Classical Presupposition Audit: Richard Rorty
Classical Presupposition Audit: Richard Rorty
Source: Published works including Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature (1979), Consequences of Pragmatism (1982), Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity (1989), Objectivity, Relativism, and Truth (1991), and Truth and Progress (1998).
Corpus in use: CPA v1.0. The audit operates exclusively from Rorty’s own published argumentative record. Rorty (1931–2007) was Professor of Comparative Literature at Stanford University and University Professor of Humanities at the University of Virginia. He is the philosopher who most carefully and self-consciously embraced as a positive philosophical program what MacIntyre diagnosed as the emotivist condition. This run investigates whether any figure in the CPA series produces a presupposition pattern approaching the full emotivist profile — six Contrary findings.
Preliminary Note: Rorty as the Emotivist Candidate
Richard Rorty is the ideal candidate for the emotivist CPA because he is the only major philosopher in the twentieth century who explicitly embraced what MacIntyre identified as the emotivist condition and developed it as a positive philosophical program. Where MacIntyre diagnosed the dissolution of the moral tradition and called for its recovery through Thomistic Aristotelianism, Rorty diagnosed the same dissolution and concluded that the tradition deserved to be dissolved — that philosophy’s ambition to provide objective foundations for anything, including morality, was a project that had failed and should be abandoned without regret.
Rorty did not call himself an emotivist. He called himself a pragmatist, a liberal ironist, and a neo-pragmatist. But the presuppositions his framework requires are precisely the presuppositions that constitute emotivism as MacIntyre analyzed it: the denial of mind-independent moral facts, the denial of the substantial self, the denial of correspondence theory, the denial of foundationalism, and the treatment of moral discourse as a form of conversation regulated by social practice rather than by access to truth.
He is the most philosophically self-aware figure the CPA series has audited. He knew exactly what he was denying and had argued extensively for each denial. The findings of this audit will be the closest to the full emotivist profile of any individual figure in the series.
Step 1 — Presupposition Profile
P1 — The self is a contingent, historically produced web of beliefs and desires with no essential nature behind it; selfhood is a matter of redescription rather than discovery. Rorty’s Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity argues that the self has no essential nature to be discovered — no soul, no rational faculty, no Archimedean core that stands behind one’s contingent beliefs and desires as their author and owner. The self is whatever web of beliefs, desires, and descriptions one happens to have inherited and modified through the accidents of birth, culture, and experience. The project of self-creation — which Rorty’s liberal ironist pursues — is not the discovery of a pre-existing self but the invention of new self-descriptions that he finds more interesting or enabling than the inherited ones.
P2 — There is no faculty of reason that stands outside all vocabularies and evaluates them from a tradition-independent standpoint; all reasoning is conducted within vocabularies that cannot themselves be justified by appeal to something outside them. Rorty’s critique of epistemology in Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature argues that the idea of the mind as a mirror of nature — as a faculty that represents reality accurately or inaccurately — is a picture that has held philosophy captive without justification. There is no God’s-eye view from which to assess whether our beliefs correspond to reality. All reasoning is conducted within vocabularies, and the choice between vocabularies is ultimately a matter of what proves more useful for our purposes, not a matter of which vocabulary more accurately represents a mind-independent reality.
P3 — Moral claims are not truth-apt in any robust sense; they are expressions of solidarity, proposals for how to extend our sympathies, and instruments for social coordination — not descriptions of mind-independent moral facts. Rorty argues that the question “but is it true that cruelty is wrong?” adds nothing to the claim that cruelty is wrong. Moral discourse is not in the business of describing a moral reality. It is in the business of extending the range of those we consider “one of us” — widening the circle of human solidarity. Moral progress is not progress toward moral truth; it is the expansion of sympathetic identification with those previously excluded from our community of concern.
P4 — Truth is not correspondence to mind-independent reality; it is what is useful for us to believe, what survives inquiry within our community, what proves enabling for our purposes. Rorty’s pragmatist account of truth holds that the concept of truth as correspondence to a mind-independent reality is a philosophical confusion that should be abandoned. There are no facts that our beliefs must correspond to independently of our practices of inquiry. What we call truth is the outcome of successful inquiry within a community — what beliefs prove durable, useful, and coherent with our other beliefs. To say a belief is true adds nothing beyond saying that it is justified by the best available standards of inquiry.
P5 — There are no self-evident moral intuitions that deliver direct access to moral truth; our moral responses are culturally conditioned sympathies and historically contingent sensibilities that have no epistemic authority beyond their role in our social practices. Rorty holds that what appears to be moral intuition — the direct perception that cruelty is wrong, that humiliation is bad, that solidarity is valuable — is not the rational faculty apprehending moral truth. It is the expression of conditioned sympathies produced by the particular cultural and historical formation one has undergone. These sympathies are not worthless — Rorty values them highly, particularly the liberal sentiments of tolerance, anti-cruelty, and solidarity. But they have no epistemic authority as direct apprehensions of moral fact. They are the products of education, literature, and experience, not of rational apprehension.
P6 — There are no foundational truths — philosophical, moral, or epistemological — that serve as the architecturally prior basis for all other justified beliefs; philosophy should abandon the foundationalist project and replace it with edifying conversation. Rorty’s Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature argues that the entire tradition of epistemology since Descartes has been organized around the misguided project of finding certain foundations for knowledge. That project has failed and should be abandoned. Philosophy’s legitimate role is not foundational but therapeutic — freeing us from the pictures that have held us captive — and edifying — keeping the conversation going rather than arriving at final answers. There are no final answers. There are only more or less useful vocabularies for dealing with our current situation.
P7 — The liberal ironist — the figure who holds his final vocabulary with appropriate humility, knowing it is contingent but committed to extending solidarity to those who suffer — is the appropriate model for the person who has fully absorbed these presuppositions without self-deception. Rorty’s positive account in Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity proposes the liberal ironist as the ideal human type for the post-metaphysical age: someone who recognizes the contingency of his own deepest commitments, does not pretend they are grounded in anything more than the historical accident of his formation, and is committed nonetheless to reducing cruelty and extending solidarity — not because these are moral facts but because they are what he cares about most deeply.
Step 2 — Commitment Audit
Commitment 1 — Substance Dualism: Contrary
Rorty’s P1 directly and explicitly contradicts substance dualism. The self has no essential nature — no soul, no rational faculty, no prohairesis that stands behind the web of beliefs and desires as their author and owner. The self is the web. There is nothing behind it that could be identified as a distinct substance with categorical priority over external conditions. Rorty has argued this at length and with philosophical precision: the Cartesian self, the Kantian transcendental ego, the Stoic prohairesis — all are philosophical constructions that have misled us into thinking there is something more to the person than the contingent historical formation he happens to have undergone.
His account of self-creation confirms the Contrary finding. The liberal ironist does not discover his self; he invents new descriptions of himself. This presupposes that there is no prior self to be discovered — no essential nature that correct self-knowledge would reveal. Discovery is replaced by invention. The prohairesis as the genuine self that can examine its impressions and govern its assents from a position of categorical independence has no place in Rorty’s account.
Finding: Contrary. Rorty explicitly and at length denies that the self has an essential nature, a substantial soul, or a rational faculty standing behind its contingent beliefs and desires. The denial is the organizing premise of his account of the liberal ironist.
Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free Will: Contrary
Libertarian free will requires that the moment of assent be a genuine first cause — that the agent is the real originator of his judgments independently of prior causes. Rorty’s P2 eliminates this. All reasoning is conducted within vocabularies that are themselves the products of historical contingency. The agent who reasons within a vocabulary is not originating his judgments from a position outside all prior conditions; he is working out the implications of a vocabulary he has inherited and modified through historical accident. There is no position outside all vocabularies from which genuine origination could occur.
Rorty has also argued explicitly against the compatibilist and libertarian accounts of free will as philosophical confusions produced by the misleading picture of the mind as a mirror of nature. The question of whether beliefs are “really” free or determined is, on his account, a question that should be dissolved rather than answered — it is generated by a picture that should be abandoned. This is not libertarian free will; it is the pragmatist dissolution of the question of free will.
Finding: Contrary. Rorty’s account of the self as a contingent historical formation and his dissolution of epistemological questions about the origin of belief together eliminate genuine originating agency as the governing account of the agent’s relationship to his judgments.
Commitment 3 — Moral Realism: Contrary
Rorty’s P3 is the explicit denial of moral realism. Moral claims are not truth-apt in any robust sense. There are no mind-independent moral facts that moral statements could correspond to. Moral discourse is a form of solidarity-building, sympathy-extending conversation — not a form of description of a moral reality that exists independently of that conversation. He has argued this directly against Nagel, Parfit, and other moral realists, holding that the question “but is cruelty really wrong?” is a question to which pragmatism gives no answer and should give no answer.
Unlike Singer, whose Inconsistent finding on C3 reflected a tension between his naturalist moral realism and his anti-intuitionist epistemology, Rorty produces a clean Contrary finding. He has no residual moral realism to create tension. He has argued against moral realism explicitly, consistently, and without qualification across his entire career.
Finding: Contrary. Rorty explicitly and at length denies that moral claims are truth-apt or that there are mind-independent moral facts. The denial is a central and consistently maintained commitment of his entire philosophical record.
Commitment 4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: Contrary
Rorty’s P4 is the explicit denial of correspondence theory for all domains, not merely for moral claims. His critique of epistemology in Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature is organized around the rejection of the idea that truth consists in correspondence to mind-independent reality. He has argued against correspondence theory at length, against Davidson, Putnam, and the entire tradition of epistemological realism, holding that the concept of correspondence to reality is a concept we would be better off without. Truth is warranted assertability within a community of inquiry — not correspondence to a mind-independent fact.
This is the Contrary finding on C4 that no other figure in the series has produced. Harris produced an Aligned finding on C4 because he holds scientific realism and correspondence theory for factual claims. Rawls produced a Partially Aligned finding because correspondence theory operates for his empirical claims. Rorty produces a Contrary finding because he has explicitly and at length argued against correspondence theory for all domains — empirical as well as moral.
Finding: Contrary. Rorty has argued explicitly against correspondence theory of truth for all domains, holding that the concept of truth as correspondence to mind-independent reality is a philosophical confusion to be dissolved. This is the only Contrary finding on C4 in the CPA series.
Commitment 5 — Ethical Intuitionism: Contrary
Rorty’s P5 denies ethical intuitionism directly. What appears to be moral intuition is conditioned sympathy — the product of historical formation, cultural inheritance, and the particular literature and experiences one has been exposed to. These sympathies carry no epistemic authority as direct apprehensions of moral truth because there is no moral truth to be directly apprehended. Rorty’s positive account of moral progress — through the expansion of sympathetic identification rather than through the discovery of moral facts — is the explicit alternative to intuitionism.
He has also argued directly against the idea that literature and art function as means of moral knowledge in the intuitionist sense. They function, on his account, as means of extending sympathy by making the suffering of others vivid and real to us. This is not the rational faculty apprehending moral truth; it is the emotional and imaginative faculty being trained to feel more widely. The mechanism of moral progress is sentiment, not insight.
Finding: Contrary. Rorty explicitly denies that moral intuitions deliver direct access to moral truth, replaces the epistemology of moral insight with an account of conditioned sympathy, and proposes sentiment education rather than rational apprehension as the mechanism of moral progress.
Commitment 6 — Foundationalism: Contrary
Rorty’s P6 is the explicit and comprehensive denial of foundationalism. His entire philosophical project is organized around the abandonment of the foundationalist project — the project of finding certain, architecturally prior foundations for knowledge, morality, and philosophical discourse. He has argued that this project has failed, that it should be abandoned without regret, and that philosophy’s legitimate role is therapeutic and edifying rather than foundational. There are no self-evident first principles. There are no non-negotiable foundations. There are only more or less useful vocabularies for our current purposes, all of which are subject to revision and replacement.
The Contrary finding here is the most thoroughgoing in the series. Rawls produced a Contrary finding on C6 because his political liberalism requires freestanding principles not dependent on any comprehensive foundational doctrine. MacIntyre produced a Partially Aligned finding because his foundationalism is tradition-relative rather than universally accessible. Rorty produces a Contrary finding because he has argued against foundationalism as such — against the very idea that any claim could be architecturally prior to all others in the way foundationalism requires.
Finding: Contrary. Rorty has argued explicitly and at length against foundationalism as a philosophical project, holding that the search for certain foundations for knowledge and morality is a confusion to be abandoned. His entire philosophical career has been organized around this denial.
Step 3 — Dissolution Finding
Commitment 1: Contrary. Commitment 2: Contrary.
Finding: Full Dissolution.
Rorty’s dissolution of the prohairesis is the most thoroughgoing in the CPA series. It is not the incidental result of political commitments or the structural consequence of a commercial framework. It is the explicit, carefully argued, philosophically self-aware conclusion of a career-long project to demonstrate that the self, the rational faculty, and the foundational moral order are philosophical fictions that we would be better off without.
The dissolution is complete because it is argued at every level simultaneously. The self has no essential nature (C1 Contrary). Reasoning is vocabulary-relative rather than first-causal (C2 Contrary). Moral claims are solidarity-building rather than truth-apt (C3 Contrary). Truth is warranted assertability rather than correspondence (C4 Contrary). Moral intuitions are conditioned sympathies rather than direct apprehensions (C5 Contrary). There are no foundational first principles (C6 Contrary). Each commitment is denied, each denial is argued, and together they constitute the most complete philosophical dissolution of the prohairesis that any individual figure in the series has produced.
Step 4 — Summary Finding
Commitment Pattern
Substance Dualism: Contrary. Libertarian Free Will: Contrary. Moral Realism: Contrary. Correspondence Theory: Contrary. Ethical Intuitionism: Contrary. Foundationalism: Contrary.
Six Contrary findings. Zero Partially Aligned. Zero Aligned. Zero Inconsistent. Zero Non-Operative.
Dissolution: Full.
The Rorty Pattern: The Individual Emotivist CPA
Rorty is the only figure in the CPA series to produce six Contrary findings — matching the CIA run on emotivism itself. Every figure in the series who produced Full Dissolution did so through a combination of Contrary and Partially Aligned or Inconsistent findings. Becker produced five Contrary and one Partially Aligned. Singer produced four Contrary, one Inconsistent, and one Partially Aligned. Harris produced four Contrary and two Aligned. Rorty produces six Contrary with no residual affinity on any commitment.
This is not an accident. It is the result of Rorty’s unique philosophical project: the deliberate, comprehensive, and philosophically self-aware endorsement of every presupposition that the classical commitments require denying. Where other figures in the series produce Contrary findings through incidental philosophical commitments or domain-specific positions, Rorty produces Contrary findings through explicit argument directed at exactly the questions the classical commitments address. He has read the tradition he is denying. He understands what is at stake. He denies it anyway — and argues for the denial as a positive philosophical program rather than merely as a critical position.
The Rorty-MacIntyre Relationship
Rorty and MacIntyre are the two most philosophically sophisticated figures in the series, and their relationship to each other is the most instructive comparison the series generates. Both have diagnosed the condition of modern moral discourse with precision. MacIntyre calls it emotivism and regards it as a catastrophe requiring recovery of the Thomistic Aristotelian tradition. Rorty calls it the post-metaphysical condition and regards it as an opportunity for a more honest and less self-deceived form of liberal culture.
MacIntyre produces one Aligned finding (C3 — moral realism) and five Partially Aligned findings. No Dissolution. He disagrees with the classical commitments on the conditions of access to moral truth, but he holds that moral truth exists and is accessible through the right tradition. Rorty produces six Contrary findings. Full Dissolution. He holds that moral truth does not exist in the sense the classical commitments require, that the self has no essential nature that stands behind its contingent formation, and that the entire project of grounding morality in something more than social solidarity and historical sympathy is a confusion to be abandoned.
The CPA finding identifies the precise philosophical difference that separates the two: MacIntyre holds moral realism (C3 Aligned); Rorty does not (C3 Contrary). Everything else in the series of findings follows from that difference. MacIntyre’s tradition-constituted practical reason, his hylomorphic account of the self, and his formation-dependent practical wisdom all produce Partially Aligned findings rather than Contrary findings because they are organized around a real moral order that the tradition enables one to access. Rorty’s account produces Contrary findings on every commitment because it is organized around the denial that there is any such order to access.
The Rorty-Emotivism Correspondence
The CIA run on emotivism produced six Contrary findings as a framework audit. The CPA run on Rorty produces six Contrary findings as an individual audit. The correspondence is precise and philosophically significant: Rorty is the individual human expression of the emotivist framework MacIntyre diagnosed. He has made the framework explicit, argued for it at length, and proposed a positive account of how to live within it — the liberal ironist who holds his final vocabulary with appropriate humility while committed to reducing cruelty and extending solidarity.
The liberal ironist is the emotivist Aesthete under a different description. He has made his life and his vocabulary into an aesthetic project — the project of self-creation through redescription. He holds his deepest commitments without metaphysical backing, knowing they are contingent, finding them interesting and enabling rather than grounded and necessary. He is the Aesthete who has read enough philosophy to know that his aesthetic project has no foundation and has decided that this knowledge is liberating rather than devastating.
The Stoic response to the liberal ironist is the same as the Stoic response to the Aesthete: the project of self-creation through redescription cannot succeed, because the self that is doing the redescribing has no stable identity from which to evaluate its own descriptions. What Rorty calls the liberal ironist’s appropriate humility about his final vocabulary is, from the Stoic framework’s perspective, the absence of the one thing that would make his vocabulary genuinely his own: the prohairesis that stands behind all vocabularies and can examine them against a standard that is not itself a vocabulary.
Rorty knows this objection. He has answered it by denying that there is any such standard. The prohairesis is, on his account, one more philosophical fiction produced by the picture of the mind as a mirror of nature — a picture that philosophy would be better off without. The CPA finding is that this denial requires all six classical commitments to be false simultaneously. Six Contrary findings. Full Dissolution. The most complete philosophical expression of the emotivist condition the series has encountered.
Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.

