├─ Non-inferential
│   │   └─ Self-evident
│   └─ Foundationalism
│       ├─ Systematic
│       ├─ Foundational
│       └─ Non-regressive
│
├─ 3. ASSENT-GUARANTEE
│   ├─ Availability
│   │   ├─ Unconditional
│   │   ├─ Immediate
│   │   └─ Universal
│   ├─ Dualism-role
│   │   ├─ Prior
│   │   ├─ Intact
│   │   └─ Condition-free
│   ├─ Freedom-role
│   │   ├─ Genuine
│   │   ├─ Real-choice
│   │   └─ Non-illusory
│   ├─ Intuitionism-role
│   │   ├─ Accessible
│   │   ├─ Always-available
│   │   └─ Certain
│   └─ Realism-role
│       ├─ Asymmetric
│       ├─ Objective-good
│       └─ Joy-warranted
│
├─ 4. THEOREM-STRUCTURE
│   ├─ Foundational
│   │   ├─ Theorem-10
│   │   ├─ Theorem-6
│   │   └─ Theorem-12
│   ├─ Derived
│   │   ├─ Theorem-13
│   │   ├─ Theorem-14
│   │   └─ Theorem-29
│   └─ Dependency
│       ├─ Collapse-risk
│       ├─ Interconnected
│       └─ Non-negotiable
│
├─ 5. IMPRESSION-PRACTICE
│   ├─ Reception
│   │   ├─ Correspondence-theory
│   │   └─ Moral-realism
│   ├─ Pause
│   │   ├─ Libertarian-will
│   │   └─ Substance-dualism
│   └─ Examination
│       ├─ Foundationalism
│       ├─ Intuitionism
│       └─ Moral-realism
│
├─ 6. EUDAIMONIA
│   ├─ Components
│   │   ├─ Virtue
│   │   ├─ Contentment
│   │   └─ Joy
│   ├─ Grounding
│   │   ├─ True-belief
│   │   ├─ Correct-assent
│   │   └─ Objective-good
│   └─ Guarantee
│       ├─ Controllable
│       ├─ Unconditional
│       └─ Now-available
│
└─ 7. RECONSTRUCTION
    ├─ Problem
    │   ├─ Ancient-physics
    │   ├─ Indefensible
    │   └─ Inwood
    ├─ Solution
    │   ├─ Six-commitments
    │   ├─ Classical
    │   └─ Defensible
    └─ Result
        ├─ Rigorous
        ├─ Non-cosmological
        └─ Skeleton-visible

Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Mind map architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026.