Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

The Correct Use of Impressions: Inner Discourse and the Three Topoi

 

The Correct Use of Impressions: Inner Discourse and the Three Topoi

A Complete Account

Draft for editing. All seven sections present. Nothing cut. Text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling; Keith Seddon, Epictetus’ Handbook and the Tablet of Cebes (Routledge, 2006), pp. 13–20, 1134; Pierre Hadot, The Inner Citadel (Harvard University Press, 1998); Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, “Epictetus” (Fall 2025 Edition). Prose rendering: Claude.


I. The Philosophical Foundation

Three foundational claims structure Sterling’s reconstruction of Stoic practice. The first: certain things are in our control and certain things are not, and this distinction is the governing fact of practical life. What is in our control is the activity of our rational faculty — our judgments, our assents, our impulses, our desires and aversions. What is not in our control is everything else: the body, reputation, property, the behavior of others, the outcomes of our actions, all events in the external world. The second: only virtue is genuinely good; only vice is genuinely evil; everything else — health, wealth, relationships, achievement, pleasure, even life itself — is an indifferent, appropriate to pursue where rational but not to be mistaken for a genuine good or genuine evil. The third: right assent — the correct governance of one’s own judgments — guarantees eudaimonia. The flourishing life is not contingent on external conditions but on the quality of one’s own rational engagement with what arrives.

These three foundational claims are not merely practical maxims. Each requires specific philosophical commitments to be coherent. The first requires substance dualism — the rational faculty must be genuinely distinct from the body and its conditions — and libertarian free will — the act of assent must be the agent’s genuine first cause, not a determined output of prior conditions. The second requires moral realism — there must be objective facts about what is genuinely good and evil, independent of preference or cultural formation — and correspondence theory of truth — the claim that an external is a genuine good must be assessable as true or false by reference to how things morally are. The third requires ethical intuitionism — the rational faculty must have direct apprehensive access to those moral facts — and foundationalism — the correction procedure must terminate in self-evident first principles rather than generating an infinite regress. These six commitments are the philosophical skeleton of Stoic practice. Remove any one and the structure collapses.

Within this structure, one operation is central to everything else: the assent to impressions. An impression (phantasia) is what is impressed into the mind by any of the senses, in a way directly analogous to a signet ring imprinting its image into wax. To have an experience of anything is at one and the same time to have an impression of something. The interpretive faculty takes the agent from having an impression of something to having an impression that something is the case — from awareness to propositional belief. As Seddon states: “The content of this second stage can always be expressed in terms of a proposition.” This propositional content is what the agent assents to.

There are two distinct stages of assent and the distinction is load-bearing for everything that follows. The first stage is factual: the agent assents to what the impression represents as being the case. I see my jacket on the mat; I assent to the proposition that my jacket is on the mat. This assent can be correct or incorrect at the purely factual level. The second stage is evaluative: the agent assents to whether what he takes to be the case is good or bad. The jacket is on the mat — is this bad? This second assent is where the false value judgment is formed or refused. As Seddon writes, it is this second type of assent that most interests Epictetus, and it is this second assent that the entire practical program of Stoicism is organized around governing correctly.

Sterling states the governing claim with maximum force: the only thing that distinguishes the sage from the non-sage is the correctness of the second assent. The sage assents only to true evaluative propositions. The prokoptōn is working toward this through training. Everyone else assents to false evaluative propositions automatically and without examination, generating disturbance from within rather than receiving it from without.


II. The Three Topoi and Their Architecture

Epictetus organized the practical program of Stoicism into three topoi — fields of study and practice. He states them in Discourses 3.2.1–2: the first concerns desires and aversions; the second concerns impulses to act and not to act and appropriate behavior; the third concerns freedom from deception and hasty judgment, and whatever is connected with assent.

The three are not three equal disciplines running in parallel. They have an internal architecture. The Discipline of Desire is explicitly identified by Epictetus as “the principle, and most urgent” (Discourses 3.2.3) — because the passions, which are the source of all disturbances, arise from nothing other than the disappointment of desires and the incurring of aversions that should never have been formed. Get the desires right and the emotional life corrects itself. The Discipline of Action is second: having governed desire, the agent now acts correctly within his social roles and relationships. And the Discipline of Assent, though presented as the third in Epictetus’s list, is not a third practice alongside the other two but, as Epictetus himself states, what “concerns the security of the other two” (Discourses 3.2.5). If the evaluative second assent is faulty, desire is corrupted at its root — the agent desires indifferents as though they were genuine goods — and action is corrupted at its source — the agent acts from faulty evaluations of what the situation is and what it requires.

Pierre Hadot drew from this the governing claim: if the Discipline of Assent is the method through which both the Discipline of Desire and the Discipline of Action operate, then the practice of philosophy as a way of life consists of exactly two things: governing what one desires and governing how one acts. The Discipline of Assent is the how; the other two are the what. This collapses the three topoi into two phases of a single continuous practice, with one governing method — the correct use of impressions through inner discourse — applied across both phases.

The ordering of the two phases matters. The Discipline of Desire always comes first because it addresses the foundational false value judgment — the evaluative second assent that assigns genuine-good status to an indifferent. This is the root error. If the agent correctly refuses the evaluative impression that an indifferent is genuinely good or evil, the desire for that indifferent does not arise, the action aimed at securing it is not generated, and the Discipline of Action has nothing false to correct. Get the first phase right and the second follows correctly. Attempt the second phase while leaving the first uncorrected and the agent is redirecting behavioral outputs while the false value judgments generating those outputs remain in place.

This is precisely the level difference between Glasser’s Choice Theory and the Stoic framework. Glasser’s WDEP procedure operates at the level of the Discipline of Action — redirecting Total Behavior once a behavioral event is underway. The Stoic framework operates at the level of the Discipline of Desire — addressing the evaluative second assent that generates the desire that drives the behavioral event. Both are genuine and effective within their scope. They are consecutive interventions at different levels of the same structure, not competitors.


III. Prosochē

Before the disciplines can operate, a prior condition must be in place: the structural gap between the impression’s arrival and the evaluative assent must be maintained. This is prosochē — attention, vigilance, watchfulness. Its Greek root, proséchō, means to attend to, to hold toward, to apply oneself to. Philosophically, Pierre Hadot characterized it as “a fundamental attitude of continuous attention, which means constant tension and consciousness, as well as vigilance exercised at every moment.”

Prosochē is not one practice among the three disciplines. It is the foundational attitude that makes the disciplines possible. Christopher Fisher states this directly: prosochē is the necessary foundation upon which the Stoic disciplines rely. Without it, impressions slide directly to assent — the evaluative judgment is made automatically, without examination, and the disciplines have no purchase. With it, every impression becomes an occasion for the correct use of impressions.

What prosochē specifically attends to is threefold. First, present impressions as they arrive — particularly their evaluative dimension, the value claim embedded in the impression before the agent has had occasion to examine it. Second, present desires and aversions — the impulses that arise when evaluative assents have been made, correct or incorrect. Third, present actions — the behavioral outputs that follow from assented impressions and formed desires. Epictetus compared the practice to a guard at the gates: impressions come knocking, but not every visitor deserves entry. Prosochē is the guard. The correct use of impressions is what the guard performs.

Prosochē is distinct from the correct use of impressions itself. Prosochē is the vigilance that maintains the pause; the correct use of impressions — chrēsis tōn phantasiōn — is the operation that occurs within the pause. The one is the posture; the other is what the posture enables.

When prosochē succeeds, the impression is caught before the evaluative second assent can complete itself automatically. The agent examines the impression. If the impression carries a false value claim — if it presents an indifferent as a genuine good or evil — the agent refuses assent. Nothing follows. No false desire arises. No disturbance results. This is the ideal operation of the entire Stoic practical program.

When prosochē fails — when the structural gap is not maintained and assent to the false evaluative impression has completed itself before examination can occur — pathos has been produced. Sterling’s reading of Epictetus’s Enchiridion 1.5, grounded in the framework’s value theory, is unambiguous: any disturbance of any degree is pathos. Not because it is dramatic or intense, but because any disturbance was produced by a false evaluative assent, and that is the full Stoic definition of pathos. The mild irritation, the faint anxiety, the slight disappointment — each is pathos in the complete sense if it was produced by a false value judgment. Intensity is not what classifies the experience. Causal origin is what classifies it.

This binary character of pathos is the most important point that the popular Stoic literature consistently softens. The literature tends to treat progress as the reduction of the frequency and intensity of false assents — implying that a mild disturbance represents partial success of prosochē. Sterling’s framework forecloses this. Mild disturbance is not partial success. It is a failure of prosochē that produced mild pathos rather than severe pathos. Progress consists in the decreasing frequency of prosochē’s failures, not in the acceptable residual level of disturbance.

Epictetus’s warning about relaxing attention is precise: “When you relax your attention for a while, do not fancy you will recover it whenever you please; but remember this, that because of your fault of today your affairs must necessarily be in a worse condition in future occasions” (Discourses 4.12.1). The failure of prosochē is not merely an episode. It establishes a worse condition for the next encounter with the same class of impression, because the pattern of automatic evaluative assent is reinforced by each failure.


IV. Chrēsis Tōn Phantasiōn — The Correct Use of Impressions

The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy’s entry on Epictetus identifies the two governing concepts of his philosophy as prohairesis — the rational faculty, the moral character, the will — and chrēsis tōn phantasiōn, the correct use of impressions. These are not two separate concerns. The correct use of impressions is what the rational faculty does; prohairesis is what does it. The two concepts name the same reality from different angles: the agent and the agent’s governing activity.

What distinguishes human beings from other animals is precisely the capacity for the correct use of impressions. Animals and humans both receive impressions and both behave in accordance with them. But human beings can do something animals cannot: step back from the impression and examine it. The rational faculty has the capacity of assent — the capacity to say yes or no to the proposition the impression presents, rather than simply being driven by the impression toward automatic response. This capacity is what makes the correct use of impressions possible as a practice rather than merely as a biological event.

Epictetus identifies four types of impressions in Discourses 1.27.1: things are and appear so; things are not and do not appear to be; things are but do not appear to be; things are not but appear to be. The first two are correct impressions at the factual level. The third and fourth are false impressions at the factual level. But the value-laden impression — the impression that carries a false evaluative claim — is a specific instance of the fourth type: something that is not a genuine good or evil appearing as though it were. The correct use of impressions catches this false appearance before the evaluative second assent completes it.

Seddon’s statement of what the correct use of impressions requires is the most precise in the secondary literature: the prokoptōn must strive to stand between their awareness of mere facts — of how things stand — and their evaluations of those facts. This is the exact position prosochē maintains and the exact operation the inner discourse performs. Stand in that gap. Examine what is there. Make the evaluative second assent correctly.

The operational instruction is Enchiridion 1.5. Epictetus states it as a practice to be trained: “Make a practice of saying to every strong impression: ‘An impression is all you are, not the source of the impression.’ Then test and assess it with your criteria, but one primarily: ‘Is this something that is, or is not, in my control?’”

The instruction has three components. First: the naming move. “An impression is all you are, not the thing itself.” This creates the structural gap by establishing the categorical distinction between the representation and what it purports to represent. The impression is not the situation; it is a representation of the situation that may or may not carry a true evaluative claim. Naming it as an impression prevents the automatic slide from impression to evaluative assent.

Second: the primary test. Is this in my control or not? If the impression presents something outside the agent’s control as a genuine good or evil, it has already failed the first filter. The dichotomy of control applied to the evaluative second assent is the governing criterion of the Discipline of Desire.

Third: the practice. “Make a practice of.” This is not a philosophical position to be intellectually assented to. It is a trained activity to be performed, impression by impression, in the present moment, continuously. Seddon makes this explicit: “It is not enough simply to know philosophical principles; we must also develop the capacity to put them into practice.” Knowledge of the arguments is not the practice. Performing the examination, in the moment, on the actual impression that has arrived, is the practice.

The standard of correct assent is the phantasia kataleptikē — the grasping or apprehensive impression. The wise person assents only to impressions that are so clear and true they could not be false. For the moral domain, the kataleptic impressions are those that correspond to how things morally are as established by the foundational theorems: only virtue is genuinely good (Theorem 10); externals are neither genuinely good nor genuinely evil (Theorem 12). An impression that presents an external as a genuine good fails the kataleptic standard. It should not receive assent. The epistemological access to this standard — the direct rational apprehension of moral truth that makes the correspondence test possible — is what ethical intuitionism (C5) provides.

The additional exercise Epictetus prescribes in Discourses 2.18.24–25 extends the instruction: “In the first place, do not allow yourself to be carried away by the intensity of your impression: but say, ‘Impression, wait for me a little. Let me see what you are, and what you represent. Let me test you.’ Then, afterwards, do not allow it to draw you on by picturing what may come next… But rather, you should introduce some fair and noble impression to replace it, and banish this base and sordid one.”

Seddon’s commentary on this passage establishes the governing practical principle: in waiting, the agent needs to stick merely at the factual interpretation without progressing to a faulty evaluative interpretation. The waiting is not passive. It is the active maintenance of the gap between Stage One and Stage Two assent. The testing is the application of the Stoic value standard to the evaluative proposition the impression is presenting. The replacement impression is the formulation of the true evaluative proposition — this is an indifferent, not a genuine good or evil — that correctly describes the situation once the false evaluative addition has been refused.


V. The Inner Discourse

Pierre Hadot’s contribution to this account is the term and the concept of inner discourse. In The Inner Citadel (1992/1998) Hadot argues that Marcus Aurelius’s Meditations are not a philosophical treatise, a diary, or a collection of maxims. They are a record of inner discourse — the actual first-person speech of the rational faculty addressing itself in the moment of practice. Marcus was writing the inner discourse he needed to conduct in order to maintain prosochē and practice chrēsis tōn phantasiōn correctly. The Meditations are inner discourse made visible on the page.

Inner discourse is the specific verbal activity through which the correct use of impressions actually occurs in the moment of practice. It is not merely thinking about Stoic principles. It is speaking to oneself, in the first person, in the present tense, about the specific impression that has arrived. The discourse is inner because it is addressed to the self by the self; it is discourse because it has the propositional structure of genuine speech — subject, predicate, evaluative judgment, directive conclusion. The reason discourse rather than silent thought is required is philosophical: since impressions are cognitive and propositional — they claim that the world is a certain way — the correct response to a propositional claim is a propositional response. The agent who receives the impression “this loss is a genuine evil” is receiving a propositional claim. The correct use of that impression requires a propositional response: “This is an impression presenting an external as a genuine evil. The impression is false. The loss is a dispreferred indifferent.” This propositional response, conducted in the first person in the present moment, is inner discourse.

Seddon provides the most complete explicit account of the inner dialogue in the secondary literature, at pages 113–114 of Epictetus’ Handbook and the Tablet of Cebes. He distinguishes the normal two-phase inner discourse from the corrective inner discourse that operates when prosochē has already failed.

The normal inner discourse runs as follows. Phase One — the Discipline of Desire:

“Now, what has happened here?” — the factual first assent. What is actually the case, stripped of evaluative addition.

“Ah yes, this is not in my power and is nothing to me.” — the evaluative second assent made correctly. The Discipline of Desire operating through inner discourse. Foundation Two stated in the first person: only virtue is genuinely good; this external is an indifferent.

Phase Two — the Discipline of Action:

“How then should I respond?” — the transition from evaluated situation to appropriate action.

“In my role as such-and-such, I shall be acting virtuously in accordance with nature if I do this.” — the correct action proposition. Role identification, appropriate object of aim, reserve clause implied. Foundation One and Foundation Three in the first person.

The corrective inner discourse runs when prosochē has failed and pathos has already been produced. Seddon:

“Now, I appear to be experiencing a pathos.” — the signal noticed. Any disturbance of any degree is this signal.

“Yes, stop everything and think: this is because I have assented wrongly to an impression.” — the diagnosis. The pathos is traced to its cause: a false evaluative second assent has occurred.

“The best course then is to go back to the offending impression and judge it correctly.” — Sterling’s Section 7 sub-step (b): do not compound the failure. Return to the source impression and apply the correct evaluative assent retrospectively.

“Does it concern something external? Yes. Then it is nothing to me.” — the correct evaluative second assent made retrospectively. Sub-step (c): formulate the true proposition.

“And so forth.” — Seddon’s indication that the dialogue continues into sub-step (d): what does my role now require?

Epictetus provides the canonical form of the inner discourse applied to specific situations in Discourses 3.8.1–5:

“His son is dead. What happened? His son is dead. Nothing else? Not a thing. His ship is lost. What happened? His ship is lost. He was carried off to prison. What happened? He was carried off to prison. But the observation: ‘He has fared ill’ is an addition that each man makes on his own responsibility.”

The factual first assent: a son has died. The refusal of the false evaluative addition: this is not an evil. The correct evaluative second assent: this lies outside the sphere of moral purpose; it is an indifferent. And then the positive inner discourse on genuine good and evil: “He was grieved at all this — that lies within the sphere of the moral purpose; it is an evil. He has borne up under it manfully — that lies within the sphere of the moral purpose; it is a good.”

This final exchange is the most important. The grief is the evil — not the death, not the lost ship, not the prison. The grief is the evil because the grief is pathos produced by a false evaluative second assent: the son’s death was treated as a genuine evil when it is a dispreferred indifferent. And the bearing up is the only good — not the survival of the son, not the recovery of the ship, not the avoidance of prison. The bearing up is the rational faculty in correct operation, the prohairesis in the right condition, the only thing that can be genuinely good.

This is Foundation Two stated as inner discourse, applied to a specific situation, in the first-person voice of the agent who has learned to use impressions correctly. It is also the complete expression of Foundation Three: right assent guarantees eudaimonia. The agent who makes the correct evaluative second assent — who refuses the false addition and assents to the true proposition about the indifferent — has, in that act, guaranteed his own eudaimonia regardless of what the external situation contains.

Seneca adds the retrospective dimension in De Ira 3.36: each evening, he reviewed the day through inner discourse: “What fault of mine have I remedied today? What vice have I resisted? In what respect am I better?” This retrospective inner discourse complements the real-time discourse Epictetus prescribes. Together they form a complete temporal structure: prospective preparation before situations arise (Sterling’s sub-step c — formulate true propositions about indifferents in advance), concurrent inner discourse in the moment (the normal two-phase dialogue), and retrospective review of where attention lapsed (the evening examination). This is askēsis — training — in its complete temporal form.


VI. The Level Difference: Glasser and the Stoic Framework

The relationship between Glasser’s Choice Theory and the Stoic framework is not a relationship between alternatives. Both hold that the agent’s emotional state is the downstream consequence of something the agent is doing rather than something being done to him. Both hold that the agent has governing power over that something. Both hold that exercising that power changes the emotional state as a consequence. This is the genuine shared ground — it is substantial, and it corresponds precisely to the three foundational claims both frameworks hold in their different ways.

The difference is in where each framework locates the governing act.

Glasser locates it at the behavioral level. The agent is generating a Total Behavior — acting, thinking, feeling, physiology simultaneously. The components directly within the agent’s control are the acting and thinking. Change those, and the feeling follows. The WDEP procedure operationalizes this: what are you currently doing, is it getting you what you want, what will you do differently? The question is always about the behavioral event that is already underway.

The Stoic framework locates the governing act one level prior to the behavioral event — at the evaluative second assent. Before the behavioral event begins, before acting and thinking have been initiated, the agent has received an impression. That impression has arrived carrying an embedded evaluative claim. At the moment between the impression’s arrival and the behavioral response, the agent has made or failed to make the correct evaluative second assent. If he has made it correctly — if the inner discourse has operated and the false evaluative addition has been refused — the behavioral event that follows is generated from correct evaluation. If he has made it incorrectly — if prosochē has failed and the false evaluative addition has completed itself — the behavioral event is generated from a false value judgment, and Glasser’s procedure addresses it from there.

Glasser’s WDEP procedure catches the patient inside a behavioral event that is already running. The Stoic inner discourse catches the impression before the behavioral event is generated. These are consecutive interventions at different levels of the same structure. The Glasser intervention is appropriate and effective once a behavioral event is underway. The Stoic intervention addresses the level prior to that.

The most philosophically significant divergence is at Foundation Two. Glasser’s five basic needs — survival, love and belonging, power, freedom, and fun — are treated as genuine goods whose satisfaction constitutes flourishing. The therapeutic procedure asks: is what you are doing getting you what you want? This is the right first question. Foundation Two asks the prior question: is what you want correctly valued? Are these needs held as preferred indifferents — appropriate to pursue, appropriate to prefer, not to stake identity or equanimity on — or as genuine goods whose non-satisfaction is a genuine evil?

Glasser cannot ask this question because his framework takes the five needs as genetically encoded facts about human nature that are not subject to rational revision. The needs are given; the therapeutic work addresses how effectively the patient is pursuing them. Foundation Two does not deny that the needs are real and their pursuit rational. It asks whether the patient is holding the specific Quality World images through which he pursues those needs as preferred indifferents or as genuine goods. A patient who has learned through the WDEP procedure to pursue his Quality World images more effectively but who is still holding them as genuine goods will find that effective pursuit provides temporary relief without genuine equanimity. He will always be one loss, one disappointment, one relationship failure away from renewed disturbance, because his equanimity is hostage to the external conditions his Quality World images require.

The two frameworks are not competing. They are consecutive, addressing the same structure at different levels. Glasser’s procedure covers the behavioral event as it runs. The Stoic inner discourse covers the evaluative second assent as it forms — and, through the long-term work of askēsis, progressively alters the character of what arrives as an impression in the first place.


VII. The Long-Term Trajectory: Askēsis Toward Sophos

The correct use of impressions is not a practice that produces results through a single application. It is a lifelong askēsis — training — whose long-term effect is the progressive alteration of what impressions arrive and what evaluative claims they carry.

Sterling states this in Nine Excerpts Section 7, sub-step (a): refuse assent to impressions that depict externals as good or evil. Sub-step (b): if (a) fails, refuse assent to subsequent impressions that depict immoral responses as appropriate. Sub-step (c): consciously formulate true propositions about indifferents — do this in advance where possible, and at the time where not. Sub-step (d): formulate correct action propositions and act from them. Sub-step (e): when you have acted correctly, assent to the proposition that you have done well — then the appropriate positive feeling (eupatheia) follows. Sub-step (f): over time, the character changes such that false value impressions no longer arise in the first place. This is eudaimonia.

Sub-step (f) is the long-term trajectory of the entire program. The prokoptōn is not someone who has eliminated false impressions. He is someone who is working, impression by impression, through correct evaluative second assent, toward the condition in which false impressions no longer arise. Each correct assent weakens the corresponding false impression. Each false assent strengthens it. The cumulative effect of consistent practice, over time, is the gradual transformation of the character of experience itself — what Hadot identifies as the alteration of the agent’s relationship to what he receives from the world.

Seddon states the arc with precision: “The ability to do this perfectly is what distinguishes the Sage from the philosopher.” The sophos — the sage — is the ideal who has completed this trajectory. He no longer receives false value impressions because his prohairesis is in full correct condition; the impressions themselves have been corrected at their source. For him the inner discourse is no longer a corrective discipline but the natural mode of his rational engagement with the world. Prosochē as an effortful practice is no longer needed because the character it was training has been formed.

The prokoptōn is positioned between the layman and the sage. He has accepted the foundational conversion — the recognition that externals are not genuine goods or evils, that value lives in the rational faculty alone, that right assent is sufficient for eudaimonia. He is working toward the condition of the sage through the disciplined practice of inner discourse, the sustained maintenance of prosochē, and the gradual reduction of prosochē’s failures. Epictetus is unsparing about the difficulty and equally unsparing about the possibility: “Is it possible to be altogether faultless? No, that is impracticable. But it is possible to strive continuously not to commit faults, with the realistic hope that by never relaxing our attention, we shall escape at least a few” (Discourses 4.12.19).

The choice that presents itself to Epictetus’s student — and to every reader of this account — is the choice Seddon names directly: either to take up the practice of philosophy in its full sense, modifying and perfecting the ruling principle, governing desires and aversions, impulses, opinions, judgments, and intentions through the inner discourse; or to remain an uneducated person, applying oneself to externals, and giving up all hope for lasting and unshakable peace of mind, freedom, and serenity. This is the choice between the philosopher and the layman. It is the choice Epictetus places at the start of the Enchiridion and returns to throughout the Discourses. It is what the entire account of the correct use of impressions, the three topoi, prosochē, and the inner discourse serves to make fully visible: what the practice consists in, what it requires, and what it makes possible.


Draft for editing. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling; Keith Seddon, Epictetus’ Handbook and the Tablet of Cebes (Routledge, 2006); Pierre Hadot, The Inner Citadel (Harvard University Press, 1998); Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, “Epictetus.” Prose rendering: Claude.

Classical Presupposition Audit: A. J. Ayer

 

Classical Presupposition Audit: A. J. Ayer

Source: Published works including Language, Truth and Logic (1936), The Foundations of Empirical Knowledge (1940), The Problem of Knowledge (1956), The Central Questions of Philosophy (1973), and More of My Life (1984).

Corpus in use: CPA v1.0. The audit operates exclusively from Ayer’s own published argumentative record. Sir A. J. Ayer (1910–1989) was Wykeham Professor of Logic at Oxford University and one of the most influential British philosophers of the twentieth century. He is the philosopher who introduced logical positivism and the emotivist theory of ethics to the English-speaking world in their most precise and uncompromising form. This run examines whether Ayer’s record produces a presupposition pattern comparable to Rorty’s six Contrary findings.


Preliminary Note: Ayer’s Position and Its Specificity

Ayer is the philosopher who stated the emotivist theory of ethics most precisely and without qualification. His *Language, Truth and Logic* argued that moral statements are neither empirically verifiable nor analytically true, and therefore are literally meaningless as factual claims — they express emotional attitudes and exhort others to share them, nothing more. This is emotivism not as a cultural diagnosis (MacIntyre) or as a positive philosophical program to be embraced with equanimity (Rorty) but as a logical thesis derived from the verification principle: moral language fails the test of meaningfulness.

Ayer later softened some positions — he acknowledged in the introduction to the second edition of *Language, Truth and Logic* (1946) that the verification principle was itself difficult to state without self-refutation, and in later work he moderated his account of ethics somewhat. The governing record for this audit is his full published career, which shows a philosopher who maintained the core logical positivist commitments while acknowledging their difficulties, rather than abandoning them.

The comparison with Rorty is instructive before the audit begins. Rorty embraced the post-metaphysical condition as liberating and proposed the liberal ironist as his positive human type. Ayer arrived at similar conclusions by a different route — through logical analysis and the verification principle rather than through pragmatist anti-foundationalism — and without Rorty’s sustained positive account of how to live in the resulting philosophical landscape. Ayer was primarily a destructive logician; Rorty was a constructive ironist. The CPA will determine whether this difference in approach produces any difference in the commitment pattern.


Step 1 — Presupposition Profile

P1 — The self is not a substantial soul or distinct metaphysical entity; the concept of personal identity is analyzable in terms of continuity of experience and memory rather than the persistence of a distinct substance. Ayer’s logical positivism holds that claims about a substantial self — a soul, a Cartesian ego, a prohairesis — are metaphysical claims that fail the verification principle: they are neither empirically verifiable nor analytically true. In *The Problem of Knowledge* he analyzes personal identity in Humean terms as a bundle of experiences connected by memory and psychological continuity, with no metaphysical substance behind them. There is no self over and above the series of experiences; the appearance of a unified self is a construction from that series.

P2 — The meaningful use of language is governed by the verification principle: a statement is meaningful only if it is either analytically true or empirically verifiable; all other statements are literally meaningless. The verification principle is the governing logical standard of Ayer’s philosophy. Metaphysical claims — about God, the soul, the nature of ultimate reality, the existence of objective moral facts — fail this test. They are neither tautologies nor empirically testable propositions. They are therefore not false but meaningless — expressions of feeling or confusion rather than genuine claims about reality. This is the logical foundation from which all of Ayer’s Contrary findings on the classical commitments derive.

P3 — Moral statements are not truth-apt; they express emotional attitudes and prescribe those attitudes to others rather than describing moral facts. Ayer’s emotivism in *Language, Truth and Logic* is stated with logical precision: moral statements of the form “cruelty is wrong” do not describe a property of cruelty that makes the statement true or false. They express the speaker’s attitude of disapproval toward cruelty and exhort others to share that disapproval. To say “cruelty is wrong” is equivalent to saying “cruelty!” with a tone of disapproval — not to asserting a fact. Moral discourse is therefore not a domain of knowledge but a domain of attitude-expression.

P4 — Truth consists in correspondence to empirical facts verifiable through sense experience; claims that cannot be tested against experience are not candidates for truth or falsity. Ayer’s empiricism holds that all genuine knowledge is either analytic (true by virtue of meaning) or synthetic and empirically testable. Truth for synthetic statements consists in their correspondence to how things are as established through sense experience and scientific method. Claims about mind-independent moral facts, necessary metaphysical truths, or the structure of objective reality beyond the empirical cannot be true or false because they cannot be tested.

P5 — Moral intuitions are expressions of feeling or attitude rather than deliverances of a faculty of rational apprehension; there is no faculty by which moral truths could be directly perceived because there are no moral truths to be perceived. Ayer’s logical positivism eliminates ethical intuitionism as an epistemological position by eliminating its object. If moral statements are not truth-apt, then there is no moral truth to be apprehended. What the intuitionist calls the direct perception of moral truth is, on Ayer’s account, the experience of a strong emotional attitude being formed or expressed — not a cognitive state that can be accurate or inaccurate.

P6 — There are no self-evident necessary truths in ethics that serve as foundational first principles; the structure of moral knowledge is not hierarchical because there is no moral knowledge in the epistemically robust sense. Ayer’s verification principle eliminates foundationalism in ethics by eliminating the domain within which foundationalism could operate. If moral statements are meaningless as factual claims, there can be no self-evident moral first principles from which other moral truths are derived. There are only more or less widely shared attitudes and more or less effective means of changing them. Moral “reasoning” is at bottom a process of adjusting attitudes, not of deriving conclusions from necessary first principles.

P7 — The claims of metaphysics, theology, and any discipline that purports to describe a reality beyond the empirical are not false but literally nonsensical; philosophy’s role is the logical analysis of language rather than the investigation of metaphysical reality. Ayer’s conception of philosophy’s role is purely analytical. Philosophy does not discover new truths about the world or about a moral order beyond it. It clarifies the logical structure of language and exposes the confusions generated by metaphysical pseudo-propositions. When a philosopher claims to have discovered that substance dualism is true or that libertarian free will exists, he has not discovered anything; he has generated a statement that fails the verification principle and is therefore meaningless.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

Commitment 1 — Substance Dualism: Contrary

Ayer’s P1 and P7 together eliminate substance dualism as a meaningful philosophical position. The claim that the rational faculty is a distinct substance — categorically different from the body and prior to all external conditions — is a metaphysical claim that fails the verification principle. It is neither analytically true nor empirically testable. On Ayer’s account it is therefore not false but meaningless — a pseudo-proposition generated by the misuse of language. His Humean analysis of personal identity as a bundle of experiences with no metaphysical substance behind them directly contradicts the classical commitment’s requirement that the rational faculty be a genuine distinct substance.

The Contrary finding here is categorical rather than merely structural. Ayer does not merely fail to hold substance dualism; he has argued that substance dualism is a meaningless claim that philosophy is better off without. The verification principle is designed precisely to eliminate claims of this kind from serious philosophical discussion.

Finding: Contrary. Ayer holds that substance dualist claims are meaningless pseudo-propositions that fail the verification principle. His Humean analysis of personal identity is the positive alternative.

Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free Will: Contrary

The claim that assent is a genuine first cause — that the agent originates his judgments independently of prior causes — is a metaphysical claim about the causal structure of the world. On Ayer’s verification principle, such a claim is meaningful only if it is empirically testable. The libertarian claim — that the agent’s will introduces a genuinely new causal contribution not determined by prior physical states — is not straightforwardly testable in the empirical sense Ayer requires. In his discussions of free will Ayer adopted a compatibilist position: free action is action that is causally determined by the agent’s own desires and reasons rather than by external compulsion, not action that escapes causal determination altogether. Libertarian free will is, on his account, an incoherent notion generated by the confused picture of the will as something that could stand outside the causal order.

The Contrary finding reflects both his compatibilism and his verification-principle-based dismissal of the metaphysical picture libertarian free will requires. Genuine origination — a first cause not itself caused — is precisely the kind of metaphysical claim Ayer’s philosophy is designed to expose as meaningless.

Finding: Contrary. Ayer’s compatibilism and his verification-principle-based dismissal of metaphysical free will together eliminate libertarian origination as a meaningful philosophical position.

Commitment 3 — Moral Realism: Contrary

Ayer’s P3 is the most precise philosophical statement of the denial of moral realism available in the CPA series. Moral statements express attitudes rather than describing facts; they are not truth-apt; there are no mind-independent moral facts that could make them true or false. This is not merely a sceptical position about our access to moral facts — it is the logical claim that there are no moral facts to have access to, because moral statements are not in the business of describing facts at all.

The Contrary finding here is, like Rorty’s, a clean one with no residual tension. Unlike Singer, who wants moral realism without its epistemological supports, Ayer has no interest in preserving moral realism. He has argued that it is a confused position generated by failing to notice that moral statements are a different logical kind from factual statements.

Finding: Contrary. Ayer’s emotivist account of moral language is the most precise available philosophical argument that moral realism is a confusion. The Contrary finding is categorical and without residual tension.

Commitment 4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: Partially Aligned

This is the most interesting finding in Ayer’s audit and the one where his pattern diverges from Rorty’s. Ayer is an empirical realist about the physical world. He holds that scientific claims are genuinely true or false depending on whether they correspond to how things are as established through sense experience. His verification principle is designed to protect the domain of genuine empirical knowledge — claims that can be true or false in a correspondence sense — from contamination by meaningless metaphysical pseudo-propositions.

For factual and scientific claims, Ayer is a correspondence theorist in the functional sense: the claim is true when it accurately describes the empirical facts. His disagreement is not with correspondence theory as such but with its extension to domains — metaphysics and ethics — where he holds there are no facts to correspond to. This produces a Partially Aligned finding rather than the Contrary finding Rorty produced, because Rorty rejected correspondence theory for all domains including the empirical, while Ayer preserved it for the empirical domain while eliminating it for ethics and metaphysics.

Finding: Partially Aligned. Ayer holds correspondence theory for empirical claims. He eliminates it for moral and metaphysical claims on the grounds that those domains contain no facts to correspond to. The partial affinity is real and distinguishes him from Rorty on this commitment.

Commitment 5 — Ethical Intuitionism: Contrary

Ayer’s logical positivism eliminates ethical intuitionism by eliminating its object. If moral statements are not truth-apt, there is no moral truth for intuition to apprehend. What the intuitionist describes as the direct rational perception of moral truth is, on Ayer’s account, the experience of a strong emotional attitude — a phenomenology with no epistemic significance. He has argued directly against Moore’s and Ross’s intuitionist positions in *Language, Truth and Logic*, holding that the disagreement between intuitionists about which moral facts are self-evident is itself evidence that they are not perceiving facts at all but expressing different attitudes.

The Contrary finding is argued and precise. Ayer does not merely fail to hold ethical intuitionism; he has identified it as a philosophical confusion generated by failing to notice the logical status of moral statements.

Finding: Contrary. Ayer argues explicitly that ethical intuitionism mistakes the expression of emotional attitude for the perception of moral fact. The Contrary finding is logically grounded in the verification principle and directly argued against Moore and Ross.

Commitment 6 — Foundationalism: Contrary

Ayer’s verification principle eliminates moral foundationalism by eliminating the domain within which it would operate. There are no self-evident moral first principles from which other moral truths are derived because there are no moral truths at all in the epistemically robust sense. What passes for moral foundationalism — the claim that certain moral propositions are self-evidently true and architecturally prior to all others — is, on Ayer’s account, the expression of particularly strong and widely shared emotional attitudes, not the identification of necessary first principles.

His account of philosophical method is also anti-foundationalist in the classical sense. Philosophy does not proceed from self-evident first principles; it proceeds by logical analysis of language, exposing the confusions generated by pseudo-propositions. The foundationalist picture of knowledge as a hierarchical structure resting on certain foundations is, for Ayer, itself a picture to be dissolved rather than a model to be emulated.

Finding: Contrary. Ayer eliminates moral foundationalism by eliminating the moral domain within which it would operate. His verification-principle-based account of philosophical method is anti-foundationalist in structure.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

Commitment 1: Contrary. Commitment 2: Contrary.

Finding: Full Dissolution.

Ayer’s dissolution of the prohairesis is logically derived from the verification principle rather than culturally diagnosed (MacIntyre) or pragmatically embraced (Rorty). The verification principle eliminates as meaningless all claims about the substantial self, libertarian free will, objective moral facts, and necessary foundational truths. The prohairesis — the rational faculty that is a genuine distinct substance, capable of originating assent, capable of directly apprehending moral truth, governed by necessary first principles — fails the verification test at every point. Not because it is false but because the claim that it exists cannot be verified empirically or established analytically.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Commitment Pattern

Substance Dualism: Contrary. Libertarian Free Will: Contrary. Moral Realism: Contrary. Correspondence Theory: Partially Aligned. Ethical Intuitionism: Contrary. Foundationalism: Contrary.

Five Contrary findings. One Partially Aligned. Zero Aligned. Zero Inconsistent. Zero Non-Operative.

Dissolution: Full.

The Ayer Pattern and the Rorty Comparison

Ayer produces five Contrary findings and one Partially Aligned — matching Becker as the second most divergent pattern in the series, behind Rorty’s six Contrary findings. The single Partially Aligned finding on C4 is what separates Ayer from the full emotivist profile. He preserves correspondence theory for empirical claims in a way Rorty does not. This is not a minor difference: Ayer’s entire philosophical program depends on preserving a domain of genuine factual knowledge — empirical science — whose claims are truth-apt in a correspondence sense. The verification principle is designed to protect that domain, not to dissolve it. Rorty’s pragmatism dissolves the empirical/metaphysical distinction that Ayer’s verification principle depends on.

The difference between Ayer and Rorty on C4 reflects a genuine philosophical disagreement between logical positivism and pragmatism. Ayer holds that there are facts — empirical facts — to which our beliefs must correspond in order to count as knowledge. Rorty holds that even this distinction is a residue of the misleading picture of the mind as a mirror of nature. Ayer would have regarded Rorty’s dissolution of the empirical/metaphysical distinction as a philosophical error. Rorty would have regarded Ayer’s preservation of correspondence theory for empirical claims as an unstable halfway house.

Ayer as the Logical Positivist Emotivist

Ayer and Rorty are the two figures in the CPA series who come closest to the full emotivist profile. They arrive there by different philosophical routes — logical analysis through the verification principle versus pragmatist anti-foundationalism — and they diverge on C4 as a result. Ayer is the emotivist by logical derivation: moral statements fail the verification test, therefore they are not truth-apt, therefore there are no moral facts, therefore moral discourse is attitude-expression. Rorty is the emotivist by philosophical program: he has read the tradition, understood what it was attempting, concluded that it failed, and proposed a positive account of how to live without it.

Both produce Full Dissolution. The prohairesis — the rational faculty as a genuine distinct substance, capable of originating assent, capable of directly apprehending moral truth — is eliminated in both cases. In Ayer’s case it is eliminated as a meaningless pseudo-proposition. In Rorty’s case it is eliminated as a philosophical fiction generated by the misleading picture of the mind as a mirror of nature. The method of elimination differs. The result is the same.


Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.

Classical Presupposition Audit: Stanley Fish

 

Classical Presupposition Audit: Stanley Fish

Source: Published works including Is There a Text in This Class? (1980), Doing What Comes Naturally (1989), There’s No Such Thing as Free Speech (1994), The Trouble with Principle (1999), Save the World on Your Own Time (2008), and Winning Arguments (2016).

Corpus in use: CPA v1.0. The audit operates exclusively from Fish’s own published argumentative record. Stanley Fish (b. 1938) is Davidson-Kahn Distinguished University Professor Emeritus at Florida International University, formerly Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He is a literary theorist and legal scholar whose anti-foundationalist, interpretive community theory constitutes one of the most sustained and self-aware philosophical programs in academic humanities. This run examines whether Fish’s record produces a presupposition pattern comparable to Rorty’s or Ayer’s.


Preliminary Note: Fish’s Position and Its Domain

Stanley Fish presents a unique CPA subject because his anti-foundationalism is domain-specific in a way that complicates the audit. Unlike Ayer, whose verification principle was designed as a universal philosophical standard, or Rorty, whose pragmatism was explicitly presented as a comprehensive philosophical position, Fish operates primarily in the domains of literary theory and legal philosophy. His anti-foundationalism is developed in those domains and resists extension into general philosophical claims — Fish has argued explicitly that he is not making universal epistemological claims but describing how interpretation actually works.

This self-limitation is philosophically significant for the CPA. Fish’s position produces an interesting challenge: he holds anti-foundationalist and anti-realist positions within his domains of practice while explicitly resisting the move to general philosophical conclusions. He is, by his own account, not a philosopher but a practitioner of interpretive theory. The CPA must audit what his record requires at the level of embedded presupposition, not merely what he claims to be doing.

Fish’s comparison with Rorty is the most instructive preliminary. Rorty admired Fish and saw him as a fellow traveler in pragmatist anti-foundationalism. Fish acknowledged the affinity but resisted the label, arguing that his position does not commit him to any general philosophical thesis. The CPA will determine whether this self-described limitation holds at the presupposition level.


Step 1 — Presupposition Profile

P1 — The self is always already constituted by its membership in interpretive communities; there is no pre-interpretive self that stands behind its community membership and evaluates it from outside. Fish’s account of interpretation in Is There a Text in This Class? holds that readers do not bring pre-formed selves to texts; they bring the interpretive strategies of the communities they belong to. The self that interprets is already constituted by those strategies — by the assumptions, methods, and values that membership in a particular interpretive community instills. There is no pre-interpretive standpoint from which one could evaluate one’s community’s strategies from outside. The self is always already a community-constituted interpreter.

P2 — There is no neutral or algorithmic method for adjudicating between competing interpretations or principles; all such adjudication is itself a practice governed by community standards that are not themselves neutrally justifiable. Fish’s anti-foundationalism holds that the appeal to neutral principles, objective methods, or universal standards is always a rhetorical move within a practice rather than a genuine appeal to something outside all practices. When a judge appeals to the plain meaning of a text, or a literary critic appeals to the intention of the author, or a philosopher appeals to self-evident first principles, he is not accessing a neutral standpoint; he is deploying a strategy that is itself the product of his community’s practices and that will be persuasive only to those who already share those practices.

P3 — Moral and political claims have no objective foundation; they are the expressions of community values and the products of rhetorical persuasion rather than the conclusions of principled reasoning from neutral first principles. The Trouble with Principle argues that the appeal to neutral principles in law and politics is always a move that smuggles in contested substantive commitments under cover of apparent neutrality. Principles do not constrain practice; they are the products of practice and are interpreted in accordance with the values of the community that deploys them. There is no neutral moral or political principle that stands outside all communities and adjudicates between them.

P4 — Texts have no meanings independent of the interpretive communities that read them; meaning is always produced by interpretation rather than discovered in texts. Fish’s reader-response theory holds that the meaning of a text is not a property of the text itself that competent readers discover. It is produced by readers whose interpretive strategies are the product of their community membership. Different interpretive communities produce different meanings from the same text, and there is no text-independent standard by which to adjudicate between them. This applies to legal texts, literary texts, and constitutional documents equally.

P5 — Moral intuitions are community-specific responses produced by enculturation rather than deliverances of a faculty of direct rational apprehension; what feels self-evident to one community is the product of that community’s particular formation. Fish’s interpretive community theory implies that what appears to be the direct perception of moral or interpretive truth is always the result of community formation. The literary critic who finds the New Critical reading of a poem self-evidently correct, the lawyer who finds the originalist reading of the Constitution self-evidently required, the moralist who finds a particular action self-evidently wrong — all are experiencing the products of their community’s interpretive formation as though they were perceiving facts. They are not.

P6 — There are no foundational principles in interpretation, law, or ethics that are genuinely prior to and independent of the practices and communities within which they operate. Fish’s anti-foundationalism is the organizing principle of his entire intellectual career. He has argued against foundationalism in literary theory (against the idea that there are correct interpretive methods discoverable by neutral inquiry), in legal theory (against the idea that there are determinate legal meanings that constrain judicial decision), and in political philosophy (against the idea that there are neutral principles of justice or free speech that stand outside political contestation). In every domain the conclusion is the same: what appears to be a foundation is always already a product of the practice it purports to ground.

P7 — The recognition that there are no neutral foundations does not produce paralysis or relativism; it describes how practice actually works, and practice continues regardless of whether foundationalist justification is available. Fish has argued — against critics who accuse his anti-foundationalism of producing relativism or nihilism — that the absence of neutral foundations does not change anything about how we actually live and argue and decide. We continue to make judgments, hold commitments, and argue for positions. We do this not because we have neutral foundations but because we are embedded in practices that make certain moves natural, compelling, and “obviously correct” to those within them. Anti-foundationalism is a description of this condition, not a prescription for abandoning it.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

Commitment 1 — Substance Dualism: Contrary

Fish’s P1 directly contradicts substance dualism’s requirement that the rational faculty be categorically prior to all external conditions including community membership, interpretive formation, and cultural embedding. His account holds that the self is always already constituted by its community membership — there is no pre-interpretive self that stands behind its formation and evaluates it from outside. The prohairesis as a rational faculty categorically prior to all external conditions — capable of examining its community’s interpretive strategies and finding some of them false — is precisely what Fish denies. The self that would do this examining is already constituted by the strategies it would examine.

Fish’s self-limitation — his claim that he is not making a general philosophical claim about the self but only describing interpretive practice — does not rescue the finding. His description of how interpretation works requires that there be no pre-interpretive self available to govern assent from a position of categorical independence. That is a presupposition about the self, not merely about texts.

Finding: Contrary. Fish’s interpretive community theory requires that the self be constituted by its community membership with no pre-interpretive rational faculty standing prior to and independent of that membership.

Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free Will: Contrary

Libertarian free will requires that the agent originate his judgments from a position not determined by prior causes. Fish’s P2 eliminates this. All judgment is governed by community standards that the judging agent did not choose and cannot evaluate from outside. The judge who decides a case, the critic who interprets a poem, the moral agent who responds to a situation — all are producing outputs governed by their community formation rather than originating responses from a position of genuine first causation.

Fish’s P7 confirms the Contrary finding. His argument that anti-foundationalism does not change anything about practice explicitly denies that the recognition of one’s community-constituted situation enables the kind of self-governance libertarian free will requires. One continues to judge as one’s community formation determines; the absence of neutral foundations does not open a space in which genuine originating agency could operate.

Finding: Contrary. Fish’s account of community-constituted judgment eliminates the possibility of genuine originating agency over one’s interpretive and moral responses. The recognition of one’s community-constituted situation does not enable the self-governance libertarian free will requires.

Commitment 3 — Moral Realism: Contrary

Fish’s P3 is the explicit denial of moral realism for the domain of law and political philosophy. Moral and political claims have no objective foundation; they are community expressions and rhetorical productions rather than conclusions of principled reasoning from neutral first principles. The Trouble with Principle is the most sustained argument in his record for this position: neutral principles in ethics and politics are always contested substantive commitments dressed in the language of neutrality.

Fish does not argue directly for a general metaphysical anti-realism about moral facts in the way Ayer does. His anti-realism is practically motivated — derived from his account of how arguments actually work in legal and political contexts rather than from a logical analysis of moral language. But the presupposition his account requires is the same: there are no mind-independent moral facts that principled reasoning could access. The Contrary finding is produced by what his account requires, not merely by what he explicitly claims.

Finding: Contrary. Fish’s account of moral and political argument requires that there be no neutral moral facts accessible through principled reasoning. His practical anti-foundationalism presupposes moral anti-realism even where he does not argue for it in general philosophical terms.

Commitment 4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: Contrary

Fish’s P4 eliminates correspondence theory for the domains he addresses. Texts have no meanings independent of the interpretive communities that read them; meaning is produced by interpretation rather than discovered in texts. If this account is correct, then there is no text-independent fact to which a correct interpretation could correspond. The claim that an interpretation is true because it corresponds to what the text means is, on Fish’s account, the claim that it corresponds to what the text means to a particular interpretive community — not to a meaning the text has independently of any community.

This produces a Contrary finding on C4 that distinguishes Fish from Ayer. Ayer preserved correspondence theory for empirical claims while eliminating it for moral and metaphysical ones. Fish’s account of textual meaning eliminates correspondence theory for the domain of interpretation — which includes legal interpretation, moral interpretation, and all other forms of reading practice — without preserving a clearly demarcated empirical domain where correspondence theory operates unquestioned. His self-limitation to interpretive practice does not rescue correspondence theory because interpretation pervades all the domains he addresses.

Finding: Contrary. Fish’s account of meaning as community-produced rather than text-independent eliminates correspondence theory for all domains of interpretation. Unlike Ayer, he does not preserve a clearly demarcated empirical domain where correspondence theory operates.

Commitment 5 — Ethical Intuitionism: Contrary

Fish’s P5 eliminates ethical intuitionism by identifying what appears to be the direct rational apprehension of moral truth as the experience of community formation felt from the inside. The moral response that seems self-evident — the judgment that something is obviously wrong or obviously required — is the product of enculturation into a community whose values have become so deeply internalized that they feel like perceptions of fact rather than products of formation.

This is a sociological deflation of ethical intuitionism rather than a logical refutation in Ayer’s style. Ayer argued that moral intuitions cannot be deliverances of rational apprehension because there are no moral facts to apprehend. Fish argues that moral intuitions are community-specific products of formation that feel like perceptions but are not. The conclusion is the same: ethical intuitionism mistakes the phenomenology of strong communal formation for the epistemology of rational apprehension.

Finding: Contrary. Fish’s interpretive community theory deflates ethical intuitionism by identifying apparent moral perception as the experience of community formation felt from the inside. The Contrary finding is produced by the sociological account rather than by logical refutation.

Commitment 6 — Foundationalism: Contrary

Anti-foundationalism is the most explicit and sustained commitment of Fish’s entire intellectual career. He has argued against foundationalism in every domain he has addressed — literary theory, legal theory, political philosophy, academic freedom — over more than four decades. His argument is always the same in structure: what appears to be a foundation is always already a product of the practice it purports to ground. The appeal to self-evident first principles, neutral methods, or objective standards is always a move within a practice that is compelling only to those who already share the practice’s commitments.

The Contrary finding here is the most explicit and least qualified in the audit. Fish does not merely fail to hold foundationalism; he has made the critique of foundationalism the organizing principle of his intellectual life.

Finding: Contrary. Anti-foundationalism is the explicit and sustained organizing commitment of Fish’s entire published record. He has argued against foundationalism in every domain he has addressed over four decades.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

Commitment 1: Contrary. Commitment 2: Contrary.

Finding: Full Dissolution.

Fish’s dissolution of the prohairesis is the most sociologically specific in the series. It is not logical (Ayer’s verification principle), not pragmatist (Rorty’s neo-pragmatism), but interpretive-communitarian: the self that would govern its own assents from a position of categorical independence is always already constituted by the interpretive community whose formation it would have to transcend in order to do so. The transcendence is unavailable. The prohairesis is dissolved into the community before it can exercise the categorical independence the classical commitment requires.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Commitment Pattern

Substance Dualism: Contrary. Libertarian Free Will: Contrary. Moral Realism: Contrary. Correspondence Theory: Contrary. Ethical Intuitionism: Contrary. Foundationalism: Contrary.

Six Contrary findings. Zero Partially Aligned. Zero Aligned. Zero Inconsistent. Zero Non-Operative.

Dissolution: Full.

The Fish Pattern and the Rorty Comparison

Fish produces six Contrary findings — matching Rorty and the CIA run on emotivism. He joins Rorty as the only individual figures in the CPA series to produce the full emotivist pattern. The difference from Rorty is in the philosophical route and the domain of application. Rorty produced six Contrary findings through comprehensive neo-pragmatist philosophy explicitly offered as a general account of knowledge, truth, and the self. Fish produces six Contrary findings through domain-specific interpretive community theory that he explicitly resists extending to general philosophical conclusions.

This difference matters philosophically even where the finding is the same. Rorty embraced the consequences of his position for the self and proposed the liberal ironist as his positive human type. Fish explicitly resists drawing consequences for the self, arguing that his anti-foundationalism is a description of interpretive practice rather than a prescription for how to understand oneself. Fish’s P7 — the argument that anti-foundationalism changes nothing about practice — is his attempt to insulate his position from the personal consequences Rorty drew from a similar starting point.

The CPA finding is that this insulation does not hold at the presupposition level. Fish’s account of the community-constituted self, the unavailability of pre-interpretive standpoints, and the community-specificity of moral intuitions together require a self-description that dissolves the prohairesis as thoroughly as Rorty’s does. His claim that this changes nothing about practice is itself a position within a practice — one more move governed by his community formation rather than a view from outside.

The Ayer-Fish-Rorty Triad

The three figures nominated as emotivist CPA candidates produce a revealing pattern. All three produce Full Dissolution. Their commitment profiles are: Rorty, six Contrary; Fish, six Contrary; Ayer, five Contrary and one Partially Aligned on C4.

The single difference — Ayer’s Partially Aligned on C4 — reflects the only genuine philosophical disagreement among the three on the classical commitments. Ayer preserves correspondence theory for empirical science because his verification principle is designed to protect the domain of genuine empirical knowledge from metaphysical contamination. Rorty dissolves this distinction by arguing that even the empirical/metaphysical border is a product of the picture of the mind as a mirror of nature that pragmatism abandons. Fish dissolves it through the domain-pervasiveness of interpretive community theory: all knowledge claims are interpretations produced by communities, including scientific ones.

The three routes — logical positivism, neo-pragmatism, interpretive community theory — converge on the same result: Full Dissolution of the prohairesis, no residual philosophical space within which the classical program of self-governance through correct assent could operate. The CPA series has now identified three individual figures whose records fully instantiate the six Contrary emotivist pattern: Rorty, Fish, and nearly Ayer. Together they represent the dominant philosophical traditions through which the emotivist cultural condition MacIntyre diagnosed has been given explicit philosophical articulation.


Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.

The Reader Who Is Prior to His Community: Toward a Sterling Theory of Interpretation

 

The Reader Who Is Prior to His Community: Toward a Sterling Theory of Interpretation

Stanley Fish’s interpretive community theory is the most sophisticated philosophical account of reading available in contemporary literary and legal theory. It is also, from the standpoint of the six classical commitments, a dissolution of the reader before he can read. This essay develops the counter-position: a theory of interpretation grounded in Sterling’s Stoic framework that affirms what Fish denies at every load-bearing point, and that produces a positive account of what correct reading requires and what it makes possible.

The essay proceeds in four movements. The first states Fish’s central claims in their philosophical structure. The second identifies the six-commitment counter at each point. The third develops the positive account — what a Sterling theory of interpretation actually holds. The fourth considers the practical implications for how one reads, what one aims at in reading, and how one holds the activity of interpretation in relation to one’s own flourishing.


I. Fish’s Central Claims and Their Philosophical Structure

Fish’s argument is elegant and internally consistent. It begins with an observation about reading practice and derives from it a series of conclusions about the self, about meaning, and about the possibility of neutral adjudication between competing interpretations.

The observation is this: readers do not encounter texts as blank slates. They bring to every text a set of interpretive strategies — assumptions about what kind of thing a text is, what counts as evidence for a reading, what the relevant context is, what questions are worth asking. These strategies are not individually chosen; they are acquired through membership in interpretive communities — academic disciplines, legal traditions, religious bodies, professional guilds — that have developed shared methods and shared standards over time. The reader who seems to be simply reading the text and finding its meaning there is actually deploying community-formed strategies that produce the meaning he finds. Meaning is made, not found.

From this observation Fish derives three conclusions that are philosophically load-bearing.

The first conclusion is about the self. There is no pre-interpretive reader who stands behind his community formation and can evaluate it from outside. The self that reads is the self that has been formed by its interpretive community. To step outside that formation would require a standpoint that is unavailable — there is no pre-interpretive self to step to.

The second conclusion is about meaning. Texts have no meanings independent of the interpretive communities that read them. The text does not contain its meaning waiting to be extracted by the correct method; meaning is always produced by interpretation, and different communities will produce different meanings from the same text with no common standard by which to adjudicate between them.

The third conclusion is about adjudication. When interpretive communities disagree about what a text means, there is no neutral method by which the disagreement can be resolved. Appeals to the author’s intention, the plain meaning of the words, the historical context, the logical implications of the text — all of these are themselves community-specific interpretive strategies that will be compelling only to those who already share the community that deploys them.

Fish holds, against critics who accuse him of relativism, that this account changes nothing about practice. We continue to read, to argue, to persuade, to reach conclusions. We do this not because we have access to neutral foundations but because we are embedded in practices that make certain moves natural and compelling from the inside. Anti-foundationalism is a description of this condition, not a prescription for abandoning the practice.

The philosophical structure of Fish’s position is now visible. It requires: a self constituted by its community formation with no prior rational faculty available to evaluate that formation (C1 Contrary); a mode of judgment that is the output of community formation rather than the origination of a self-governing rational agent (C2 Contrary); the absence of mind-independent textual facts to which correct interpretations could correspond (C3, C4 Contrary); the identification of apparent perceptions of textual meaning as the experience of community formation felt from the inside (C5 Contrary); and the elimination of foundational interpretive principles as products of the practices they purport to ground (C6 Contrary). This is the full emotivist pattern applied to the domain of reading — six Contrary findings, Full Dissolution of the reader as a rational agent capable of correct apprehension of textual fact.


II. The Six-Commitment Counter

The counter to Fish is not one argument but six, corresponding to the six classical commitments his position requires denying. Each counter is logically independent. Together they constitute a comprehensive alternative framework.

Against the community-constituted self: Substance Dualism (C1)

Fish requires that the reading self be constituted by its community formation — that there is no prior rational faculty available to evaluate that formation from outside. The classical commitment on substance dualism holds that the rational faculty — the prohairesis — is categorically prior to all external conditions, including community membership, cultural formation, and interpretive habit. The self is not the sum of its formations. It is the faculty that can examine those formations and find some of them false.

This is not the naive claim that readers arrive at texts unaffected by their formation. Formation is real. The literary critic who has been trained in New Critical close reading, the lawyer who has been formed in common law reasoning, the theologian who reads scripture within a hermeneutical tradition — all bring genuine formation to their reading. The classical counter is not that this formation is absent but that it does not exhaust the reader. Behind the formation is a rational faculty capable of examining it.

The practical consequence is precise. A reader who has correctly identified what he is — a rational faculty that is prior to its conditions — can ask of any interpretive strategy: does this strategy direct my attention toward what is actually in the text, or does it direct my attention away from it? This question is available to him because he is not identical with the strategy. The strategy is a formation he has undergone. The faculty that examines it is genuinely his own in a way the formation is not.

Against community-determined judgment: Libertarian Free Will (C2)

Fish requires that the reader’s interpretive judgments be outputs of community formation rather than originations of a self-governing rational agent. The classical commitment on libertarian free will holds that assent is a genuine first cause — that the moment between impression and response is a moment of real originating power, not a determined output of prior conditions including community formation.

Applied to interpretation, this means that the reader’s assent to an interpretation is genuinely his own — not in the sense that it is unaffected by formation, but in the sense that he is the real author of the assent, that the formation does not determine it mechanically, and that he can withhold assent from impressions that his formation would otherwise produce automatically.

This is exactly what Epictetus describes in Section 1 of the Enchiridion: the capacity to pause before the impression and examine it before assenting. The reader who finds a reading obvious — who experiences Fish’s community formation felt from the inside — can pause before that impression and ask: is this obvious because it is correct, or because my community has trained me to find it obvious? The capacity for this pause is the libertarian free will of the reading self. It is the pause that Fish’s account eliminates before it can occur.

Against the production of meaning: Moral Realism (C3) and Correspondence Theory (C4)

Fish requires that meaning be produced by interpretation rather than discovered in texts — that there are no mind-independent textual facts to which correct interpretations could correspond. The classical commitments on moral realism and correspondence theory together require the opposite: that there are facts, that claims can be true or false in virtue of corresponding to those facts, and that reason can discover rather than merely produce them.

Applied to textual interpretation, these commitments require that texts have determinate features that constrain correct reading. These features are not imaginary or community-specific. They include the linguistic structure of the text, the semantic content of its words in their historical context, the logical implications of its stated propositions, the demonstrable intentions of its author where recoverable, and the coherence of its internal argument. These are facts about the text. Interpretations can correspond to them or fail to correspond to them. An interpretation that ignores what the words actually mean in their historical context, that attributes to an author intentions he demonstrably did not hold, or that claims a text implies what it logically excludes has failed the correspondence test regardless of what any interpretive community endorses.

The correspondence claim does not require that every text have a single correct interpretation. Complex texts — literary, philosophical, legal — may generate multiple defensible readings, each corresponding to different genuine features of the text. The correspondence claim requires only that interpretations be accountable to the text’s actual features and that some interpretations fail that accountability. Fish’s account, consistently held, cannot explain why any interpretation would be wrong — why attributing to a text the opposite of what it says would be an interpretive failure rather than merely the product of a different community’s formation.

Against formation-as-perception: Ethical Intuitionism (C5)

Fish requires that what appears to be the direct apprehension of textual meaning is always the experience of community formation felt from the inside. The classical commitment on ethical intuitionism holds that the rational faculty can directly apprehend certain facts without the mediation of community formation — that reason has genuine perceptual access to what is there.

Applied to interpretation, this means that some features of a text are directly apprehensible by any competent rational reader exercising correct attention, regardless of community formation. The plain meaning of a clear declarative sentence, the logical structure of a well-formed argument, the emotional register of a passage — these are accessible to direct rational apprehension in the same way that basic moral facts are accessible on the intuitionist account. They do not require community mediation because they are genuinely there to be perceived.

Fish’s counter is that even “plain meaning” is community-produced — that what counts as plain depends on interpretive conventions that are themselves community-specific. This is partially correct as an observation about interpretation in contested cases. It is not correct as a general account of all reading. The reader who finds the sentence “the cat sat on the mat” to mean that a cat was on a mat has not deployed an exotic community-specific interpretive strategy. He has read. The existence of hard cases in interpretation does not establish that all cases are equally community-dependent. The existence of genuinely difficult moral questions does not establish that there are no directly apprehensible moral facts. Fish generalizes from the hard case to all cases — which is precisely the move that the intuitionist framework is designed to resist.

Against interpretive anti-foundationalism: Foundationalism (C6)

Fish requires that there are no foundational interpretive principles that are genuinely prior to and independent of the practices they govern. The classical commitment on foundationalism holds that there are architecturally prior first principles from which correct practice derives — principles that are not themselves products of the practices they govern.

Applied to interpretation, this means that there are governing principles of correct reading that are not merely conventions adopted by particular communities. The principle that an interpretation should correspond to what the text actually says is not a community convention that some communities share and others do not; it is a rational requirement of the activity of interpretation as such. An “interpretation” that systematically ignores what the text says has not adopted a different interpretive strategy; it has ceased to be an interpretation of the text and become something else — a meditation, a performance, a political intervention.

The foundational principles of correct interpretation are derivable from what the activity of interpretation requires: the aim of getting the text right, the means of attending to its actual features, the reserve clause acknowledging that full certainty may be unavailable, and the rational assessment of competing candidate readings against the textual evidence. These principles are prior to any particular community’s conventions because they govern what it means to interpret at all. Communities that abandon them have not adopted different interpretive practices; they have abandoned interpretation for something else.


III. The Positive Account: What a Sterling Theory of Interpretation Holds

The six-commitment counter is simultaneously a positive account of what correct reading requires. It can be stated in five propositions.

Proposition One: The reader is prior to his formation. The self that reads is not constituted by its interpretive community. It is a rational faculty that has been formed by community membership but is not exhausted by that formation. The reader can examine his formation, identify where it has introduced false presuppositions, and correct his reading accordingly. This capacity is not unlimited — no reader achieves a view from nowhere — but it is real. The community does not determine the reading; it influences the conditions within which the reading occurs. The reader is the genuine author of his assents to interpretive impressions.

Proposition Two: Texts have determinate features that constrain correct interpretation. A text is not a blank surface on which communities project meanings. It is an artifact with genuine features: linguistic structure, historical context, authorial intention where demonstrable, internal logical coherence, and semantic content that can be established through philological and historical investigation. These features are facts about the text. Interpretations that ignore or contradict them have failed, not adopted a different strategy.

Proposition Three: The appropriate object of aim in interpretation is correspondence. The reader’s governing aim is to get the text right — to produce an interpretation that corresponds to what the text actually does, means, and implies. This aim is not guaranteed to be achievable — some texts are genuinely ambiguous, some contextual information is irrecoverably lost, some questions about authorial intention are unanswerable. The reserve clause applies: the reader aims at correct interpretation if the evidence allows. But correspondence to the text’s actual features is the standard against which all interpretive efforts are measured, regardless of community endorsement.

Proposition Four: Interpretive communities are preferred indifferents. Communities are real and their influence is real. The training they provide, the methods they develop, the vocabularies they supply — all of these are valuable resources for the reader who uses them correctly. They are preferred indifferents: appropriate objects of rational engagement, worth taking seriously, not to be dismissed as mere prejudice. But they are not genuine goods. A community’s endorsement of a reading does not make the reading correct. A community’s rejection of a reading does not make it wrong. The reader who measures his interpretive success by community acceptance rather than correspondence to the text has converted a preferred indifferent into a false good. He has become the emotivist Therapist of literary criticism — treating client satisfaction as the governing standard of correct interpretation.

Proposition Five: The reserve clause governs interpretive activity. The reader aims at correspondence to the text with full rational effort and zero attachment to whether his reading achieves canonical status, wins critical approval, or produces consequences he desires. The interpretive act is appropriately judged at the moment of its making — by the quality of the attention brought to the text, the honesty of the correspondence test applied, and the intellectual integrity of the reasoning offered. What happens to the reading after it is made — how it is received, whether it influences the field, whether it is remembered — is external, and the reader’s equanimity does not depend on it.


IV. Fish’s Real Insight and Where It Belongs

The Sterling theory of interpretation does not dismiss Fish as simply wrong. His observation is real: communities do form readers, interpretive habits are genuinely acquired, and the experience of reading is genuinely shaped by prior formation. What the Sterling framework denies is the philosophical conclusion Fish draws from this observation — that the formation constitutes the reader, that meaning is produced rather than discovered, and that there is no rational faculty available to evaluate formation from outside.

Fish’s observation, correctly framed within the Sterling account, describes the formation of false dogmata about texts — the prejudices and presuppositions that distort the reader’s access to the text’s actual features. These are precisely the objects of the corrective work the framework prescribes. The Stoic practitioner who approaches a text asks: what impressions am I bringing to this text that are products of my formation rather than of what the text actually does? Which of my interpretive habits involve false value judgments — the judgment that a community’s approval is the standard of correct reading, the judgment that a text must mean something fashionable, the judgment that my prior commitments determine what the text is permitted to say?

Fish’s interpretive community theory is, in this light, an accurate description of the problem the Stoic reader must address — and an inaccurate account of why the problem cannot be solved. The formation is real. The reader who is prior to his formation is equally real. The activity of correct interpretation is the discipline of bringing the rational faculty’s genuine apprehensive capacity to bear on the text’s actual features, with the community’s formation held as a preferred indifferent rather than a governing standard.

This is prosochē — the Stoic practice of attention — applied to the domain of reading. It requires what Fish denies: a reader who is genuinely present to the text, whose attention is not exhausted by the categories his community has supplied, and whose assent to interpretive impressions is genuinely his own.


V. Implications for a Formal Instrument

The five propositions developed in Section III are the foundation of a formal Sterling interpretive instrument. Such an instrument would operate analogously to the Sterling Decision Framework: a procedural replication of what a reader of genuinely correct judgment does naturally, designed to surface false interpretive dogmata, identify the appropriate object of aim in the interpretive activity, select rational interpretive means, and hold the outcome with reservation.

The instrument would include a preliminary reader check — an examination of the interpretive impressions the reader brings to the text, identifying which are the products of community formation and which correspond to features the text actually has. It would include a correspondence test — an explicit examination of whether the candidate reading accounts for the text’s actual linguistic, historical, and logical features or ignores some in favor of community-endorsed conclusions. It would include a means check — an assessment of whether the interpretive methods deployed are genuinely designed to produce correspondence or are methods that produce community-acceptable readings regardless of correspondence. And it would include a reserve clause formulation — an explicit acknowledgment of what remains uncertain, what evidence is unavailable, and what the limits of the current reading are.

This instrument would apply across the domains Fish addresses: literary interpretation, legal interpretation, philosophical reading, scriptural hermeneutics. In each domain the governing question is the same: what does this text actually do, mean, and imply, and what rational means are available for establishing that correspondence? The community’s answer to this question is a preferred indifferent — worth consulting, worth engaging, not worth treating as authoritative.

The instrument does not promise perfect readings. It promises correct interpretive aims, rational means, and honest acknowledgment of limits. That is what any Sterling instrument promises: not the achievement of the aim, but the appropriate pursuit of it with reservation. The appropriateness of the pursuit is entirely within the reader’s control. The canonical status of the resulting reading is not.


Essay architecture and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling, including Core Stoicism, the Sterling Logic Engine v4.0 (Props 1–58), the Sterling Decision Framework v3.3, the Classical Presupposition Audit v1.0, and the Harshness and Beauty in Epictetus. Primary interlocutor: Stanley Fish, Is There a Text in This Class? (1980), Doing What Comes Naturally (1989), The Trouble with Principle (1999). Prose rendering: Claude.