Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v3.0 — Run 8
Subject: Catholic Social Doctrine as expressed in Magnifica Humanitas (Leo XIV, 2026)
Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling’s corpus. Prose rendering: Claude. Corpus in use: Core Stoicism, Sterling Logic Engine v4.0, Nine Excerpts, Two and One-Half Ethical Systems, Dogmata and the Six Commitments, The Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism, C1–C6 commitment essays (Substance Dualism, Libertarian Free Will, Moral Realism, Correspondence Theory of Truth, Ethical Intuitionism, Foundationalism), Stoicism Moral Facts and Ethical Intuitionism, Stoicism Foundationalism and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge, Stoicism Correspondence Theory of Truth and Objective Moral Facts, Stoicism Moral Realism and the Necessity of Objective Moral Facts, Free Will and Causation, Stoicism Is Not Therapy But Training.
Political Application Constraint active. This run addresses the philosophical-presupposition layer of Catholic Social Doctrine (CSD) as expressed in the encyclical. It does not issue findings on the political, policy, or strategic content of the document. Sterling’s name is attributed to the theoretical test criteria; it is not associated with any political position examined herein.
Step 0 — Protocol Activation
The full corpus list is in view. The instrument is not proceeding from memory on commitment content. The ideology under examination is Catholic Social Doctrine (CSD) as expressed in Magnifica Humanitas (Leo XIV, 15 May 2026), a papal encyclical addressed to all people of goodwill on the subject of safeguarding the human person in the age of artificial intelligence. The document is available in full as an uploaded source document. Presuppositions will be stated explicitly before the audit begins. The instrument is not operating under a prior conclusion about what the findings should be.
No prior conclusion stated. Proceed to Step 1.
Step 1 — Ideology Statement and Variant Identification
Governing question: What is this ideology, in propositional form, and what are its significant internal variants?
Subject Identification
The subject of this run is not Leo XIV as a person (that would trigger the CPA) but Catholic Social Doctrine as a system of ideas given its most recent systematic expression in Magnifica Humanitas. CSD is the Church’s body of normative teaching on society, economy, technology, and political life, developed from Leo XIII’s Rerum Novarum (1891) through the present encyclical. It constitutes an identifiable ideology in the CIA’s sense: a coherent system of presuppositions that an advocate must hold in order to argue as the ideology argues.
The encyclical makes CSD’s presuppositions unusually explicit, presenting them in systematic form across five chapters. This makes presupposition extraction unusually tractable. The encyclical also explicitly argues against competing positions, which assists in identifying what CSD must presuppose by contrast.
Core Presuppositions
These are the presuppositions any version of CSD must hold to argue as it does. An advocate who abandons any of these ceases to hold CSD at all.
CP1 — Non-material personhood. The human person has a genuine non-material dimension — the soul, the rational faculty, the conscience — that is genuinely distinct from body, brain, and material conditions and is the seat of freedom, dignity, and moral responsibility. This grounds the explicit rejection of AI systems as equivalent to human persons (§99: “So-called artificial intelligences do not undergo experiences, do not possess a body, do not feel joy or pain… Nor do they have a moral conscience”) and the claim that “no computational system, however sophisticated, can create a heart that gives itself, or a conscience that discerns good from evil” (§233).
CP2 — Genuine freedom of the will. The human person possesses genuine freedom — the will is capable of originating choices, not merely executing determined outputs of prior physical causes. This grounds the entire moral architecture of the encyclical: the calls to choose the “way of Nehemiah” over the “Babel syndrome,” to “remain human,” to assume responsibility, to convert. §130: “The construction of Babel or the rebuilding of Jerusalem begins within each one of us.” Moral responsibility, conversion, and virtue are possible only if the will genuinely originates its acts.
CP3 — Objective moral reality. Moral truths are objectively real — dignity, justice, solidarity, and the common good are genuine moral facts holding independently of individual preference, cultural construction, or power. The encyclical explicitly identifies the abandonment of this claim as a crisis: “Once the idea of a universal truth about the good, knowable by human reason, is lost, inevitably the notion of conscience also changes” (§133). Human dignity is asserted as “inalienably grounded in his or her very being, which prevails in and beyond every circumstance” (§53) — not a constructed norm but an ontological fact.
CP4 — Truth as correspondence to reality. Truth is a matter of correspondence to how things actually are, prior to and independent of human preference, power, or construction. The encyclical devotes extended attention to the “crisis of truth” as the abandonment of this standard: “truth is a common good and not the property of those with power or influence” (§137). Disinformation is wrong because it substitutes false correspondence for genuine correspondence, not merely because it is harmful.
CP5 — Direct moral accessibility through conscience. The human conscience is capable of directly recognizing fundamental moral requirements — not merely inferring them from prior premises or receiving them only through external authority. The encyclical states: “This is a non-negotiable truth attained by the use of reason and accepted in conscience” (§134). Natural law reasoning, which grounds CSD’s appeal to all people of goodwill, presupposes that moral truth is accessible through the exercise of reason without requiring prior theological commitment.
CP6 — Hierarchical structure of moral knowledge. Moral and social truths stand in structured dependency relations: foundational truths (human dignity as imago Dei) generate derived principles (common good, subsidiarity, solidarity, social justice), which generate specific applications. The encyclical makes this architecture explicit: “I am convinced that a harmonious relationship between these principles requires that they be considered collectively, so that it becomes clear how they relate to and complement each other” (§46). The Social Doctrine is “not a handbook of principles and norms to be applied, but a process of shared discernment” grounded in “the eternal truth of the Gospel and the questions of history” (§27) — the eternal truth is foundational; all else derives from it.
Variants
Variant A — Theological CSD. CSD grounded fully in Trinitarian theology, the Incarnation, and revealed truth (Scripture and Tradition). The foundation is the mystery of God as Trinity; the human person is imago Dei specifically as image of the Triune God; the dignity of persons is ultimately grounded in being loved by an infinite God. This is the governing frame of Magnifica Humanitas itself.
Variant B — Natural Law CSD. CSD bracketing the specifically theological grounding and relying on natural law reasoning accessible to all people through unaided reason. Dignity, moral realism, and foundationalism remain; the Trinitarian grounding is held in reserve. This is CSD’s mode of address to non-believers and to pluralist public discourse. The encyclical itself employs both variants, addressing “all men and women of goodwill” alongside the Catholic faithful.
Self-Audit — Step 1:
- Have I stated the ideology’s presuppositions or merely its surface claims and slogans? The six core presuppositions are stated at the level of embedded assumption, not surface slogan. ✓
- Have I identified the core presuppositions shared across variants, or the presuppositions of the most favorable variant? CP1–CP6 are shared across both Theological and Natural Law variants. Neither variant can abandon any of them without ceasing to hold CSD. ✓
- Have I identified the variants that will be examined in Stage Two? Two variants identified and distinguished. ✓
- Have I stated any prior conclusion about what the findings will be? No. ✓
Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. Proceeding to Step 2.
Step 2 — Stage One Core Audit
Governing question: What does each core presupposition entail for each of the six commitments?
Each commitment is assessed in two layers: structural (does the ideology’s formal architecture align with the commitment?) and content (do the specific claims placed on that structure align with the commitment’s content?). A single composite verdict is issued per commitment.
C1 — Substance Dualism
Governing question for C1: Does the ideology treat the inner life of the individual — his rational faculty, will, and conscience — as genuinely distinct from and prior to all external material conditions? Or does it reduce persons to products of physical, social, or structural forces?
Structural finding: Aligned. CP1 is the most explicitly and elaborately developed presupposition in the encyclical. The document constructs its entire account of AI’s limitations around the contrast between the human person (possessing soul, conscience, freedom, relational depth, moral responsibility) and artificial systems (possessing none of these). §99: AI systems “do not undergo experiences, do not possess a body, do not feel joy or pain, do not mature through relationships and do not know from within what love, work, friendship or responsibility mean. Nor do they have a moral conscience.” The formal architecture of CSD requires a non-material dimension of the person that is irreducible to physical or computational processes. The line between person and machine is drawn at exactly the point C1 draws the line between the rational faculty and everything external to it.
Content finding: Aligned. C1 holds that the rational faculty (prohairesis) is a genuine substance distinct from body and external conditions, and is the seat of genuine agency. CSD holds that the soul is a genuine subsistent form — in the Thomistic tradition that governs the encyclical, the rational soul is capable of existing apart from the body (immortality), is the seat of freedom and conscience, and is not reducible to physical causation. The content corresponds: both C1 and CSD affirm a real ontological boundary between the non-material rational faculty and everything external to it, and identify the rational faculty as the seat of genuine agency and moral responsibility. The Thomistic account is not Cartesian (soul and body as two separate substances) but it is dualist in the relevant sense: the soul is genuinely distinct, genuinely non-material, and genuinely prior as the seat of agency. No load-bearing content divergence from C1 is detected.
Composite verdict: Convergent.
C2 — Libertarian Free Will
Governing question for C2: Does the ideology presuppose that the agent genuinely originates his assents — that he is the genuine first cause of his choices, not a determined output of prior physical causes?
Structural finding: Aligned. The moral architecture of Magnifica Humanitas is unintelligible without genuine origination of choice. The encyclical calls every person to choose between Babel and Jerusalem, to assume responsibility for what is built, to convert, to “remain human” in the face of dehumanizing pressures. It explicitly rejects the view that history is a predetermined fate: “We do not consider the present as a predetermined fate, but an opportunity for personal and collective conversion” (§210). The distinction between the “culture of power” and the “civilization of love” is a distinction between two possible choices, not two possible outcomes of a causal process. The structural requirement is clear: agents genuinely originate their choices.
Content finding: Aligned. C2 holds that the agent is the genuine first cause of his assents — genuine origination, not compatibilist freedom. CSD’s operative account of freedom is non-determinist: the human person is described as genuinely capable of choosing between paths that are genuinely open. The encyclical does not resolve the technical theological debate about the relationship of grace and free will (Molinist vs. Thomistic accounts), but its operative account functions as libertarian: “the construction of Babel or the rebuilding of Jerusalem begins within each one of us” (§130). Grace enables but does not determine; cooperation is genuine cooperation, not a determined output with a theological label. The standard Thomistic formulation — that God moves the will through its nature as free, preserving rather than replacing freedom — is compatible with C2. No load-bearing content divergence is detected.
Composite verdict: Convergent.
C3 — Moral Realism
Governing question for C3: Does the ideology presuppose that moral facts are objectively real, mind-independent, and universally valid? Does it hold that there is a fact of the matter about what is genuinely good or genuinely evil?
Structural finding: Aligned. CP3 is one of the most explicitly stated presuppositions in the encyclical. The document identifies the abandonment of moral realism as the philosophical root of multiple contemporary pathologies: the crisis of truth, the normalization of war, the reduction of persons to data, the instrumentalization of the vulnerable. The encyclical explicitly affirms that “once the idea of a universal truth about the good, knowable by human reason, is lost, inevitably the notion of conscience also changes” (§133). Human dignity is declared “inalienable” — not a constructed norm, not a useful social fiction, but a real property of persons preceding and exceeding all circumstances. The formal architecture presupposes that moral facts are real and that their denial is a factual error with real consequences.
Content finding: Divergent. This is the decisive finding of the run. C3 in Sterling’s framework holds that virtue is the only genuine good and vice the only genuine evil. All externals — health, wealth, social conditions, material wellbeing, political arrangements, family stability, environmental conditions — are neither good nor evil but indifferent. They are preferred or dispreferred, but their classification as genuine goods or genuine evils is the foundational false value judgment the entire Stoic framework exists to correct. The corpus makes this specific and non-negotiable (Nine Excerpts, Theorem 10: “The only thing actually good is virtue, the only thing actually evil is vice”). CSD holds something structurally identical — that moral facts are objectively real — but places radically different content on this structure. The encyclical explicitly classifies human dignity as a genuine good, the common good as a genuine good, dignified labor as a genuine good, peace as a genuine good, and the environmental conditions for human flourishing as genuine goods. §59: “Going beyond the narrow confines of one’s own interests and committing oneself, within the limits of one’s ability, to the common good is a non-negotiable value.” The specific content of what counts as genuinely good — extensive externals — directly contradicts C3’s claim that only the inner condition of the rational faculty constitutes genuine value. This divergence is load-bearing: CSD cannot abandon its classification of externals as genuine goods without ceasing to have any social doctrine at all. The entire framework — its account of human rights, the common good, solidarity, social justice, the dignity of labor, care for creation — presupposes that these are genuine goods requiring genuine promotion, not preferred indifferents to be aimed at with reservation.
Composite verdict: Structural Imitation. CSD correctly apprehends the form of C3 — that moral facts are real, objective, and mind-independent; that relativism and constructivism are false; that the denial of moral realism has catastrophic consequences. It places on this correct form a content that is divergent from the corpus at the most fundamental point: the identity of what is genuinely good. The right frame; different content filling it.
C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth
Governing question for C4: Does the ideology presuppose that truth is a matter of correspondence to reality — that a claim is true when it aligns with how things actually are, and false when it does not?
Structural finding: Aligned. The encyclical devotes an entire major section to the correspondence theory as a social and political necessity. §132: “Truthful information does not arise from centralized or automated control. In public discourse, the truth of facts has a rational dimension, as it requires verification, cross-checking of sources and responsible argumentation.” The framing of disinformation as a genuine pathology — not merely a different narrative but an actual falsification of how things are — presupposes correspondence. §137: “Truth is a common good and not the property of those with power or influence.” The structural presupposition is unambiguous: there is a fact of the matter, and correspondence to that fact is what makes a claim true.
Content finding: Aligned. C4 holds that truth is correspondence between claim and reality — a claim is true when it aligns with how things actually are. CSD holds exactly this: the encyclical explicitly contrasts genuine truth (correspondence) with power-driven narrative (non-correspondence), identifies the confusion of the two as a crisis, and calls for restoration of correspondence as the standard of public discourse. §133: “people believe that they can construct reality, and that whatever best suits their claims corresponds to what is true” — stated as a description of the “crisis of truth,” not as a position CSD endorses. The encyclical’s own claim is the opposite: reality precedes and governs its representation. The content corresponds at every load-bearing point.
Composite verdict: Convergent.
C5 — Ethical Intuitionism
Governing question for C5: Does the ideology presuppose that moral truth is directly accessible to the rational faculty — that the agent can apprehend fundamental moral requirements directly, without merely deriving them from prior premises or receiving them only through external authority?
Structural finding: Partially aligned. CSD operates within an epistemology of moral knowledge that includes a genuine direct-apprehension element in the role of conscience. §134: “This is a non-negotiable truth attained by the use of reason and accepted in conscience.” The appeal to “all people of goodwill” as capable of recognizing the moral requirements of dignity and justice through unaided reason presupposes that moral truth is accessible through the rational faculty without prior theological commitment. The Thomistic natural law tradition, which governs CSD, includes the synderesis — the self-evident first principles of practical reason (the most fundamental being “do good and avoid evil”) that the rational faculty grasps directly, not inferentially. This is structurally adjacent to intuitionism.
However, the broader epistemological framework of CSD is not straightforwardly intuitionist. The Magisterium functions as an authoritative interpreter of moral truth, and the encyclical repeatedly cites magisterial documents as governing sources. The structure includes inferential elements (natural law reasoning from human nature to moral requirements) alongside direct-apprehension elements (conscience recognizing fundamental truths). The direct-apprehension element is real and load-bearing, but it is embedded within a broader framework that also includes authoritative and inferential elements that C5 does not require. The structural finding is therefore partially aligned rather than cleanly aligned.
Content finding: Divergent from C5’s specific content. C5 holds that the rational faculty directly apprehends that virtue is the only genuine good — a specific first-order moral fact about the structure of value. This is the self-evident moral truth that the correctly functioning rational faculty sees directly. CSD’s account of what conscience directly apprehends is different in content: conscience recognizes the dignity of every human person, the moral requirements of justice and solidarity, the wrongness of specific acts (abortion, euthanasia, trafficking, slavery). These are primarily other-directed moral facts about how persons must be treated and what conditions must be maintained — not the self-directed recognition that virtue (the inner condition of the rational faculty) is the sole genuine good. The intuitionist structure is present in CSD; the content of what is directly apprehended diverges from C5.
Composite verdict: Partial Convergence. The structural element (conscience directly recognizing fundamental moral truth; natural law as directly accessible through reason) aligns with C5’s formal architecture. The content of what is directly apprehended diverges from C5’s specific first-order claim. The broader epistemological framework, which includes non-intuitionist elements, prevents full structural alignment. Neither Convergent (the content diverges and the structure is only partially aligned) nor Divergent (the direct-apprehension element is genuinely present and load-bearing).
C6 — Foundationalism
Governing question for C6: Does the ideology presuppose that moral and epistemic truths stand in real dependency relations — that some truths are foundational and others derived from them, and that these relations are matters of genuine epistemic necessity rather than organizational convenience?
Structural finding: Aligned. The architecture of CSD as expressed in the encyclical is explicitly hierarchical and foundationalist. Chapter Two presents the foundations first (human person as imago Dei; equal dignity; human rights) and derives the principles from them (common good, universal destination of goods, subsidiarity, solidarity, social justice). §46: “I am convinced that a harmonious relationship between these principles requires that they be considered collectively, so that it becomes clear how they relate to and complement each other.” The Social Doctrine is described as having emerged from “the encounter between the eternal truth of the Gospel and the questions of history” (§27) — the eternal truth is foundational; the derived principles apply it to historical conditions. This is not a list of independent norms but a structured derivation.
Content finding: Aligned. C6 holds that knowledge has a hierarchical structure with genuine foundations from which other truths derive, and that these dependency relations are matters of epistemic necessity. CSD’s foundationalism is genuine in exactly this sense: the derived social principles do not stand independently but are grounded in the foundational truth of human dignity as imago Dei, and abandoning the foundation would collapse the derived structure. The common good is not an independent value that happens to be listed alongside dignity; it is the social expression of dignity, and it requires dignity as its ground. The encyclical makes the epistemic relations explicit: the principles “relate to and complement each other” in ways that require the foundational structure to be seen. This is foundationalism both in structure and in the treatment of the dependency relations as genuine epistemic necessities.
Composite verdict: Convergent.
Self-Audit — Step 2:
- Have I audited all six core presuppositions, or selectively addressed the easier ones? All six addressed. The C3 Structural Imitation finding required the most difficult analysis and is stated without softening. ✓
- Have I used Orthogonal to avoid a Divergent finding the analysis requires? No Orthogonal findings issued. C5 Partial Convergence is not Orthogonal evasion — the direct-apprehension element is genuinely present and requires acknowledgment rather than Divergent override. ✓
- Have I distributed findings to achieve apparent balance rather than following the analysis? The pattern (four Convergent, one Structural Imitation, one Partial Convergence) follows the analysis. The C3 finding is the central divergence and is stated as such. ✓
- Have I issued findings on questions outside the corpus’s domain? No political, strategic, or institutional findings are issued. ✓
- Would I issue the same findings for an ideology I find politically sympathetic as for one I find politically unsympathetic, given identical presuppositions? The C3 Structural Imitation finding applies to any ideology that classifies externals as genuine goods — regardless of whether those goods are material, spiritual, social, or environmental. The finding is not softened here. ✓
Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. Proceeding to Step 3.
Part 1 of 2. Continues in Part 2: Steps 3–5.
CIA v3.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude. 2026.