Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Substance Dualism Answered for Its Critics: The Standard Objections and the Corpus Replies

 

Substance Dualism Answered for Its Critics: The Standard Objections and the Corpus Replies

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. Scope and Voice

This essay assembles, in one place, the standard objections professional philosophy raises against substance dualism (C1) and the replies available from the corpus. A discipline of attribution governs throughout. Sterling’s own dated argumentative record on this question is brief and specific: the ISF post of January 20, 2012 (“A Brief Reply, Re: Dualism”) and the position it states. Where a reply below rests on Sterling’s own words, it is marked as his. Where a reply extends his position using the corpus’s C1 documentation or the argumentative resources of aligned professional philosophers identified in the corpus’s CPA runs, that extension is Dave Kelly’s synthesis, and it is marked as such. Nothing below attributes to Sterling an argument he did not make.

One framing point first, from Sterling directly. His dualism is not a revival of ancient Stoic physics and is not aimed at the ancient Stoics: “My dualism is not developed in opposition to the ancient Stoic metaphysics, but to modern scientific physics.” The ancient position — that mind is a state of a subtle, intelligent material substance — was coherent on its own terms, given what the ancients believed matter could do. What Sterling denies is that anyone can hold that position today, because modern physics recognizes in the brain only particles undergoing electro-chemical processes, none of which are understood as having characteristics like “the feeling of pain” or “the concept of modus ponens.” The objections below are therefore answered as objections to a thesis pitched against contemporary physicalism — which is where professional philosophy pitches them.


II. Sterling’s Own Position, Stated Before the Objections

The 2012 post gives the argument in three numbered steps, quoted here in substance: (1) “I am absolutely certain, beyond any possibility of error, that I have qualitative mental experiences. I am more certain of this than any other proposition.” (2) Experience consistently testifies that choices are made on the basis of the qualitative content of these experiences — complex reasoning, recognized logical form, conclusions acted upon. (3) Science tells us that during mental experience the central nervous system undergoes electro-chemical processes. And the burden-assignment that follows: anyone who says today that the mind is a state of matter “must either explain how it is that various brain particles can have such properties, or claim that there exist forms of ‘matter’ that are utterly unlike any that physicists have discovered.” Sterling sees no hope for either, and adds — knowing full well that many, perhaps most, philosophers hold the physicalist view — “I am asserting that they have never explained how this is possible.”

Note the structure. Sterling does not begin by defending an immaterial substance against attack. He begins from the datum of maximal certainty — qualitative experience — and assigns the explanatory burden to the position that must account for that datum with resources (particles, processes) that do not contain it. Every reply below inherits this structure: the objections assume dualism is the view that owes an explanation, and the corpus’s consistent answer is that the debt runs the other way.


III. The Objections and the Replies

Objection 1 — The Interaction Problem

How can a non-physical substance causally affect a physical body? Causation requires a mechanism, and no mechanism connecting the immaterial to the material has ever been specified. This is the oldest objection, pressed since Elisabeth of Bohemia against Descartes.

Reply (synthesis, building on Sterling’s stated position). The objection assumes that all causation must be mechanistic — that “how does it work?” must be answerable by specifying an intermediate mechanism. But mechanism is a feature of physical-to-physical causation, not of causation as such. At the base of any causal theory, including physics’s own, lie fundamental causal powers for which no further mechanism can be given: no one explains how mass curves spacetime or how charge generates a field; these are bedrock powers, and explanation terminates in them. The dualist claims the rational faculty’s power to originate assent, and assent’s power to move the body, are similarly basic. This is not evasion; it is the same structure of explanation-termination that foundationalism (C4) requires everywhere and that physics itself exhibits at its floor. Meanwhile the objection cuts the other way with greater force, and here Sterling’s own words apply directly: the physicalist must explain how brain particles can have properties like the feeling of pain or the grasp of modus ponens — and “they have never explained how this is possible.” The dualist declines to specify a mechanism at the causal bedrock; the physicalist cannot specify how his own ontology contains the datum at all. Those are not symmetrical debts.

Objection 2 — Causal Closure of the Physical

Physics is causally complete: every physical event has a sufficient physical cause. If the mind is non-physical, it can cause nothing physical without violating closure — so mental causation is either excluded or overdetermined.

Reply (synthesis). Causal closure is not a finding of physics; it is a metaphysical postulate appended to physics. No experiment establishes that every physical event has a sufficient physical cause; laboratory practice establishes conservation and lawful regularity within the systems measured, which is compatible with the closure thesis but does not entail it. The dualist is therefore not contradicting physics but contradicting a philosophical interpolation into physics. And the interpolation is question-begging in this debate: closure is credible only if one has already decided that nothing non-physical acts — which is the point at issue. Against the postulate stands the datum Sterling ranks above every other proposition: that we choose on the basis of the qualitative content of experience. He gives the example from his own record — declining veal, which he finds delicious, on the strength of a moral argument; consciously re-forming his patterns of thought as a result of long discussion of Stoic theory. If closure excludes that, then closure excludes the most certain thing there is, and it is closure that must yield. The corpus’s dependency structure makes the stakes explicit: without mental causation, assent originates nothing (C2 collapses), and with C2 fall Th7’s practical import and everything the collapse-test names.

Objection 3 — The Neuroscientific Correlation Argument

Every mental state investigated correlates with brain states; lesions, stimulation, and chemistry alter mind predictably. The dependence of mind on brain is total, which is what physicalism predicts and dualism does not.

Reply (synthesis, consistent with Sterling’s step 3). Sterling’s own third premise grants the correlation: science tells us the nervous system undergoes electro-chemical processes during mental experience. Correlation, dependence in operation, and vulnerability to interference are exactly what an interactionist dualism predicts: a rational faculty that receives impressions through the body and acts through the body will of course be conditioned by the state of its instrument. Damage the instrument and the interaction degrades — as damaging a violin degrades the music without showing the violinist is made of wood. What the correlation data never supply is the identity claim: that the mental state is the brain state. No amount of correlation converts into identity without the further metaphysical premise that correlation is all there is — and that premise, again, is the point at issue. The corpus’s C1 vector space marks the difference precisely: what physicalism cannot locate in the correlated brain state is the first-person givenness, the intentionality, the felt quality — the dimensions that constitute the commitment and that no third-person description contains.

Objection 4 — Parsimony (Occam’s Razor)

Even if physicalism has unsolved problems, dualism multiplies entities. One substance is simpler than two; the hard problem is a research program, not a refutation.

Reply (synthesis). Parsimony forbids multiplying entities beyond necessity; it does not license deleting data. The question is whether one substance is sufficient, and Sterling’s burden-assignment answers it: a single physical substance whose recognized properties are exclusively those of particles and processes does not contain qualitative experience, and its defenders “have never explained how this is possible.” An ontology that cannot accommodate the most certain datum there is has not achieved simplicity; it has achieved omission. The promissory note — “physicalism will explain consciousness eventually” — has been outstanding for the entire modern period, and the corpus’s Philosophy field audit records the current state honestly: the hard problem is acknowledged as a difficulty and the mainstream response is to develop more sophisticated physicalist proposals, not to answer the question Sterling posed. A theory that is simpler because it leaves out the explanandum is not the more rational choice; it is the less rational one wearing a methodological virtue as a costume.

Objection 5 — Multiple Realizability and Functionalism

Mental states are functional states — definable by causal role, realizable in many substrates. This dissolves the need for any special substance: mind is what the brain does, as software to hardware.

Reply (synthesis). Functionalism characterizes mental states entirely by input-output relations, and precisely thereby omits everything C1’s vector space identifies as constitutive: a functional description of pain specifies what pain does, never what pain feels like; a functional description of grasping modus ponens specifies dispositions to token certain outputs, never the recognition of validity as such — the very thing Sterling reports as the basis of his reasoned choices. The standard internal difficulties (inverted and absent qualia: a system functionally identical to a subject but feeling nothing, or feeling otherwise) are not exotic puzzles; they are the direct symptom of defining mind by role while leaving out occupancy. And the software analogy concedes more than it defends: software is not a physical property of hardware but an abstraction imposed by an interpreting mind — syntax has no intrinsic existence in the silicon. Explaining mind as software presupposes a mind doing the interpreting, one level up. The regress ends only in something whose intentionality is intrinsic, which is what the rational faculty as substance is.

Objection 6 — The Pairing Problem

What ties a particular non-physical mind to a particular body? Physical causation pairs cause and effect by spatial relation; souls, lacking location, cannot be paired with bodies in a principled way.

Reply (synthesis). The objection assumes that spatial relation is the only possible ground of causal pairing — an assumption drawn, once more, from the physical-to-physical case and generalized without argument. The dualist’s answer is that the pairing is primitive and individual: this rational faculty has the basic, unmediated power to act in this body and receive from this body, just as fundamental physical relations pair their relata without an intermediary that explains the pairing. Nothing in the concept of causation requires that all pairing be spatial; that requirement is physicalism’s house rule, applied to the one entity the debate concerns. The corpus can also note what the objection costs its user: the same first-person datum that certifies experience certifies whose experience it is. The unity and ownership of consciousness — one center receiving impressions, comparing them to foundational truths, issuing verdicts — is given, not constructed; a theory that finds ownership mysterious has mislaid its starting point.

Objection 7 — The Evolutionary Objection

Minds emerged gradually by natural selection operating on physical organisms. Where in phylogeny would an immaterial substance enter, and why would selection produce one?

Reply (synthesis, drawing on argumentative resources the corpus’s CPA runs identify as aligned). The objection presupposes that an evolutionary account of the organism is thereby an account of the mind — which assumes reduction rather than establishing it. Nothing about the gradual assembly of bodies entails that what thinks in those bodies is an assembly. But the stronger reply turns the objection around, in the form the corpus’s Plantinga run records as the evolutionary argument against naturalism: selection rewards fitness, not truth; if mental states are nothing but physical states shaped for adaptive behavior, there is no reason to expect the beliefs they realize to be true — including the belief in naturalism and the belief in the evolutionary objection itself. The objector saws the branch he sits on. The dualist, by contrast, can accept the entire biological record while holding that rational insight — the recognition that a proof is valid, that virtue alone is good — is a capacity of a faculty whose authority does not derive from selection pressure and therefore is not undermined by it. That authority is what C3’s direct apprehension and the entire theorem architecture presuppose.


IV. The Common Structure of the Replies

Read together, the seven replies are one reply. Each objection generalizes a rule from physical-to-physical cases — causation needs mechanism, pairing needs location, science’s closure is metaphysics, correlation is identity, role is occupancy, simplicity licenses omission, biology exhausts ontology — and applies the rule to the one entity whose distinctness is the question. Each reply refuses the generalization and returns to the datum Sterling placed first: qualitative, intentional, unified, choosing consciousness, more certain than any proposition brought against it. The professional literature has never answered Sterling’s challenge on its merits — it has not explained how brain particles can bear the feeling of pain or the concept of modus ponens — and the corpus’s field audit confirms that the mainstream’s response to the hard problem remains a program, not a result. The displacement of C1, as the corpus’s historical analysis states, was not the loss of a decisive argument; it was the loss of cultural authority. The arguments, examined one at a time, still run the other way.


V. What Rests on the Answer

This is not a detached metaphysical exercise. C1 grounds the dichotomy of control: if the mind is the body, mental events are physical events determined by prior physical causes, and nothing is “up to us” in the sense Th6 requires. With C1 stands C2 — assent as genuinely originated — and with C2 stands the entire practical architecture: Th7’s causal chain from belief to desire, the recovery audit that traces a pathos to its belief, the possibility that correcting the belief is an act rather than an event that happens to occur. The practitioner who runs the Five Steps is presupposing, at every step, that there is a rational faculty distinct from the processes it judges. The objections answered above are therefore not merely answerable; for the coherence of the practice itself, they must be.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Th10–14 as Pivot and as Audit Content: Locating the Value Cluster in Sterling’s System

 

Th10–14 as Pivot and as Audit Content: Locating the Value Cluster in Sterling’s System

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Cluster Verbatim

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

11) Ergo, since virtue and vice are types of acts of will, they are in our control.

12) Ergo, things that are not in our control [externals] are never good or evil.

13) [cf 9, above] Desiring things out of our control is irrational, since it involves false judgment.

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

Five lines from Core Stoicism (ISF, September 19, 2005). One basic, four derived. The task of this essay is to state what these five lines are within the architecture of the whole twenty-nine-line system — and to show that their location settles a question of practice: what askesis is, and what it is not.


II. Where the Cluster Sits Derivationally

Core Stoicism opens with a promissory note. Line 2* asserts that complete happiness is possible and marks itself “[To be proven below.]” The negative-happiness argument then assembles its premises: Th3, that all unhappiness is caused by desiring an outcome that fails to result; Th6, that only our beliefs and will are in our control; Th7, that desires are caused by beliefs about good and evil. From these, lines 4, 5, 8, and 9 derive that desiring things out of our control is irrational — irrational because avoidable, avoidable because desires are in our control, in our control because they are caused by beliefs.

But the argument to this point establishes only that desiring externals is imprudent. It has not yet established that such desire is false — that the belief producing it misrepresents reality. Th10 supplies that. It is the value axiom: underived, basic, load-bearing, the kind of proposition Sterling’s own gloss on the “Th” marker classifies as an unprovable postulate defensible by intuition — the ethical intuitionism (C3) of the system doing exactly the work it exists to do, terminating the regress rather than continuing it. From Th10 with Th6, line 11 derives that virtue and vice are in our control; line 12 derives that externals are never good or evil; line 13 re-grounds line 9’s prudential verdict as an epistemic one — the desire for externals now stands convicted not merely of exposing the agent to unhappiness, but of embodying false judgment.

Line 14 is the terminus. It discharges 2*: the agent who values only virtue judges truly (because Th10 is true) and is immune to all unhappiness (because, per Th3–5, no desire of his can be frustrated by the world). The proof the system opened by promising is, at line 14, complete.


III. What Depends on the Cluster

Everything after line 14 presupposes it. Line 15 — true judgment of the value of virtue produces desire for virtue — takes 14 as its sole premise. Line 17, the appropriate positive feeling attending correct judgment and will, runs from 15. Line 23, the three ways the Stoic is positively happy, gathers 17 and 19. On the action branch, line 28 — that aiming at external desire-objects is not virtuous — cites 13 directly alongside Th27, and line 29, the terminus of the whole system, inherits it. Sterling’s own collapse-test names the stakes from below: deny Th7 and lines 8, 9, 13, 14, 28, and 29 all fall. The cluster is thus doubly load-bearing: it completes the proof that precedes it, and it is cited by nearly everything that follows.

But the dependency is not merely logical. The system does not move past line 14 the way a proof moves past a lemma — established once, then available on demand. Line 15 says that true judgment of virtue’s value produces desire for virtue. That is a claim about an agent, not about a page. The positive-happiness branch and the virtue branch describe the condition of someone of whom line 14 is true — someone who actually values only virtue, as a settled fact about his rational faculty. The theorems after 14 are inert for any agent who merely affirms 14 while his operative valuations say otherwise. The architecture therefore has a seam at line 14 that no other line has: it is the point at which the system’s demand shifts from assent-to-a-proof to a state-of-the-agent.


IV. The Cluster as the Content of the Recovery Audit

Now the corrected model of practice, established through the Tullia Case run and the Pathos Already Occurred verdict. Seddon defines pathos as an excessive impulse occasioned by assenting to a false judgment, and adds that it can be regarded as the affective component of that judgment or identified as the judgment itself. There is no intermediate stage — no window between an impression’s arrival and assent in which a vigilant agent could catch and screen it. The freak-out is not downstream of the false assent; it is the false assent, or its affective face. And one cannot extirpate a passion already underway any more than one can prevent sugar from tasting sweet once the cake is already in the mouth.

Two modes, therefore, and only two. Prospectively: the correct judgments are held in advance as settled dogma, so the impression that arrives meets a rational faculty that already judges truly, and no false assent occurs. Sterling’s own figure — immunization, not cure. Retrospectively: a pathos has already occurred, and the agent, noticing it, treats the disturbance itself as a new, second-order impression — “I am experiencing a pathos” — and works backward from it, per Th7, to the belief that caused it, corrects that belief, and wills correctly now.

And what is the content the retrospective audit works through? Precisely the cluster. The located belief has the shape some external is good or evil. First contact is Th10, the truth it contradicts. Lines 11 and 12 derive the direct verdict — externals are never good or evil, so the belief is false. Th6 draws the control boundary that defines “external.” Th7 supplies the causal warrant that makes the belief the correct address for the disturbance. Lines 8 and 9 establish that the desire the belief produced was in the agent’s control and irrational. Line 13 names the failure: false judgment. Th3–5 state what sustaining the belief costs. Line 14 states what correcting it yields. The eight moments of clause (a)’s functional-order cluster are the derivational cluster of Section Two, traversed in the order the audit forces them into view rather than the order the proof establishes them.

This is the identity the essay exists to state plainly: Th10–14 is not general doctrine of which the recovery audit makes occasional use. It is, without remainder, the propositional content of the one action available to an agent once assent has already gone wrong. The same five lines are the pivot of the derivation and the script of the recovery.


V. What This Settles About Askesis

The identity closes off a tempting third category. One might suppose there is a distinct activity — call it practice, rehearsal, staged application — in which the agent produces instances of Th10–14 correctly applied under controlled conditions, and that this activity is what askesis is. Stated that way, the supposition is a survival of the interception model at one remove: it imagines a use of the cluster that is neither the settled disposition nor the recovery audit, a rehearsal for a catch that the live case does not contain.

The architecture leaves no room for the third category. At any moment, exactly one of two things is true of an agent with respect to the cluster. Either line 14 holds of him — he values only virtue as a settled fact about his faculty — in which case the arriving impression meets true judgment and nothing further happens; the prospective mode’s success is precisely the absence of any occasion for action. Or line 14 does not yet hold of him, in which case some impression asserting an external’s value has met his faculty and been assented to — a pathos, large or small, is on the books — and the only action available is the audit: notice the disturbance, trace it to its belief, correct the belief against Th10, will correctly now.

Askesis, then, is not a third use of the cluster. Voluntary hardship, imagined adversity, restraint before imagined pleasure, objective description, the view from above, the rehearsal of death — these are methods of deliberately manufacturing live impressions, under graded and voluntary conditions, so that the agent’s actual state with respect to line 14 is exposed rather than presumed. Lying in bed affirming that spiders are indifferent tests nothing; the affirmation meets no impression. Askesis arranges the meeting. Where the settled disposition holds, the staged impression confirms it — a live true judgment under real, if chosen, pressure. Where it does not hold, a pathos occurs in miniature, and the agent is handed exactly what the retrospective mode requires: a disturbance to notice, fresh, low-stakes, traceable — an occasion to run the audit now rather than for the first time when the loss is a daughter and not a spider.

Askesis is thus the discipline by which line 14 migrates from theorem to fact-about-the-agent. It does not add a mode to the two the system contains. It drives the frequency of the second mode toward zero by making the first mode actual — and until that work is done, every disturbance it surfaces is answered by the same five lines, in the same backward order, that the derivation established once and the practitioner must now make his own.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

The Body That Cannot Choose: Stoic Corporealism and the Case for Dualism Today

 

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

The Body That Cannot Choose: Stoic Corporealism and the Case for Dualism Today

By Dave Kelly


A recent essay in this space, Judith Stove’s “Entering A Garden: Stoicism, Nature, and Metazoa,” makes a case that ought to be taken seriously: that ancient Stoic physics, in insisting that only bodies exist and that mind or soul is itself corporeal, anticipated the monism now fashionable in philosophy of mind and animal cognition studies. Stove is right about the ancient doctrine. Where the case runs into trouble is at the point where “the Stoics believed it” quietly becomes “and therefore we should too.” That step deserves scrutiny — not because the historical claim is wrong, but because the present-tense one does not follow from it, and the ancient Stoics themselves would have had little patience for an argument that treated a school’s physics as immune to revision by later evidence.


What the ancient Stoics actually held

Stove’s citations are accurate. Seneca’s quidquid facit corpus est — “whatever is active is a body” — is the load-bearing premise of Stoic ontology, and Diogenes Laertius’s account of the soul’s seven “tentacle-like” extensions from the hēgemonikon is genuine Stoic doctrine, not a poetic flourish borrowed from Oppian. Contemporary classicists confirm the reading without much dissent. Vanessa de Harven’s work on Stoic corporealism traces how the school’s dunamis criterion — being is the capacity to act or be acted upon — commits it to treating soul, tension, and even virtue as bodies of a particular kind, however strange that sounds to modern ears.1 Marcelo Boeri goes further, arguing that Stoic psychology anticipates the causal closure thesis at the center of contemporary physicalism: the Stoics rejected substance dualism for close to the same reason many analytic philosophers of mind do now — the apparent impossibility of an immaterial item exerting causal force on a material one.2 Massimo Pigliucci, who holds both a philosophy chair and a doctorate in evolutionary biology, states the position even more bluntly in his popular work: “the Stoics were materialists,” full stop, and he has argued in print that a scientifically responsible Stoicism today ought to inherit that materialism rather than quietly drop it.3 So Stove is not exercising private judgment here. She stands in company with working philosophers who have made the same case, some of them in professional, peer-reviewed terms.

This matters for what follows, because it means the disagreement is not between an amateur enthusiast and a rigorous tradition. It is a live dispute within the tradition itself, and it turns on a single question that none of the ancient texts can settle for us: does a plausible account of why the Stoics were corporealists in the third century BC give us any reason to be corporealists now?


Sterling’s reply

Grant Sterling addressed this question directly in a 2012 exchange on the International Stoic Forum, responding to a correspondent who had made essentially Stove’s move — citing the ancient doctrine that mind is “a state of matter” as though that settled the modern question. Sterling’s answer is worth quoting because it draws the line so precisely:

“My dualism is not developed in opposition to the ancient Stoic metaphysics, but to modern scientific physics. You say that for the ancient Stoics, the human mind is a ‘state of matter.’ The problem that I was bringing up is that there is no room in modern Physics for any such notion. Modern Physics recognizes only physical matter in the brain, consisting of various particles undergoing various electro-chemical processes. None of those particles or processes are understood as having characteristics like ‘the feeling of pain’ or ‘the concept of modus ponens.’”

The argument is narrower than it might first appear, and its narrowness is the point. Sterling does not dispute the history. He denies that a philosopher writing after the twentieth century’s advances in physics can help himself to Chrysippus’s pneuma the way Chrysippus could. The ancient Stoics were free to say mind is a fine, breath-like body permeating the coarser body, because nothing in their physics forbade matter from having such properties. Ours does. A particle physicist today has no category for “the concept of modus ponens” among the properties electrons and their interactions can bear, and no amount of appeal to pneuma closes that gap — it only relocates the mystery under a different name. Boeri’s own paper, read carefully, concedes as much: he does not claim the Stoics solved the interaction problem, only that they were dissatisfied with dualism for reasons that rhyme with contemporary physicalist dissatisfaction. Dissatisfaction with a difficulty is not the same as having dissolved it.


Why the difference is not academic

Stove’s essay treats corporealism as a scientific convenience — it “avoids many difficulties which continue to attend study of mind, when conceived as somehow distinct from… the body.” But the difficulties do not vanish; they migrate. If mental acts are simply a further arrangement of the same matter that composes rocks and rivers, then Epictetus’s opening move in the Enchiridion — “some things are in our control, others not; in our control are belief, impulse, desire, aversion” — needs an account of what “in our control” could mean for a state that is itself just one more link in a physical causal chain. A belief that is fully constituted by antecedent bodily states is not thereby exempted from the causal history of those states. It is one more event in the chain, however finely we describe its texture as “breath” rather than “electrochemistry.” The vocabulary changes; the determination does not.

This is the sense in which substance dualism, in Sterling’s reconstruction, is not an ornamental addition to Stoic ethics but its structural precondition. The rational faculty has to be a distinct kind of thing — not merely a distinctively organized body — if its judgments are to be genuinely its own rather than the terminal output of a causal sequence that began elsewhere. Stove’s essay, admirably, wants Stoicism’s ethics of agency and its physics of nature to hang together, and historically they did hang together, because the ancient Stoics were also, notoriously, close to determinists about the physical order even as they insisted assent was “up to us” — a tension their own contemporaries pressed them on. What Sterling’s dualism does is resolve that tension in the one direction the ancient corporealist could not: by taking the rational faculty out of the physical causal order the ancients otherwise wanted to make exhaustive.


A shared root, a divided branch

None of this diminishes what Stove has done well. Her essay is right that the Stoics saw human life as continuous with animal and even vegetative life through the two basic drives, right that Oppian’s octopus and Godfrey-Smith’s octopus are working the same vein of close, unsentimental attention to other minds, and right that this tradition has been underread relative to Aristotle’s. The corporealist premise and the continuity-of-nature premise are not the same claim, and a reader could accept the second — humans as embedded in a single biological order, oikeiōsis as a graded capacity running from instinct to reason — without accepting the first. Pigliucci, in fact, tends to run exactly this combination: full-throated materialism paired with an insistence that reason, however physically realized, still marks a genuine and consequential difference between human and animal oikeiōsis. Sterling would agree with the second half of that pairing and part ways on the first. That is where the argument now stands, and it is an argument, not a settled matter — which is, after all, the condition Stove’s own essay found the Stoics in when the subject was zoology rather than metaphysics of mind.


Notes

1. Vanessa de Harven, “The Metaphysics of Stoic Corporealism,” Elenchos.

2. Marcelo D. Boeri, “The Stoic Psychological Physicalism: An Ancient Version of the Causal Closure Thesis,” in R.A.H. King, ed., Common to Body and Soul.

3. Massimo Pigliucci, How to Be a Stoic (Basic Books, 2017); “The Stoic God Is Untenable in the Light of Modern Science,” The Side View, 2019.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Monday, July 13, 2026

SEAI — Situational Executive Application Instrument — Protocol v1.0

 

SEAI — Situational Executive Application Instrument — Protocol v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. Purpose

SEAI takes a single described executive situation and returns one corpus application matched to it — an Entry, in the register of “One Hundred Practical Applications of the Corpus for a Corporate Executive,” plus a one-page Explanation of why that entry fits. SEAI is an SRGI extension: it inherits SRGI’s Protocol Activation, Operating Rules R1–R9, and Standards/Named Failure Modes in full. It narrows SRGI’s general any-domain output to one fixed two-part format for one request type: a specific situation seeking a specific application, not a general question seeking discursive treatment.

SEAI is not a substitute for the Five-Step Method run by the executive himself. It identifies which corpus mechanism bears on his situation; it does not run the mechanism for him. Selection is not decision.


II. Required Corpus Documents

Before SEAI runs on a given situation:

  • The Six Commitments document — retrieved per SRGI’s Protocol Activation.
  • “One Hundred Practical Applications of the Corpus for a Corporate Executive” — retrieved via Project Knowledge search, consulted as the primary candidate-entry pool before any new entry is considered.
  • Any primary-source or theorem-level document the matched entry depends on (Th6, Th7, Th10–14, etc.), retrieved as needed for the Explanation.

SEAI does not run from memory of what the 100-list contains. Retrieval happens before matching, every run.


III. Input

One described executive situation: a decision pending, a reaction, a conflict, a communication task, a personnel matter, or similar. No minimum specification is required. Per R9 (inherited from SRGI), SEAI does not decline for thin input — it reasons from the six commitments directly if the situation is under-described, marking the result as an extension per R8.


IV. Output

Always two separate documents, never merged:

1. The Entry. One line. Same register as the 100-list: imperative, corpus-term-anchored, no hedging, no restatement of the situation.

2. The Explanation. One page. States which commitment(s) and theorem(s) are load-bearing for this situation specifically, what the situation’s actual judgment-content is (the impression, the belief, the control-boundary question at issue), and what the Entry corrects or structures. Not a restatement of the Entry — the reasoning that produced it.


V. Operational Protocol

Step 0 — Protocol Activation. Confirm the Six Commitments and the 100-list document are retrieved, not recalled from memory. Confirm the situation has been read for its actual judgment-content, not just its surface content.

Self-Audit — Step 0: Six Commitments retrieved? 100-list retrieved? Situation read for judgment-content, not surface? State result explicitly.

Step 1 — Situation Parse. Identify the operative judgment or decision-point in the description. Separate it from incidental detail (industry, personalities, financial specifics) that doesn’t bear on which corpus mechanism applies. State the parsed judgment-point in one sentence before proceeding.

Self-Audit — Step 1: Is the parsed judgment-point actually load-bearing, or has an incidental detail been mistaken for the point? State result explicitly.

Step 2 — Entry Selection. Match the parsed judgment-point against the retrieved 100-list. Select the single best-fitting existing entry — best-fitting meaning most specific to this situation’s actual failure point or decision-point, not merely thematically related. If no retrieved entry covers the situation, construct a new-candidate entry in the same register, marked explicitly and unmistakably as unratified — proposed, not filed. SEAI does not add entries to the corpus itself; any new-candidate entry follows the standard draft → ratification → render → System Map path independently of this run.

Self-Audit — Step 2: Was the full 100-list actually checked before concluding no entry fits? Is the selected entry the most specific fit, not just a plausible one? If new-candidate, is it clearly marked unratified? State result explicitly.

Step 3 — Entry Render. Output the one-line Entry, standalone, in the established register.

Step 4 — Explanation Render. Output the one-page Explanation as a separate document: commitment/theorem citation, situation-specific reasoning, no padding restating the Entry or the situation description.

Self-Audit — Step 4: Does the Explanation cite specific Th-numbers or commitments rather than gesturing at “the framework” generally? Is it free of restatement padding? State result explicitly.


VI. Relationship to Other Instruments

SEAI is distinct from SRGI proper: SRGI produces discursive answers with margin Standpoint notes across any domain; SEAI produces exactly the Entry/Explanation pair for exactly one situation. A request that asks something general, or asks for multiple applications rather than one situation-matched application, routes to SRGI directly or to the 100-list document itself — not to SEAI.

SEAI is distinct from the 100-list document: the list is a fixed, ratified corpus artifact; SEAI is the retrieval-and-match procedure that searches it live and can propose (never file) extensions to it.


VII. Instrument Limitations

SEAI can identify which existing corpus application fits a described situation, or propose a candidate for one that doesn’t yet exist. It cannot: run the Five-Step Method on the executive’s behalf; guarantee the executive’s actual assent follows the Entry; add a candidate entry to the corpus without separate ratification; or produce output for a request that isn’t a single situation seeking a single matched application.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

One Hundred Practical Applications of the Corpus for a Corporate Executive

 

One Hundred Practical Applications of the Corpus for a Corporate Executive

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

None of this decides for you. It structures the interval before you decide — the choice at the end is still yours.


Decision procedure under pressure

  1. Run Reception→Decision explicitly before responding to a board challenge, rather than reacting in the room.
  2. Use the Pause step as a literal delay tactic — no commitment offered until the impression has been tested.
  3. Separate “what happened” (fact) from “what it means” (judgment) before reacting to bad news.
  4. Test layoff, pricing, or PR decisions against Th6’s boundary: what’s actually his to originate versus what he’s treating as his that isn’t.
  5. Apply the recovery audit after a reactive decision already made — locate the false judgment that produced it.
  6. Use the Decision step as a deliberate closing act — state the choice explicitly rather than letting a meeting’s momentum produce it.
  7. Distinguish Examination (finding the truth) from Decision (acting on it) when a call keeps getting re-litigated.
  8. Flag zigzag decision-reversal patterns as a standing-discipline failure at Pause, not a data problem.
  9. Apply the same procedure to a subordinate’s panic — coach the Five Steps rather than absorbing the reaction.
  10. Use it on himself mid-negotiation, not just pre- or post-.

Goal, means, reservation

  1. State targets with an explicit internal reservation — pursue X, outcome not guaranteed.
  2. Separate effort quality (in his control) from outcome quality (not) when evaluating his own performance.
  3. Hold a specific deal, hire, or product launch as a preferred indifferent — pursued fully, not identity-bearing.
  4. Use reservation language in his own internal self-talk before high-stakes calls.
  5. Distinguish “this failed” from “I failed” using the externals/rational-faculty boundary.
  6. Apply goal/means/reservation to his own career trajectory, not just company targets.
  7. Reframe “the deal died” from a personal verdict to an external outcome before deciding what to do next.
  8. Set targets that are ambitious without being identity-fused.
  9. Apply reservation to hiring decisions — commit fully to the candidate, hold the outcome provisionally.
  10. Use it when a board rejects his proposal — the proposing was his; the vote wasn’t.

Recovery audit / emotional regulation

  1. When anger at a subordinate arrives, locate the false judgment before responding.
  2. Treat strong emotion in a meeting as evidence a judgment already occurred, not something to suppress.
  3. Run recovery audit on a bad hire instead of just reversing it.
  4. Distinguish anxiety about a metric from the metric itself.
  5. Use it after a public setback instead of denial or spiraling.
  6. Catch reactive resignation threats as decisions made under unexamined pathos.
  7. Apply it to board friction — locate whether it’s real disagreement or a misjudged external.
  8. Use it on competitive anxiety — a rival’s move is an external; the judgment about it is the work.
  9. Apply it to market downturns — separate “the portfolio dropped” from “something evil happened to me.”
  10. Use it to interrupt catastrophizing before an all-hands.

Judging externals correctly

  1. Treat reputation, press coverage, and industry standing as preferred indifferents.
  2. Apply the same to compensation and title.
  3. Separate the company’s valuation from his own worth as a judgment worth making consciously.
  4. Apply to competitor success — a rival’s win isn’t evidence of his own deficiency unless the reasoning is run.
  5. Use it on customer churn — examined for lesson, not treated as catastrophe.
  6. Apply the in-control/not-in-control test to his own health and stress.
  7. Evaluate a merger target without the outcome becoming a referendum on his judgment as a person.
  8. Apply to board composition changes — power shifts navigated, not evidence of standing.
  9. Use it on personal wealth tied to equity.
  10. Apply to industry awards — accept without absence registering as failure.

Personnel and culture

  1. Coach direct reports through the Five Steps rather than just supplying the answer.
  2. Use the Abstainer type to identify withdrawal-from-ownership specifically.
  3. Apply the [D]-flag posture audit when a report has checked out rather than actively resisting.
  4. Use goal/means/reservation language when setting a report’s targets, modeling the posture.
  5. Distinguish a report’s competence problem from a judgment problem before intervening.
  6. Use recovery-audit language in post-mortems — “what was the false judgment” instead of “who’s to blame.”
  7. Evaluate effort and judgment quality in reviews, not just outcomes the report didn’t control.
  8. Identify Satellite-type procrastination — attaching to someone else’s initiative — in delegation patterns.
  9. Use Relinquisher-type patterns to flag reports who defer decisions upward that are actually theirs.
  10. Model the Decision step publicly as a culture-setting act.

Negotiation and counterparties

  1. Identify what a counterparty must presuppose to argue as they do, before negotiating.
  2. Separate the counterparty’s stated position from their actual value judgment.
  3. Use the externals framework to avoid over-personalizing adversarial tactics.
  4. Apply reservation to a deal outcome going in — full commitment to pursuit, no fusion with result.
  5. Distinguish a counterparty’s tactic (external) from his own reaction to it (judgment).
  6. Run recovery audit after a negotiation goes badly, before revising strategy.
  7. Apply the fact/judgment split to a counterparty’s public statements before responding.
  8. Set a walk-away point that’s principled rather than emotionally reactive.
  9. Separate what a partner’s behavior means from what it is before escalating.
  10. Apply the control boundary to joint-venture outcomes — his contribution is his; execution isn’t.

Communication and public statements

  1. Apply correspondence discipline to internal messaging — state what’s true, not what lands best.
  2. Use the fact/judgment separation drafting a difficult all-hands announcement.
  3. Distinguish an apology that corresponds to an actual failure from one issued for optics.
  4. Apply Th10’s bivalence to avoid hedged, meaningless messaging.
  5. Use reservation language publicly announcing targets, modeling the posture.
  6. Separate what the press says happened from what happened before responding.
  7. Apply recovery-audit discipline to his own public missteps — correct visibly rather than deflect.
  8. Use the control-boundary framing publicly: own what the company controls, name what it doesn’t.
  9. Draft crisis communications from Examination’s output, not raw pathos.
  10. Use decisive Decision-step language rather than hedged process-language.

Strategic planning and risk

  1. Frame long-range strategy around means fully pursued, outcomes held with reservation.
  2. Separate execution risk (owned) from market risk (not) in scenario planning.
  3. Distinguish controllable operational levers from macro conditions.
  4. Use recovery-audit thinking retrospectively on a failed strategic bet.
  5. Apply reservation to multi-year roadmaps to keep commitment independent of market timing.
  6. Separate observed competitive moves from inferred intentions.
  7. Apply the control boundary to regulatory risk — prepare fully, hold outcome provisionally.
  8. Use Examination discipline before greenlighting major capital allocation.
  9. Apply reservation to acquisition integration timelines.
  10. Use the procrastination typology to diagnose stalled strategic initiatives organizationally.

Self-examination and character

  1. Audit which recent decisions were genuine acts of will versus reactions dressed as decisions.
  2. Check his own public reasoning for unexamined load-bearing presuppositions.
  3. Distinguish ambition from purpose in his own motivation.
  4. Trace a persistent craving back to its underlying judgment via Th7.
  5. Apply the fixed-standard model to self-evaluation rather than shifting internal comparison.
  6. Use recovery audit on long-standing resentments toward a co-founder or investor.
  7. Separate genuine virtue-relevant failures from merely externally-judged ones.
  8. Notice when satisfaction is coming from an external win rather than acting well.
  9. Use the Five Steps on decisions about his own exit or succession.
  10. Re-run the control-boundary test on his own identity periodically.

Organizational and systemic use

  1. Install the fact/judgment distinction as a standing post-mortem norm.
  2. Use recovery-audit language as the default root-cause framing instead of blame-framing.
  3. Teach goal/means/reservation as the company’s stated posture toward targets.
  4. Use the procrastination typology as shared vocabulary for stalled initiatives.
  5. Apply the control-boundary distinction to how the company discusses market conditions publicly.
  6. Build the Pause step into formal decision gates for major capital commitments.
  7. Use presupposition-checking on a competitor’s or activist investor’s public argument.
  8. Apply Examination discipline to due diligence — testing the thesis, not confirming it.
  9. Use reservation language in board resolutions themselves.
  10. Treat the whole apparatus as infrastructure for judgment, not a replacement for it.

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


Sunday, July 12, 2026

The Burnout — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

 

The Burnout — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


The Burnout is too depleted to start. His depletion is real, unlike the other types’ imagined dangers — the audit must separate the fact of depletion, prudently managed, from the false judgments riding on it.

Reception

The Burnout faces the task and finds nothing there. What arrives for audit is the depletion presenting as incapacity: not “I don’t want to” but “I can’t.”

Recognition

Two layers. Surface: “My depletion makes right action impossible.” Beneath it, offered as diagnostic hypothesis rather than entailment: “The results I’ve been chasing were the good” — the sustained assent that produced the depletion in the first place.

Pause

The pause costs no energy the depletion has taken — it is itself an act within present capacity.

Examination

The boundary test applied three times: the chased results are external; energy is a preferred indifferent, to be stewarded, never the measure of the agent; and what remains untouched by any level of depletion is the willing of appropriate acts within present capacity. “Can’t” is true of the wrong thing — the full former output is out of range; the scaled appropriate act is not.

Decision

The results chased are externals, never the good. Energy is to be restored deliberately and never again mistaken for the measure of the self. Right action was never the full output — it is the willing of appropriate acts within present capacity, which remains intact. The act may be small. It may be rest itself, chosen as stewardship rather than collapsed into as defeat.


Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

The Hedonist — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

 

The Hedonist — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


The Hedonist chases immediate pleasure over the task at hand. This is the general form of the Thrill Seeker’s error: immediate pleasure is judged good, discomfort judged evil — the false value judgment operating pre-reflectively, and therefore, being a judgment, corrigible.

Reception

The task waits while he scrolls, snacks, watches one more episode. What arrives for audit is the drift itself: a thousand small swerves toward comfort and away from friction.

Recognition

The belief, two-sided: “Immediate pleasure is a good; discomfort is an evil.” Both are feelings, both external. Naming it converts what feels like wiring into a proposition — and a claim that can be stated can be tested, and a claim that can be tested can be false.

Pause

No assent in the nine is more continuously renewed. The pause is difficult because the belief is so old it presents as perception rather than judgment.

Examination

Both poles of the policy sit outside the boundary of control. A life steered by pleasant-now versus unpleasant-now has handed the rudder to the immediate environment. Every swerve is this policy executing — not wiring expressing itself but a judgment cashing itself out, and judgments, unlike wiring, are in our control.

Decision

Pleasure and discomfort are externals, indifferent. The good is the right use of judgment and will; its discomfort cannot harm him. He does the task, discomfort and all — not by overpowering the appetite, but because its funding judgment has been withdrawn.


Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

The Rebel — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

 

The Rebel — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


The Rebel feels a lack of control over life, so delays as a way to assert autonomy and push back against resented authority figures. Another’s will is external and cannot touch the rational faculty; delay as revenge treats an indifferent — the authority’s expectation — as an evil, and treats harming his own interest as a good.

Reception

The task sits undone, and the Rebel knows why: someone else assigned it, expects it, presumes to dictate his time. What arrives for audit is resentment, with the delay as its expression.

Recognition

Two beliefs surface: “Their demand is an evil — it injures my autonomy,” and, riding on it, “Delaying is good — it repays the injury.” Another person’s demand is external; classing it an evil has the prohibited shape. Classing the delay a good inverts the same error.

Pause

The pause is hardest to perform here, because the resentment presents itself as self-respect. Examining a claim is not capitulating to the claimant.

Examination

Another person’s will is external and cannot touch the faculty of judgment and assent — so the alleged injury is impossible in principle, not merely tolerable. The delay-as-revenge further spends the Rebel’s own undone work as ammunition, harming his own sphere to inflict a frustration landing in someone else’s externals. The demand is already issued, so the assent presents as emotion — anger, resentment — rather than aversion toward something pending.

Decision

Real autonomy is the will’s freedom to judge rightly, already intact; the demand is indifferent. He acts for his own reasons, judged by his own examination, on his own authority — not because he submitted, but because compliance and defiance were both letting another’s will set his agenda.


Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

The Thrill Seeker — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

 

The Thrill Seeker — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


The Thrill Seeker enjoys the rush of an impending deadline and scrambles at the last minute. Pleasure is indifferent; judging it good makes it a desire that commands the schedule.

Reception

Weeks of calm avoidance, then the deadline looms and everything changes — focus sharpens, the work pours out, and it feels magnificent. What arrives for audit is the appetite for that rush, plus its cost: a schedule quietly reorganized around manufacturing emergencies.

Recognition

The belief: “The rush is a good.” The rush is a feeling produced by circumstance — an external. The belief has exactly the prohibited shape.

Pause

The assent renews itself with every surge, making this the most self-reinforcing assent of the nine. The pause declines to keep endorsing the claim that pleasant means good.

Examination

The rush is circumstance-dependent, which is why he must keep arranging the conditions for it — an external he cannot even directly produce has been placed in charge of when he works. His appetite for the rush exists because he judged the rush a good; since the appetite comes from a judgment, and judgments are in his control, directing it at an external is irrational. Each payout settles one instance and opens the next pending one, so the desire cycles.

Decision

The rush is a feeling, external and indifferent — pleasant when it comes, never the good. The good is the right use of judgment and will, available at any point on the calendar. He starts early — not renouncing enjoyment, but demoting it from governor to occurrence.


Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

The Zigzagger — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

 

The Zigzagger — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


The Zigzagger constantly shifts attention from one task to another, so nothing gets finished. He is the exception among the nine: no single false belief, but a habit of unexamined assent — the disease is upstream of content.

Reception

The Zigzagger’s day is motion without completion. What arrives for audit is not a single disturbance but a pattern: attention re-captured by whatever appears, serially.

Recognition

The audit tries to name the belief and finds no single target. The closest approximation is a policy: “whatever appears now is worth pursuing” — each arriving impression’s implicit claim, endorsed automatically. No single micro-assent is load-bearing; correct any one and the next arrival gets the same automatic yes.

Pause — the actual site of the failure

For the other eight types, the pause is a step performed within the audit. For the Zigzagger, the pause is the thing that is broken: no gap ever opens between an impression’s arrival and his assent to it.

Examination

He has ceded the direction of his will to the arrival order of externals. Each automatic assent spawns a micro-desire; the churn is this mechanism executing over and over, serially, rather than one sustained error.

Decision — issued prospectively

He has no located belief to replace. His decision is a standing rule about assent itself: no arriving impression’s claim to matter will be endorsed until it has been examined. This is discipline installed in advance, not a corrected judgment recalled after the fact — a repaired pause, not a replaced belief.


Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

The Dreamer — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

 

The Dreamer — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


The Dreamer spends time fantasizing about the future instead of doing what is needed in the present. He desires an external — the fantasized outcome — while withholding assent from the impression that action now is the appropriate act. The fantasy is pleasant precisely because it delivers the feeling of the good without the willing.

Reception

The Dreamer sits with the task undone, vividly elsewhere. What arrives for audit is not pain but pleasure — anticipatory pleasure consumed in place of action.

Recognition

The belief: “The imagined future is the good — and the present task, by comparison, is not.” The imagined future is an external outcome; the belief has exactly the prohibited shape. If the good is the external outcome, vividly picturing it yields a preview of the good, with none of the work that willing requires.

Pause

The pause withholds re-assent, declining to keep endorsing the value claim riding on the image while it stands under review.

Examination

The imagined future is external, doubly removed as an imagined outcome. What sits inside the boundary is exactly what the Dreamer is not doing: the willing of the appropriate act now. His desire for the imagined future exists because he judged it the good; since the fantasy previews that good, desire flows to the previewing rather than the producing. The entire structure lives in the not-yet, and nothing in the experience protests, which is why the fantasy is the most stable of the nine.

Decision

The imagined future is external and indifferent — pleasant to picture, incapable of being the good. The only good on offer is the willing of the appropriate act now. He turns to the task — not because he suppressed the dream, but because its funding was cut.


Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

The Perfectionist — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

 

The Perfectionist — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


The Perfectionist is fixated on getting everything exactly right before starting or finishing. His belief locates the good in a property of the product — its flawlessness — rather than in the agent’s exercise of judgment and will in producing it. The work’s imperfection is indifferent; the right use of the impression in producing it is the whole good.

Reception

The Perfectionist stalls, or cannot finish, because conditions are never quite right. What arrives for audit is anxiety that spikes whenever the work threatens to fall short of flawless.

Recognition

The belief: “This work is good only if flawless — and flawed work is an evil that reflects on me.” Virtue is the only genuine good; the product’s quality is a property of an external object, so the belief has exactly the prohibited shape.

Pause

The checking loop renews the assent with every reread. The pause withholds re-assent and interrupts the loop.

Examination

The doing of the work is in his control; the product and its reception are not. Flawlessness is a property of the external object, assessed against standards he does not command — a near-miss that mimics the Stoic position while inverting it. His desire for the flawless product exists because he judged flawlessness the good; since the desire comes from a judgment, and judgments are in his control, directing it at an uncontrollable standard is irrational. Because “flawless” is unreachable, the outcome is permanently pending, guaranteeing the anxiety never resolves.

Decision

The good in the work is the right use of judgment and will in producing it — complete in each moment he exercises it. The product’s imperfection is indifferent. He ships it — not because he lowered his standards, but because he relocated them to the one place a standard can actually be met.


Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

The Pessimist — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

 

The Pessimist — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


The Pessimist fears failure and concludes there is no point in even trying, tending to underestimate himself. Two false judgments operate together: that failure is an evil, and that success — an external result — is the good being pursued. The only success that is ever up to him is judging rightly and willing rightly, which cannot fail.

Reception

The Pessimist looks at the task and does not start, because there is no point. What arrives for audit is despair — a conviction so settled it forecloses action before it begins.

Recognition

Named flatly, the despair rests on two beliefs: that failure would be an evil, and that success is the good he is pursuing, now out of reach. Virtue is the only genuine good, vice the only genuine evil; therefore no external is ever good or evil. Both beliefs have exactly the prohibited shape — one locating the good out of reach, the other locating the evil as inevitable.

Pause

The beliefs renew themselves each time he glances at the task. The pause interrupts that renewal, withholding re-assent to both while they stand under review.

Examination

Failure is external. Success, as he has defined it, is equally external. Both poles of his despair sit outside the boundary of his control. His aversion to failure and his hopeless craving for success both exist because he has judged externals to be good or evil — and since these judgments are in his control, directing them at externals is irrational. Even his estimate of his own capacity concerns an external question; the internal question — can he judge and will rightly here — has an answer never in doubt. This is the settled-outcome branch: the verdict is treated as already returned, which is why the affect is despair rather than fear.

Decision

The only success that was ever up to him is judging rightly and willing rightly, and that cannot fail, because it depends on nothing outside his will. He begins — not because his self-estimate improved, but because the question it was answering turned out to be the wrong question.


Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

The Worrier — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

 

The Worrier — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


The Worrier becomes so concerned something will go wrong that he is paralyzed and cannot act. The Stoic analysis names the operative false judgment: the bad outcome that might happen would be an evil. Since only vice is genuinely evil, no possible outcome of the task is evil; the paralysis dissolves with the judgment.

Reception

The Worrier sits before the undone task, paralyzed. What arrives for audit is not a fresh impression but the disturbance itself: the fear. The fear is not a mood that descended on him. It is the felt side of a belief he is holding — the belief that a bad outcome of the task would be genuinely bad for him.

Recognition

The belief is named: “If this fails, that would be an evil — a genuine harm to me.” Virtue — right judgment and right willing — is the only genuine good; vice the only genuine evil. Therefore no external is ever good or evil, and any impression asserting that one is, is false. The belief has exactly the prohibited shape.

Pause

The belief got in without inspection once. The pause is simply refusing to keep endorsing it while it stands under review.

Examination

Is the thing being called bad inside the Worrier’s control or outside it? The outcome is outside. Desires and aversions are caused by judgments about good and evil; his aversion exists because he judged the outcome an evil. Since aversions come from judgments, and judgments are in our control, directing this aversion at an external is irrational — the belief involves false judgment. The outcome is still pending, so the assent presents as aversion toward a future rather than as grief over something settled.

Decision

He assents instead to what is true: the task’s reception is not his to control and cannot harm what matters. Doing the work well is up to him; the good is in the doing. He acts — not because the fear was suppressed, but because the judgment that constituted it is no longer held.


Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

The Nine Types of Procrastinator — Series Index v1.0


The Nine Types of Procrastinator — Series Index v1.0

The nine-type taxonomy: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination: The Science of Why We Put Things Off and How to (Finally!) Stop (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


The One Error Beneath the Nine

Dr. Itamar Shatz identified nine types of procrastinator, each defined by a distinct pattern of delay. Applied through Sterling's framework, the nine types resolve into one error wearing nine faces: in every case, the delay rests on a value judgment that treats something outside the will as genuinely good or genuinely evil. The Worrier dreads an outcome; the Hedonist craves a pleasure; the Rebel resents another’s demand. Each has assented to a false impression that an external carries the weight of good or evil — and the delay is that assent, felt from inside.

This is why the nine are one. They are not nine disorders requiring nine remedies. They are nine presentations of a single error — the misplacement of the good — and they answer to a single correction: unfilter the impression, examine it against what is actually in our control, and withdraw assent from the judgment that an external can harm or complete us. Where the outcome, the pleasure, the product, the other’s will are seen for what they are — externals, indifferent to the only good there is — the desire that drove the delay is not managed but ungenerated. The passion does not have to be resisted, because it is no longer produced.

The contrast with the environmental approach is exact. Manage the surroundings — add friction, remove distraction, arrange accountability — and fewer tempting impressions arrive; but the false judgment stands, waiting for the next unarranged moment. The correction below enters where the error actually lives: at the act of assent, the one link that is always in our power. Eight of the nine are corrected by locating and replacing a false judgment; one, the Zigzagger, is corrected upstream, by installing the discipline of examination before assent. Each type is treated in its own document, running the same method to its distinct false judgment.


The Nine

  • The Worrier — “The bad outcome that might happen would be an evil.” Aversion toward a pending external, felt as paralysis.
  • The Pessimist — “My failure would be an evil, and my incapacity makes it certain.” A settled aversion that forecloses action before it begins.
  • The Perfectionist — “The work is good only if flawless.” The good misfiled into the quality of an external product.
  • The Dreamer — “The imagined future is good; the present task is not.” A fantasy that pays out the feeling of the good without the willing.
  • The Zigzagger — “Whatever appears now is worth pursuing.” Not a single false judgment but a habit of unexamined assent — the one type corrected upstream, at the Pause.
  • The Rebel — “Their demand is an evil and injures my autonomy.” Another’s will treated as an evil, delay pursued as revenge.
  • The Thrill Seeker — “The rush of the deadline is a good.” A pleasure judged good and left to command the schedule.
  • The Hedonist — “Immediate pleasure is good, discomfort is evil.” The general form of the error, operating pre-reflectively as a standing policy.
  • The Burnout — “My depletion makes right action impossible.” And beneath it, the results-as-good judgment that produced the depletion.

Four Ways of Not Doing the Thing — Procrastination in Three American Novels


The nine-type taxonomy: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination: The Science of Why We Put Things Off and How to (Finally!) Stop (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Four Ways of Not Doing the Thing — Procrastination in Three American Novels

 

Four Ways of Not Doing the Thing — Procrastination in Three American Novels

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


Procrastination looks like one failure — the appropriate act, undone. Beneath the surface it is many failures, because the reason the act goes undone differs from person to person, and the reason is always a value judgment about something outside the will. Four American literary figures, read together, display four distinct such judgments so cleanly that they can stand as portraits of four types — and each maps to one of the three interpersonal solutions Karen Horney identified, with a fourth figure carrying the resignation solution past procrastination into something graver.

Two of them share an author, and that is not accidental. Arthur Mizener observed that Fitzgerald’s use of a narrator let him keep separate, for the first time, “the two sides of his nature, the middle-western Trimalchio and the spoiled priest who disapproved of but grudgingly admired him.” Fitzgerald split himself across Gatsby and Nick — and the split falls along a line the corpus recognizes. A third figure, Kerouac’s Sal Paradise, was likewise his author’s self-portrait, cast as satellite to another man’s energy. And Cather’s Godfrey St. Peter completes the set.


Jay Gatsby — The Will Misdirected Outward (Expansive Solution)

Gatsby is the least idle man in his novel. He builds a fortune, a mansion, a persona, a machinery of parties — enormous, sustained, genuine activity. Yet the appropriate acts of his actual life go undone, because the whole apparatus is aimed at a projected good: Daisy as she was five years ago, the past made recoverable, the ideal self confirmed by a world bending to match it. His conviction is stated nakedly — that of course one can repeat the past. The error is not weakness of will but misdirection of it: Gatsby holds one of the most powerful capacities for genuine origination in American fiction and points it entirely at an external not in his control and, as the novel proves, not recoverable.

His is the expansive solution — the good not merely imagined but performed outward into brick and light and display, the self magnified until the world must confirm it. What he defers is reality: Daisy as she is, the present as it stands, the self as it actually is rather than as the ideal demands. Nick’s verdict is the corpus verdict in Fitzgerald’s cadence — borne back ceaselessly into the past, beating against the current.


Sal Paradise — The Will Lent Out (Self-Effacing Solution)

Sal, too, is constantly in motion — thousands of miles, coast to coast and back — which is exactly why his procrastination hides so well. But the motion is not the appropriate act; it is a daydream given a steering wheel. Sal has located the good in another man: Dean Moriarty, the figure of apparently self-generating vitality, the intensity Sal feels he lacks and hopes to reach by proximity. His governing judgment is that the good lives in Dean and down the road — in the unnameable aliveness always one city further on — and his task is to stay in orbit.

This is the self-effacing solution: the good outsourced to a living external, the agent’s own standing point projected into a companion he can witness but never become. Every arrival disappoints because the good was never in any actual place; it was in the anticipation, and in Dean, who cannot supply it. Sal’s undone acts — the writing, the settling, the relationships he abandons to follow the anchor — are displaced not by his own imagined success but by the standing decision that success is someone else’s and his role is to accompany it. Where Gatsby performs the vitality he has manufactured, Sal orbits the vitality he believes another man possesses — the same projected good, the opposite relation to it.


Nick Carraway — The Will Withheld (Resignation Solution)

Nick presents himself as the one steady, judicious man in a novel of impulsives — inclined to reserve judgment, to watch from the edge, to stay above the moral disorder around him. This is the spoiled priest: the vocation for judgment and witness intact, the willingness to commit it withheld. His procrastination is on the appropriate acts of engagement and position-taking, and its distinguishing mark is that he has reframed the delay as a virtue — as breeding, as discernment, as being above the fray. This is the subtlest of the four, because the reframe conceals the failure even from the man committing it.

Here the corpus sees what ordinary reading cannot. Nick’s detachment is the resignation solution’s pride wearing the language of philosophical virtue. Horney named “stoicism” itself as a component of the resignation type’s idealized image — the man proud of his detachment, his self-sufficiency, his being above competition. Nick’s reserve is indistinguishable from genuine philosophical detachment and structurally its opposite: real detachment flows from seeing externals as indifferent; his flows from holding involvement as a thing that would compromise him and his aboveness as a thing worth keeping. He has taken the legitimate examining pause and made it a permanent residence, calling the arrested act wisdom. Mizener’s “grudgingly admired” catches the friction exactly: the pull toward Gatsby is real, but the priestly reserve will not act on it, and the unspent admiration is the tension between a vocation and its non-performance.


Godfrey St. Peter — The Will Discharged (Resignation Solution, Past Procrastination)

Cather’s professor has finished his life’s work and cannot take up his continuing life — the new house he will not inhabit, the family grown remote, the future he will not enter. On the surface this resembles depletion, but St. Peter has crossed a line the other three have not. A procrastinator still means to do the deferred act; the delay is a gap between intention and execution. St. Peter has withdrawn the intention. He has assented that there is no appropriate act remaining for him, retreating into the “original self,” the boy before ambition and family accreted — a self prior to all roles and therefore, he concludes, owing none.

His will is not misdirected like Gatsby’s, lent out like Sal’s, or withheld like Nick’s; it is discharged. He shares Nick’s resignation solution but has carried it past the withheld act into the abandoned one. He has even reached the first half of the Stoic insight — he correctly holds his achievements and reputation to be externals, not genuine goods. His error is downstream: from “these are not the good” he infers “therefore nothing is worth aiming at,” which does not follow, since externals lose genuine value yet remain appropriate objects of aim. St. Peter has collapsed that distinction, and his near-suffocation in the study shows where a discharged will drifts when nothing recharges it. He is not a procrastinator. He is the terminal case the whole category shades into.


The Pattern

Four men, four placements of the standing point from which a person acts, the three Horney’ solutions made visible in fiction. Gatsby, expansive, projects the standing point outward into a recoverable past and spends his will on an external that cannot be had. Sal, self-effacing, lends it to another man and orbits the vitality he thinks he lacks. Nick, resigned, holds it in permanent reserve and calls the hoarding virtue. St. Peter, resigned to the end, withdraws it into a self that generates nothing and stops willing altogether. Misdirected, lent out, withheld, discharged — the same rational faculty, aimed wrongly, outsourced, kept unspent, or abandoned.

And the corrective is one corrective in four fittings: the good was never in the recoverable past, never in another man’s aliveness, never in the clean distance of non-commitment, never absent because the work was finished — it was, in every case, in the right use of the will each man already had, and that no external past, no idealized companion, no protective reserve, and no completed achievement could ever have taken from him.


Source: Arthur Mizener, The Far Side of Paradise: A Biography of F. Scott Fitzgerald, rev. ed. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1965), p. 185.

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Sterling on Kataleptic Impressions: The Primary-Source Record (v1.1)

 

Sterling on Kataleptic Impressions: The Primary-Source Record (v1.1)

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


Correction (v1.1)

The v1.0 text treated Sterling's kataleptic-impression avowals as if the category itself were coextensive with foundational moral principles — the case his 2019 avowals happen to invoke. This is imprecise. Kataleptic impression is the general epistemic category (an impression that could not have arisen from anything other than the object it represents); foundational moral principles are one instance that can fill it, not its definition. Section IV is revised accordingly, and a new Section V is added to state the scope explicitly. Nothing in Sections I–III changes; the quotations stand as verified.


Context

The corpus's general position — that impressions of particulars are claims about reality, not reality itself, while foundational moral truths are apprehended directly — is Dave Kelly's synthesis of Sterling's theorem architecture. This document sets that synthesis alongside Sterling's own dated words on the same question, drawn from the ISF/Gmail archive. The quotations below are exact, pulled from full message text rather than search snippets.

I. The Gap and Its Closure (2015)

In a thread titled "Kataleptic Impressions," Malcolm Schosha suggested that a kataleptic impression is one the agent grasps, rather than one that grasps the agent. Sterling replied by naming the classical problem of perception directly — the gap between impression and object — and identifying the kataleptic impression as the Stoic answer to it. Notably, this exchange concerned ordinary sense perception, not ethics:

“Malcolm: You have it backwards. A kataleptic impression is not one that grasps us, it is one through which we grasp the external object. The doctrine was developed in opposition to Skepticism. If there are no k.i.'s, then the skeptic will argue that knowledge (or perhaps even rational belief) is impossible. Since there is a gap between the impression in my mind and the object outside my mind, there is no way for me to ever know whether the impression is or is not accurate. This is a continuing problem in philosophy. Plato resolved it by affirming that the intellect could grasp (only) the eternal forms… Aristotle developed a theory according to which the forms enter our soul by means of a causal interaction with the external object, guaranteeing at least some access to the external world.”

“The Stoics, as 'dogmatists' who believed that knowledge was possible, affirmed the existence of k.i.'s, impressions which were the kind of impressions that could only come from the external object they appeared to represent, and hence could be the foundation of knowledge…”

“It is true that humans decide whether an impression is convincing or not. But if that's the whole story, then you're left with total skepticism, assuming that we agree that sometimes we assent to impressions that are false. The question is whether there are or are not ever impressions that 'couldn't be false', and, if so, what they're like.”

Sterling here states the veil-of-perception problem in his own terms and identifies the kataleptic impression as the specific device that closes it — not an impression that merely resembles its object closely, but one that could not have arisen from anything other than the object itself. The example under discussion elsewhere in this same thread was sense perception of physical objects, not moral principles.

II. Personal Avowal (2019)

In "Making correct use of impressions," George Richards pressed Sterling on how he could know his ethical judgments were correct. Sterling's reply was a direct, first-person epistemic claim:

“G: Because I have kataleptic impressions of the principles on which the judgments are based.”

A week later, pressed further on how he identifies the right action in a given situation, he repeated and extended the claim:

“G: I look at the likely effects of each action, and consider which are preferred and which are dispreferred indifferents. I also consider whether I have any role-duties that are relevant to the situation. Deciding the right thing to do is virtually always simple. (And my simplistic earlier answer plugs in here—I have kataleptic impressions of the truth of propositions about preferredness and duties.)”

These are not third-person descriptions of Stoic doctrine. Sterling states, of himself, that he possesses kataleptic impressions of foundational principles — direct grasp, not mediated claim — and that this grasp is what grounds his confidence in particular ethical judgments. This is an application of the kataleptic-impression category to the moral domain, not evidence that the category is defined by that domain.

III. The Greek Term and Its Locus

The term is phantasia kataleptike (φαντασια καταληπτικη). Its occurrence in Epictetus is Discourses 3.8.4, identified in the archive in a 2009 exchange with Jan Garrett, with the Greek quoted directly from the text.

IV. Corpus Significance

Set against the corpus's general claim — that the agent recognizes the impression as an impression, a claim about reality and not reality itself — Sterling's primary-source language shows that claim was never meant to be exceptionless. The gap he describes in 2015 is real and structural for impressions generally. But the kataleptic impression is his named exception: the one impression-type that is, by definition, not a claim that could fail to correspond, because it could not have arisen from anything but the object itself. His 2019 avowals show he takes this to be operative in his own case regarding foundational moral principles — but that is one instance of the category, not its boundary.

V. Scope: Kataleptic Impression Is Not Defined by Moral Content

Not every kataleptic impression is a fundamental moral principle. The category is structural — defined by the relation between impression and object, not by subject matter — and the corpus's own epistemology-restoration material states its scope explicitly: kataleptic impressions cover perceptual facts, logical relationships, and basic principles as three distinct instances of the same structure. The 2015 archive exchange bears this out directly: the worked example under dispute was ordinary sense perception (ripe apple versus wax replica, in the wider scholarly literature Sterling was drawing on), not ethics.

Three known instances, then, not one:

  • Ordinary sense perception under ideal conditions — the classical case, and the one Sterling and Malcolm were actually discussing in 2015.
  • Logical and mathematical relations — that a valid conclusion follows, that a proof holds.
  • Foundational moral principles — Sterling's 2019 usage, and the instance C3/ethical intuitionism specifically needs.

An open question, not resolved in the archive material reviewed so far: how far Sterling extends the category beyond perception into logical/rational content, and whether he treats all three instances as structurally identical or draws distinctions among them. This is flagged for further archive review rather than settled here.


Sources

  • International Stoic Forum (Yahoo Groups era), “Kataleptic Impressions,” message dated December 23, 2015. Author: Grant C. Sterling.
  • International Stoic Forum (Yahoo Groups era), “Making correct use of impressions,” messages dated August 19, 2019 and August 26, 2019. Author: Grant C. Sterling.
  • International Stoic Forum (Yahoo Groups era), “Epictetus' Kataleptike fantasia,” message dated March 31, 2009. Greek citation to Epictetus, Discourses 3.8.4.

Preserved by Dave Kelly, 2026.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.