Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Monday, April 06, 2026

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

 

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

Within Sterling’s Stoicism, the correspondence theory of truth is the account that makes “false” mean what the framework requires it to mean. Stoicism is built on the claim that most human impressions about good and evil are false. Not unhelpful. Not unconventional. Not culturally contingent. False. That single word carries the entire normative weight of the corrective project: the demand to correct rather than merely adjust, to examine rather than merely manage, to refuse assent rather than merely redirect attention. The corpus-governed dimensions of C4 are derived from what Sterling’s own formulations require truth to be — not from the epistemology literature’s standard account of correspondence but from the specific claims Sterling makes in Documents 16 and 18 about what Stoicism requires of truth and why.


Match

The most basic dimension of correspondence theory in Sterling’s corpus is the simplest: truth is a matter of match. A belief either matches how the world actually is or it does not. Sterling uses this formulation in the February 2020 message: beliefs are about the world, and when they match the way the world really is they are true, and when they do not they are false. The match formulation is deliberately ordinary — Sterling notes that correspondence theory is what basically 100% of people throughout most of human history have embraced, and thought so obvious that it did not even need a name. The philosophical work is not to defend match as the criterion of truth but to make explicit what that ordinary criterion requires: a world with determinate features that beliefs either track or fail to track.

The Word “False” as Load-Bearing

The word “false” appears throughout the framework as a term of assessment: false impressions, false value judgments, false beliefs about externals. This word is doing specific philosophical work that requires correspondence theory to carry it. If truth were defined by coherence within a belief system, then “false” would mean “inconsistent with the rest of the system.” If truth were defined by pragmatic success, “false” would mean “unhelpful in practice.” Correspondence theory fixes the meaning as Sterling requires it: “false” means failing to match how things actually are. The belief that a loss is a genuine evil is false because it does not match the actual evaluative structure of reality — in which loss, as an external, is genuinely neither good nor evil. Without correspondence theory, the word “false” loses the precision the framework depends on.

Heart and Soul Formulation

Sterling’s most emphatic statement of correspondence theory’s role in the framework appears in the February 2020 message: the heart and soul of Stoicism is that most of our impressions about good and evil do not match up with the way good and evil really are in the universe. This is not a secondary point about epistemology. It is Sterling’s identification of what Stoicism most fundamentally is: a systematic recognition that human beings characteristically misrepresent the evaluative structure of reality, and a practice aimed at correcting that misrepresentation. The heart-and-soul formulation places correspondence theory at the centre of the framework — not as an epistemological option the Stoics happen to endorse but as the precise claim that gives Stoicism its corrective character. Remove correspondence theory and the heart and soul disappears: there is nothing left for impressions to match or fail to match.

Pure Realism

Sterling states in the August 2015 message that the authentic Stoic position is that the Stoics were pure realists: the only criterion of truth is correspondence with the facts. Pure realism is not a qualified or hedged realism. It does not say that truth is partly a matter of correspondence and partly a matter of coherence or utility. It says that correspondence with the facts is the only criterion. This exclusivity is load-bearing: it closes the option of supplementing or replacing correspondence with coherentism or pragmatism. Sterling endorses pure realism not as a philosophical preference but because the Stoic revisionary project requires it: the project of correcting false impressions about good and evil requires a single determinate standard — how things actually are — and not a range of criteria that might give different verdicts on the same impression.

Utter Rejection of Truth-Without-Match

Sterling’s most emphatic discriminative formulation appears in Document 18: he rejects utterly any notion of truth wherein something can be true and yet not match reality. The emphasis is Sterling’s own. This formulation goes beyond the positive claim that truth is correspondence to include a negative claim that brooks no compromise: any account of truth that allows a belief to be true without matching reality is simply wrong. This utter rejection is not philosophical aggression. It is the recognition that any weakening of the correspondence requirement undermines the corrective project: if something can be true without matching reality, then the framework cannot appeal to the way things actually are as an unconditional standard, and the verdicts it issues lose their authority.

Cataleptic Impression as Always-Matching

Sterling uses the Stoic technical concept of the cataleptic impression to ground correspondence theory within Stoic epistemology. Cataleptic impressions are a special class of impressions that always match the facts. They are inside the mind — they are still impressions — but they are characterised by their invariable correspondence to reality. Non-cataleptic impressions are false precisely because they fail to achieve this match. The cataleptic/non-cataleptic distinction presupposes correspondence theory: it presupposes that impressions have a property — matching or failing to match the facts — by which they are assessed as cataleptic or not. Without correspondence theory, the distinction has no content: if truth did not consist in matching the facts, there would be no criterion by which to identify which impressions are cataleptic.

Cataleptic Impressions Require Facts Outside the Mind

Sterling draws a precise consequence in the February 2020 message: cataleptic impressions need facts outside the mind in order for them to be true. Even the most reliable and certain impressions — the cataleptic ones — are inside the mind. They are representations. For them to be true representations — for them to achieve correspondence — there must be something outside the mind that they correspond to. The facts outside the mind are what the impressions either match or fail to match. This point is architecturally important: it establishes that correspondence theory requires a robust commitment to mind-independent reality. The facts are not constituted by the impressions, even the best impressions. They are what the impressions either track or miss.

Mental Attitude Pointing Outward

Sterling describes beliefs as internal states that are “about” something — about rain outside, about the Pepsi can on the desk, about the evaluative status of an external. This aboutness is the intentional structure that makes beliefs truth-evaluable. A belief points beyond itself toward the world, representing it as being a certain way. Sterling’s formulation: beliefs are about the world, and when they match the way the world really is they are true. The world-directedness of beliefs is what makes them candidates for assessment as true or false: a mental state with no world-direction has nothing to correspond or fail to correspond to. The mental attitude pointing outward is the structural feature of belief that correspondence theory requires and that the Stoic practice of examining impressions presupposes.

Objective Facts as the Standard

Sterling uses the word “fact” in a precise technical sense in the February 2020 message: facts, as philosophers use the word, are not things in our minds — they are things in the world. The objective facts are the way the universe actually is, independently of how anyone believes or wants it to be. They are the standard against which all impressions are assessed. When the SDF runs the Value Strip and asks whether the agent is treating an indifferent as a genuine good, the standard being applied is the objective fact about evaluative reality: externals are neither good nor evil — that is how things actually are. Without objective facts as the standard, the examination has no fixed point of reference, and the verdicts it issues are assessments of coherence rather than assessments of truth.

Without Objective Facts No Basis for Calling Value Impressions False

Sterling states in Document 18 that without objective facts there is no basis for calling value impressions false rather than culturally contingent. This is the sharpest formulation of what correspondence theory does for the framework. If there are no objective facts — no way the world actually is, evaluatively — then the impression that wealth is a genuine good is not false. It is culturally shaped, perhaps, or the product of bad habits, or inconsistent with Stoic theory. But it cannot be called false in the objectively loaded sense the framework requires. Calling it false requires that there be an objective fact it fails to match: the fact that virtue is the only genuine good. Without objective facts, the corrective project loses its most fundamental justification.

Stoicism Incoherent Without Moral Facts

Sterling states explicitly in the February 2020 message that Stoicism is incoherent without moral facts. The claim is comprehensive: externals are neither good nor evil — the Stoics think this is a fact about the universe. If there are no facts, then the Stoic view of what is good, evil, or indifferent is no more valid than the ordinary view. The Stoics think that we have role-duties: this is a putative fact. If there are no such facts, then we have no duties. Courage is a virtue: this is a fact. If there are no moral facts, there are no virtues. The incoherence-without-moral-facts formulation is Sterling’s strongest statement of the dependency: correspondence theory is not an optional addition to Stoicism. Remove it and the entire system becomes incoherent — its central claims lose their status as claims about how things are and become mere expressions of preference.

Externals Neither Good nor Evil as Fact About the Universe

Sterling states in the February 2020 message that the Stoics think externals being neither good nor evil is a fact about the universe. This formulation is precise and important. It is not a Stoic perspective, not a therapeutic reframing, not a culturally specific value orientation. It is a claim about how things actually are — a fact about the evaluative structure of reality. Correspondence theory is required for this claim to have the status it needs: it is true because it matches how the universe actually is, evaluatively. The agent who believes that a loss is a genuine evil holds a false belief — false because it fails to match this fact about the universe. The fact status of the foundational Stoic claims is what gives the framework its authority over the agent’s impressions.

Primitive Categories Accepted Without Further Definition

Sterling observes in the January 2022 message — responding to Scruton’s objection — that at some point something must be accepted as fundamental. This applies to correspondence theory itself: the notion of truth as match with reality is a primitive category that cannot be further defined without circularity. Any attempt to define truth in terms of something else — coherence, usefulness, agreement — either uses the concept of truth in the definition or replaces it with something weaker. Sterling’s response to the objection that correspondence theory presupposes the notion of reality it is trying to ground: yes, and this is unavoidable. Primitive categories are the stopping point of philosophical analysis. Correspondence theory identifies the right stopping point: truth as match with reality is the primitive evaluative concept that makes all further assessment possible.

Junction of Correspondence and Foundationalism

Sterling identifies a junction in the January 2022 message: both correspondence theory and foundationalism require primitive categories accepted without further definition. Correspondence theory requires the primitive category of reality as the standard; foundationalism requires the primitive category of self-evident necessary truth as the epistemic base. These two primitives support each other: the foundational moral truths are self-evident because they directly track objective moral reality, and objective moral reality is what the foundational truths correspond to. The junction of correspondence and foundationalism is the architectural point at which the epistemological and metaphysical dimensions of the framework connect: truth as match (C4) connects to the structured hierarchy of moral truths (C6) at the point where foundational truths are both self-evidently known and objectively real.

Scruton’s Objection Closed

Sterling’s engagement with Scruton’s objection in the January 2022 message establishes an important discriminative point. Scruton had pressed the question of how correspondence theory can be stated without presupposing the very notion of reality it is trying to ground. Sterling’s answer is that at some point something must be accepted as fundamental — and the notion of reality as the standard of truth is the right thing to accept as fundamental. The Scruton objection is closed not by answering it in its own terms but by recognising that the demand for a non-circular definition of all primitive concepts is itself an unreasonable demand. Every philosophical framework must accept some primitive categories, and correspondence theory identifies the correct ones.

Something Must Be Fundamental

The general principle behind Sterling’s response to Scruton — at some point something must be accepted as fundamental — applies across the entire framework. It applies to foundationalism (the moral axioms cannot be derived by reasoning — or else they would not be axioms). It applies to intuitionism (the foundational truths are self-evident, requiring no input). It applies to correspondence theory (truth as match with reality is the primitive criterion). The something-must-be-fundamental principle is the framework’s explicit acknowledgment of its own foundationalist structure: the demand for infinite further justification is incoherent, and the framework identifies its termination points honestly rather than concealing them.

Truth So Obvious It Had No Name

Sterling observes that correspondence theory is what basically 100% of people throughout most of human history have embraced — and thought so obvious that there was not even a name for it. This observation does the same work for correspondence theory that the anger test does for moral realism: it demonstrates that the position being defended is not a sophisticated philosophical theory requiring special defence but the ordinary pre-theoretical understanding of truth that every functioning person relies on. The philosophical alternatives — coherentism, pragmatism, deflationism — are departures from the ordinary understanding, not improvements on it. Sterling defends the ordinary understanding precisely because the Stoic framework requires exactly what the ordinary understanding provides: a clear distinction between matching reality and failing to match it.

Cultural Contingency Excluded

Sterling states in Document 18 that without objective facts there is no basis for calling value impressions false rather than culturally contingent. The cultural contingency exclusion is the negative consequence of correspondence theory for moral assessment: a belief that is merely culturally shaped is not thereby false in the required sense. It may be shaped by different cultural forces than a Stoic upbringing would produce, but it is not assessable as false unless there is a mind-independent standard it fails to meet. Correspondence theory provides that standard: objective evaluative facts. With it, the impression that wealth is a genuine good is false — not merely culturally shaped, not merely non-Stoic in orientation, but objectively false as a representation of how things evaluatively are.

Correction as Truth-Seeking Not Preference-Adjustment

The corrective project of the framework is fundamentally a truth-seeking procedure, not a preference-adjustment exercise. The agent examines his impressions not to align them with preferred orientations or cultural norms but to determine whether they correspond to reality. This character of the corrective project — truth-seeking rather than preference-adjusting — depends entirely on correspondence theory. If truth were defined by coherence within a preferred system, the corrective project would be a coherence-restoration exercise. If truth were defined by pragmatic success, the corrective project would be a success-optimisation exercise. Correspondence theory is what makes it a truth-seeking procedure: the agent is asking whether his impressions match how things actually are, and correcting them when they do not.

Right Assent as Alignment Not Coherence

Foundation Three states that right assent guarantees eudaimonia. The content of “right assent” is determined by correspondence theory: right assent is assent that aligns with reality — that corresponds to the objective evaluative structure of the world. This is a stronger claim than assent that coheres with other Stoic beliefs, or assent that a Stoic procedure endorses, or assent that produces good consequences in practice. Right assent is correspondence-to-reality assent, and the guarantee holds because aligning with the objective evaluative structure of reality produces the state that is genuinely good. The alignment formulation distinguishes the guarantee from a conditional recommendation: it is not that Stoic-style assent tends to produce good outcomes but that assent corresponding to reality constitutes the correct relationship to one’s own evaluative life — which just is eudaimonia.


The Three Foundations

Foundation One — only internal things are in our control — is supported by correspondence theory through the objective-facts-as-standard dimension. The claim that externals are indifferent is a fact about the universe — a claim about how things actually are evaluatively. Correspondence theory specifies what it means for this claim to be true: it matches the objective evaluative structure of reality. The control dichotomy is therefore not merely a practical distinction but a truth claim about evaluative reality, and correspondence theory is what makes it a truth claim.

Foundation Two — unhappiness is caused by falsely believing externals are good or evil — is most directly dependent on correspondence theory. The falsity condition requires correspondence theory to carry it: “falsely” means failing to match reality. Without correspondence theory, the corrective project has no determinate standard of falsity — only a standard of incoherence with Stoic theory or unhelpfulness in practice. Correspondence theory is what makes the corrective project a truth-seeking procedure rather than a coherence-restoration or preference-adjustment exercise.

Foundation Three — right assent guarantees eudaimonia — requires correspondence theory for “right assent” to mean more than “internally consistent” or “pragmatically effective.” Right assent is correspondence-to-reality assent. The guarantee holds because alignment with evaluative reality produces the state that is genuinely good. Without correspondence theory, “right” in “right assent” has no determinate content — and the guarantee becomes conditional on whatever standard happens to be invoked.


Integration with the Other Commitments

Correspondence theory requires substance dualism (C1) to establish the rational faculty as a genuine truth-tracking system rather than a physical process that merely instantiates states. Correspondence is a relation between a representation and the world. For the rational faculty’s assents to be genuine representations — capable of corresponding or failing to correspond to reality — the faculty must be a real representing subject, not merely a physical system caused by reality. Dualism establishes the subject; correspondence theory specifies the truth-relation the subject’s representations stand in.

Correspondence theory requires libertarian free will (C2) for the correctness or incorrectness of assent to be attributable to the agent. If assent were a determined output of prior causes, the correspondence or failure of correspondence would be a property of the causal chain, not of the agent’s own truth-tracking act. Libertarian free will makes the agent the genuine originator of his assents, and therefore genuinely responsible for whether those assents correspond to reality.

Correspondence theory requires moral realism (C3) to supply the evaluative facts that moral judgments either correspond to or fail to correspond to. Correspondence is a relation between two terms: the judgment and the fact. Moral realism supplies the fact. Without moral realism, there are no objective evaluative facts for correspondence to be a relation to, and correspondence theory has no application in the moral domain.

Correspondence theory requires ethical intuitionism (C5) to give the agent access to the evaluative facts against which his judgments are assessed. The agent must be able to apprehend directly that virtue is the only genuine good before he can determine whether any given judgment corresponds to that fact. Without intuitionism, the agent knows that correspondence is the standard but cannot reach the facts that constitute it.

Correspondence theory requires foundationalism (C6) to organise the evaluative facts into a structured hierarchy that makes assessment tractable. The junction of correspondence and foundationalism is the architectural point at which the framework’s epistemological and metaphysical dimensions connect: foundational moral truths are both self-evidently known (intuitionism) and objectively real (moral realism), and correspondence theory specifies the relation between the agent’s judgments and those truths.


The Discriminatives

Any notion of truth wherein something can be true yet not match reality is Sterling’s own formulation of his primary discriminative, stated with maximum emphasis in Document 18. This is not a standard philosophical discriminative label. It is the negative boundary of the entire commitment: whatever allows truth without match is excluded. Sterling’s utter rejection of this option is absolute: such notions of truth are not alternative accounts to be considered but positions that destroy the framework’s corrective character. If something can be true without matching reality, then the impression that wealth is a genuine good might be true — it might cohere with the agent’s other beliefs, or be useful for him, or be endorsed by his community. Correspondence theory excludes all of these as criteria: only match with reality determines truth.

Cultural relativism about truth fails on the without-objective-facts dimension. If moral truth were culturally relative — if what is true about good and evil varied with cultural formation — then there would be no basis for calling value impressions false rather than culturally contingent. The impression that wealth is a genuine good would not be false in any culture where that belief is standard. Correspondence theory excludes cultural relativism by establishing that truth is match with mind-independent reality, not match with culturally produced standards. The evaluative structure of reality does not vary with culture.

Coherentism applied to truth fails on the match dimension and the pure-realism dimension. Coherentism defines truth as internal consistency within a belief system. A perfectly coherent set of false value judgments is still false — still failing to match reality — regardless of how well its members cohere with each other. Sterling’s pure realism excludes coherentism: the only criterion of truth is correspondence with the facts, not coherence within a system. Coherentism also cannot account for the force of Sterling’s corrective project: if truth were coherence, the agent who holds a consistent set of non-Stoic value beliefs is not in error but merely in a different coherent system. Correspondence theory is what makes him genuinely wrong.


Sterling/Kelly Philosophical System. C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth (Truth as Alignment with Reality). Corpus-governed recovery essay. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Analytical judgments and architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.

C3 — Moral Realism (Objective Value Structure)

 

C3 — Moral Realism (Objective Value Structure)

Within Sterling’s Stoicism, moral realism is the claim that the Stoic corrective project is a truth-seeking procedure rather than a preference-adjustment exercise. When the framework says that most human impressions about good and evil are false, when it says that unhappiness is caused by false belief, when it says that right assent guarantees eudaimonia — each of these terms requires that value be an objective feature of reality. The corpus-governed dimensions of C3 are not derived from the metaethics literature. They are derived from the arguments Sterling actually makes in his ISF messages: the arguments that turn on desire-independence, the collapse of instrumental accounts, the challenge to the total amoralist, the anger test, and the necessity formulation. These are the concepts without which Sterling’s own arguments cannot proceed.


Desire-Independence

The pivot of Sterling’s January 2015 moral realism message is the Wanda case. He imagines an agent who cares about his daughter and therefore has a desire-based reason to avoid harming her. He then introduces Wanda: an agent toward whom he has no desires at all. If moral reasons were desire-based, the fact that an action would harm Wanda would give him no reason not to perform it — because he has no desire involving Wanda. But Sterling holds that the Stoics think the fact that he would be harming his parents is a reason not to do something whether he cares about them or not. There must be some kind of reason utterly independent of contingent desires. Desire-independence is the first and most fundamental dimension of moral realism in Sterling’s framework: moral reasons are not grounded in the agent’s desires, preferences, or emotional investments. They hold regardless of whether the agent has any relevant desire at all.

Inherent Moral Consideration (Type A)

Sterling distinguishes Type A moral rules — rules that describe inherent moral considerations — from Type C rules of thumb. A Type A rule tells you that a moral consideration is present that must be included in your weighing. The fact that an action counts as breaking a promise is, in itself, a reason not to do it. At least one weight is placed in the against pan, regardless of other considerations. This is not a rule that says the against side will always win — it is a rule that says the against side is never empty when a promise is at stake. The inherent character of these considerations is what moral realism asserts: the consideration is present in the moral structure of the situation, not generated by the agent’s desires or the community’s conventions. Inherent moral consideration is the practical unit of moral realism at the level of action guidance.

Project-Failure Condition

Sterling states the necessity of moral realism for the Stoic framework in its starkest form: if there are no objective moral facts, the Stoic project fails utterly. This is not a cautious hedge. It is a precise claim about structural dependency. The Stoic project requires that externals are genuinely neither good nor evil — that this is a fact about the universe, not a Stoic preference. It requires that the agent’s false value judgments are genuinely false — not merely unconventional or unhelpful. It requires that virtue is genuinely the only good — not merely the most useful orientation to adopt. Remove objective moral facts and each of these claims loses its load-bearing character: “false” becomes “unhelpful,” “genuine” becomes “from a Stoic perspective,” and the entire framework softens into a life-strategy rather than a truth-governed practice. The project-failure condition is Sterling’s own formulation and does not appear in the philosophical literature on moral realism.

Non-Sensory Access

Sterling closes the 2015 message with a question that directly joins moral realism to ethical intuitionism: if there are objective moral facts of this sort, then we must have some means of knowing them. They cannot be sensed. How do we know them? The non-sensory access dimension is the link between C3 and C5. Moral realism posits the facts; intuitionism specifies the epistemic operation that reaches them. But the connection appears within C3 itself: moral realism is only philosophically viable if the moral facts it posits are accessible, and they are only accessible through a non-sensory operation. If moral facts existed but were in principle inaccessible, moral realism would be an empty metaphysical thesis. Non-sensory access is the dimension that makes moral realism actionable within the framework.

Necessity

Sterling states in the May 2021 message that moral facts are fundamental, necessary, and unalterable facts about the universe. The necessity formulation is explicit: 2+2 could not possibly have been anything other than 4, and the claim that one should, all other things equal, maximise preferred indifferents is necessary in the same sense. These are not truths that happen to hold given the current structure of the universe. They are truths that could not have been otherwise. The necessity of moral facts is what prevents moral realism from collapsing into a contingent cultural orientation: if moral truths are necessary, as Sterling holds, they cannot vary with changing circumstances, evolving social norms, or differences in human nature. They hold in every possible circumstance in which there is rational agency.

Sourcelessness

Sterling states that the fundamental moral truths have no “source,” just as “2+2=4” has no source. This formulation is unique to the corpus and does not appear in the philosophical literature on moral realism. Sourcelessness means that the moral facts do not derive their authority from any further fact: not from God’s decree, not from social agreement, not from evolutionary pressure, not from rational procedure. They simply are, as necessary features of reality, in the same way that mathematical truths simply are. The sourcelessness dimension closes three options simultaneously: theological grounding (Euthyphro), social constructivism (agreement), and naturalistic reduction (evolution). None of these can be the source of the moral facts, because the facts have no source. They are primitive necessary truths.

Unalterability

Sterling describes moral facts as fundamental, necessary, and unalterable. Unalterability is the temporal dimension of necessity: not only could the moral facts not have been otherwise, they cannot change. No future development — in science, in culture, in social organisation — can alter the fact that virtue is the only genuine good. This dimension is directly load-bearing for the guarantee of Foundation Three: the guarantee holds permanently because the evaluative structure of reality is permanently fixed. An agent who achieves right assent in any century and any culture has aligned with the same unalterable evaluative structure as any other agent who achieves right assent. Unalterability is also what gives the framework its authority to issue verdicts rather than recommendations: the verdicts are not contingently correct — they track facts that cannot change.

Rational Access

Sterling states that we know moral facts by using our Reason, in the same way we know that 2+2=4 and that modus ponens is valid. Rational access is the positive epistemological claim that completes non-sensory access: it is not merely that moral facts cannot be sensed, but that they can be reached by a specific epistemic operation — rational perception of self-evidence. This is what makes moral realism a live philosophical position rather than a plea for inaccessible truths. The rational faculty that recognises logical necessity is the same faculty that recognises moral necessity. Rational access is the operational bridge between the fact that moral truths exist (moral realism) and the fact that the agent can reach them (ethical intuitionism).

Intrinsic Goodness

The self-interest document establishes the intrinsic goodness dimension through elimination. Sterling imagines “Grant,” who holds that virtue is intrinsically good — good in itself, not as a means to pleasure or preferred indifferents. The Epicurean makes virtue instrumentally good: a generally reliable method for producing the non-moral good of pleasure. Sterling then runs three cases designed to strip away the instrumental account: Smith and Jones, the Ring of Gyges, and the dying molester. Each case eliminates one layer of the causal generalisations the Epicurean relies on. What survives all three cases is only “Grant’s” position: virtue is intrinsically and definitionally the only good. Intrinsic goodness is the dimension that survives the elimination — the only account of virtue’s value that does not collapse under unusual circumstances.

Constitutive Relation

The distinction between the Epicurean and “Grant’s” position is stated with precision in the self-interest document: eudaimonia requires virtue for the Epicurean as a causal fact, while it requires virtue for “Grant” as a matter of definition. This is the constitutive relation dimension: virtue is not causally conducive to eudaimonia — it constitutes eudaimonia. The difference is architecturally decisive. A causal relation between virtue and eudaimonia means that there are unusual circumstances where virtue does not cause eudaimonia — and in those circumstances virtue is not good. A constitutive relation means that virtue just is what eudaimonia consists in — and the unusual circumstances cannot change this because they cannot change what eudaimonia is. The constitutive relation is the precise form that moral realism takes in Sterling’s framework: not that virtue causes good outcomes but that virtue is the only genuine good.

Instrumental Collapse

The three test cases in the self-interest document are designed to demonstrate that every instrumental account of virtue’s value collapses under unusual circumstances. Smith and Jones show that the non-moral account cannot explain the Stoic verdict that the virtuous poor man is better off than the vicious rich man: Smith has more pleasure, peace of mind, and material goods, yet Jones is closer to a good life. The Ring of Gyges eliminates social enforcement: Jones can commit any vice without detection or social consequence, removing the Epicurean’s usual reasons for virtue. The dying molester eliminates long-term consequences: Smith will be dead before the social costs of his vicious acts accrue. Once all causal generalisations are stripped away, the instrumental account has no resources left. Instrumental collapse is the argumentative device that forces the conclusion: intrinsic goodness is the only account of virtue’s value that survives.

Total Amoralist Exclusion

Sterling closes the self-interest document with a challenge that goes to the heart of moral realism: is there any reason a total amoralist could not accept everything in the non-moral account? The total amoralist is a person who believes there is no such thing as moral truth, goodness, or virtue, while acknowledging that most people believe in these things and act on their beliefs. Sterling argues that the total amoralist can accept the Epicurean account without remainder: behave prudently, take account of others’ moral beliefs as social facts that affect your well-being, and act accordingly. The non-moral account cannot exclude the total amoralist because it does not require the agent to recognise any genuine moral obligation. Moral realism excludes the total amoralist because it posits objective moral facts that bind the agent regardless of whether he acknowledges them — the same way mathematical facts bind the agent regardless of whether he acknowledges them.

Falsity Condition

The word “falsely” in Foundation Two — unhappiness is caused by falsely believing externals are good or evil — is the most load-bearing single word in the framework. It requires that there be objective moral facts against which the belief fails. Without moral realism, “falsely” cannot mean what it must mean. It softens into “unhelpfully,” or “irrationally relative to a chosen framework,” or “inconsistently with other beliefs.” Moral realism fixes the meaning: the belief that a loss is a genuine evil is false because it fails to correspond to the actual evaluative structure of reality — a structure in which loss, as an external, is genuinely neither good nor evil. The falsity condition is what makes the corrective project a truth-seeking procedure rather than a therapeutic technique.

Type A/C Dependency

Sterling’s Type A/C distinction in the 2015 message establishes the foundational dependency structure of moral knowledge. Type C rules — empirically built rules of thumb about what usually works morally — presuppose Type A rules — inherent moral considerations that determine what counts as a moral weight in the first place. I can only build a rule of thumb by already knowing what things count as weights. That prior knowledge is not itself built from experience. It is the non-empirical foundational moral knowledge that moral realism posits: the objective moral facts that make certain considerations inherently morally significant. Type A/C dependency is the argument that the empirical dimension of practical wisdom cannot get started without the moral realist foundation.

Single Right Action

Sterling states in the May 2021 message that while there is not a single type of thing that is right, in each situation there is a single action which is right (barring rare ties). This is the moral realist claim at the level of applied ethics: moral facts determine a unique correct answer in each situation, not a range of equally valid options. The agent who examines an impression correctly and identifies the appropriate object of aim is not choosing between equivalent options — he is identifying what is actually correct in this situation. The single-right-action dimension is what gives the SDF its authority to issue verdicts: the procedure does not generate a range of defensible options. It identifies the one action that the objective moral structure of the situation requires.

Role-Duty Reality

Sterling holds that role-duties are genuine moral facts. The fact that he would be harming his parents is a reason not to act whether he cares about them or not. The role-duty — the obligation generated by his relationship to his parents — exists independently of his desire or care. This is moral realism stated at the level of role-relations: the duties generated by being a parent, a judge, a colleague, or a citizen are objective moral facts, not constructions of social agreement or expressions of the agent’s values. Role-duty reality is what makes the Action Proposition Set of the SLE philosophically grounded: Props 64–67 identify role-duties as real constraints on action because the duties they identify are genuine moral facts, not conventional guidelines.

Exclusive Identification

Theorem 10 of Core Stoicism states the exclusive identification: only virtue is genuinely good, only vice is genuinely evil. The “only” is the load-bearing word. It is not that virtue is the most important good among several goods. It is not that virtue is a necessary component of a good life that also includes health, wealth, and relationships. Virtue is the only genuine good — and everything else falls outside the good/evil axis entirely. This exclusive identification is what makes the value asymmetry of Sterling’s framework precise: the entire evaluative structure of reality is organised around a single axis, with virtue on one side, vice on the other, and all externals excluded from the axis completely. The exclusive identification is Theorem 10 as a moral fact, not a preference or a framework choice.

Bad Habit Obstruction

Sterling observes in the May 2021 message that bad habits — developed since childhood of believing that things that seem to benefit us are good — lead us to try to deny obvious moral truths when they are inconvenient. The bad habit obstruction dimension is unique to the corpus. It names a specific mechanism by which agents fail to recognise moral facts that are, in principle, available to them: not epistemic incapacity, not the absence of moral facts, but the habituated tendency to treat apparent benefit as genuine goodness. The bad habits do not create moral uncertainty. They create practical resistance to moral truths that the rational faculty could apprehend clearly if the habits were cleared. This is moral realism stated with psychological precision: the facts are there to be seen; the bad habits are why they are not always seen.

Anger Test

Sterling’s diagnostic in the May 2021 message is entirely his own and appears nowhere in the philosophical literature on moral realism: the man who does not repay a debt and pretends he has no obligation to do so gets furious when someone else does not repay a debt to him. This anger is self-revealing. It demonstrates that the debt-denier has rational access to the moral truth he is theoretically denying. He knows that obligations are real, that failing to meet them is a genuine failure, and that the agent who fails is genuinely responsible — when he is the creditor. He cannot sustain the denial practically even while maintaining it theoretically. The anger test is not merely a rhetorical device. It is evidence that moral facts announce themselves even to those who deny them — that the rational access to moral truth is present and operational even when theoretically disavowed.

Amoralist Challenge Closure

Sterling’s closing challenge in the self-interest document is addressed to anyone who holds a non-moral account of eudaimonia: is there any inherent reason to be moral on your view, or is morality only a means? Sterling’s argument is that the non-moral account cannot exclude the total amoralist — the person who acknowledges no genuine moral obligation while navigating other people’s moral beliefs as social facts. The Epicurean who keeps promises only because it generally produces better long-term outcomes for him does not genuinely respect promises any more than the thief who does not steal only when a police officer is watching genuinely respects property. Morality on the non-moral account is a conditional commitment — conditional on its producing the right non-moral outcomes. Moral realism closes this: moral facts bind unconditionally, as 2+2=4 binds unconditionally. The total amoralist cannot accept moral realism without contradiction.


The Three Foundations

Foundation One — only internal things are in our control — is supported by moral realism through the exclusive identification. The claim that externals are indifferent is a moral fact: not merely a Stoic preference, not a useful reframing, but a necessary truth about the evaluative structure of reality. Moral realism makes the control dichotomy more than a practical distinction: it is an ontological claim about where genuine value lies, and the answer — only in virtue, never in externals — is a moral fact that holds regardless of the agent’s desires or cultural formation.

Foundation Two — unhappiness is caused by falsely believing externals are good or evil — is the foundation most directly dependent on moral realism. The falsity condition is the hinge: the belief that an external is a genuine good is false in the objective sense — it fails to correspond to the actual evaluative structure of reality. Without moral realism, the corrective project has no objective standard to appeal to. The agent can note that the belief produces unhappiness, but he cannot say it is false. Moral realism supplies the objective standard that makes “falsely” mean what the framework requires it to mean.

Foundation Three — right assent guarantees eudaimonia — depends on moral realism for the guarantee to be non-vacuous. The guarantee holds because aligning with the objective evaluative structure of reality produces the state that is genuinely good. If value were subjective or constructed, the guarantee would reduce to: correct assent produces the state the agent prefers, or the state a rational procedure endorses. That is not a guarantee of eudaimonia. It is a guarantee of preference satisfaction. Moral realism ensures that the state produced by right assent is objectively superior — not comparatively preferred but genuinely the only good — and therefore that the guarantee tracks something real.


Integration with the Other Commitments

Moral realism requires substance dualism (C1) for the ontological resources to accommodate objective evaluative properties in the world. A framework that already accepts that the rational faculty is a non-physical substance capable of genuine moral perception has the resources to accept that evaluative properties are real features of the world. A purely physicalist framework has no principled basis for accepting objective moral facts alongside purely physical facts.

Moral realism requires libertarian free will (C2) for the rational requirement and the obligation dimensions to be genuinely binding on the specific agent. If the agent does not genuinely originate his assents, then the obligation to correct false value judgments cannot be genuinely addressed to him as an obligated party. A determined output cannot be obligated. Libertarian free will makes the agent the genuine subject of moral realism’s demands.

Moral realism requires correspondence theory (C4) to specify what it means for a moral judgment to be true or false. Moral realism posits the moral facts; correspondence theory specifies that a judgment is true when it corresponds to those facts and false when it fails to. Without correspondence theory, moral realism has no account of what makes a moral judgment correct rather than merely sincere.

Moral realism requires ethical intuitionism (C5) to give the agent access to the moral facts it posits. If moral facts existed but were in principle inaccessible, moral realism would be philosophically inert. Intuitionism specifies the epistemic operation by which the agent reaches the foundational moral facts: rational perception of self-evidence, requiring no sensory input, non-variable between rational persons, yielding knowledge of necessary truths.

Moral realism requires foundationalism (C6) to organise the moral facts into a structured hierarchy the agent can navigate. Theorem 10 is foundational; Theorem 12 derives from it; role-duties derive from the conjunction of Theorem 10 with the agent’s specific circumstances. Without foundationalism, the moral facts are available but unstructured, and the correction of false judgments remains case-by-case rather than systematic.


The Discriminatives

Epicureanism and instrumentalism hold that virtue is a generally reliable means to the genuine good of pleasure or preferred indifferents. They fail on the intrinsic-goodness, constitutive-relation, and instrumental-collapse dimensions. Sterling’s three test cases strip away, one by one, the causal generalisations on which the instrumental account relies. Once all causal generalisations are eliminated — in the Ring of Gyges case and the dying molester case — the instrumental account has no resources left. The only account of virtue’s value that survives all three cases is intrinsic goodness: virtue is good in itself, constitutively of eudaimonia, not causally productive of it under normal circumstances.

Desire-based accounts hold that moral reasons are grounded in the agent’s contingent desires, preferences, or emotional investments. They fail on the desire-independence and total-amoralist-exclusion dimensions. The Wanda case establishes desire-independence directly: if moral reasons were desire-based, there would be no reason not to harm Wanda when the agent has no relevant desire. The total amoralist challenge closes the discriminative argument: the desire-based account cannot exclude the agent who has no moral desires at all. He can accept the entire desire-based account while remaining a total amoralist, because the account never requires him to recognise any genuine moral obligation.

Constructivism and social grounding hold that moral facts are produced by rational procedures, social agreements, or divine decree. They fail on the sourcelessness, necessity, and unalterability dimensions. Sterling states that moral facts have no source, just as 2+2=4 has no source: there is no need for God to decree these things, nor for human society to adopt them. The necessity formulation closes the constructivist option: a constructed moral fact is contingent on the procedure that generates it. A necessary moral fact could not have been otherwise — and therefore could not have been constructed by any procedure that might have produced a different output. The anger test provides additional evidence: the debt-denier’s fury reveals that he knows moral obligations are real, not constructed, not contingent on his acceptance.


Sterling/Kelly Philosophical System. C3 — Moral Realism (Objective Value Structure). Corpus-governed recovery essay. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Analytical judgments and architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.

C6 — Foundationalism (Structured Dependency of Truths)

 

C6 — Foundationalism (Structured Dependency of Truths)

Within Sterling’s Stoicism, foundationalism is the structural principle that gives the corrective project its architecture. The corrective project requires more than access to moral truth — it requires a way of organising moral truths so that the agent can trace any false impression back to the foundational principle it contradicts and correct it at the right level. Foundationalism provides that organisation. It holds that ethical truths are not an undifferentiated set of equally basic claims but a hierarchy: some truths are foundational, grasped directly through rational perception, requiring no further support; others derive from them through structured dependency relations. This hierarchy is not imposed on ethics from outside. It is what the Stoic system’s own structure reveals when examined carefully.


Self-Evident Necessary Truths as the Epistemic Base

Sterling states in the January 2015 message that the fundamental truths of ethics are necessary, self-evident truths — truths that any rational faculty can apprehend directly. These are the epistemic base of the system. They are not inferred from prior claims. They are not derived from experience. They are not dependent on theological premises. They are held because they are evident through themselves to a rational faculty attending to them. Theorem 10 — only virtue is good, only vice is evil — is the clearest example: it is a self-evident necessary truth, foundational in the precise sense that everything else in the system depends on it while it depends on nothing beyond itself. The epistemic base is where justification terminates. Below it, there is nothing to appeal to. Above it, everything stands or falls.

The Is/Ought Gap Requires a Non-Sensory Premise 2

The foundationalist structure of Sterling’s ethics is most precisely demonstrated by his treatment of the is/ought gap. Sterling states that one can add up a million empirical Premise 1s and without a non-sensory moral Premise 2 never reach a moral conclusion. This is not merely an observation about current ethical discourse. It is a structural claim about moral reasoning: the gap between descriptive and evaluative propositions cannot be closed by accumulating descriptions. At some point, a non-sensory evaluative premise must be introduced. That premise is not derived from the empirical premises — it is prior to them. It is the foundational moral claim that gives the moral weight to all the derived conclusions that follow from it. Foundationalism names this structure: the foundational moral claim is the non-sensory Premise 2 that the entire system of moral reasoning requires at its base.

Theorem Dependency

Sterling issues a warning in Core Stoicism that is foundationalist in its precise structure: deny one theorem and it tends to affect everything else in the system. The theorems are not isolated claims. They stand in structured dependency relations. Theorem 12 (externals are neither good nor evil) derives from Theorem 10 (only virtue is good, only vice is evil). Theorem 13 (desiring externals involves false judgment) derives from Theorems 12 and 9. The theorems from Theorem 3 onward derive from the foundational claims at the system’s base. Deny the foundation and the entire derived structure loses its support. Theorem dependency is not a logical accident — it is the visible form of the foundationalist architecture. The system is not a web of mutually supporting claims. It is a hierarchy in which the foundational truths carry everything built on them.

Type A/C Presupposition

Sterling’s distinction between Type A and Type C moral rules in Document 19 maps directly onto the foundationalist structure. Type A rules describe inherent moral considerations — the fact that breaking a promise is a moral reason not to act, regardless of consequences. Type C rules are rules of thumb derived from accumulated experience of past moral weighings. The key claim is that Type C presupposes Type A: I can only build a rule of thumb by already knowing what counts as a moral weight in the first place. The experiential, empirical dimension of practical wisdom cannot get started without the non-empirical foundational dimension. This presupposition is the foundationalist structure in its practical form: the derived and experiential level of moral knowledge rests on the foundational and non-empirical level, and cannot be understood without it.

Support Versus Connection Distinction

Sterling’s most philosophically refined contribution to foundationalism is the support/connection distinction developed through the infidelity analogy in the June 2017 message. Two beliefs are connected when each is independently supported and the two illuminate each other without either being the logical ground of the other. Two beliefs stand in a support relation when one is the foundation of the other: deny the foundation and the superstructure collapses with it. Sterling argues that Stoic ethics and Stoic theology are connected, not mutually supporting. His ethical beliefs were developed independently of his theological beliefs. He came to Stoicism for reasons that have nothing to do with theism. He is a theist for reasons that have nothing to do with ethics. The two beliefs connect — each makes the other more coherent as a whole — but neither supports the other in the foundationalist sense. This distinction is architecturally decisive: it establishes that the ethical foundations of the system are self-standing, not dependent on theological claims that have become philosophically indefensible.

Independence from Theology

The support/connection distinction directly grounds the independence of Sterling’s ethical foundations from Stoic theology. Refute Stoic panentheism — show that there is no fiery pneuma at the heart of the universe — and you have not touched the foundational ethical claims. Those claims are independently supported by rational perception of self-evidence. They do not stand on the theological claims; they merely connect with them. This independence is what makes Sterling’s reconstruction philosophically defensible: the most vulnerable elements of ancient Stoicism — the physics, the cosmology, the theology — can be surrendered without affecting the ethical core. The core stands on its own foundation. It has always stood there. The ancient Stoics did not hold virtue to be good because Zeus approved of virtue. They held virtue to be good because it is. The theological claims were connections, not supports.

Euthyphro Closure

Sterling explicitly invokes the Euthyphro problem to close the option of grounding ethics in the will of God. The Euthyphro dilemma shows that divine command ethics faces a destructive fork: either God’s approval makes something good (in which case goodness is arbitrary — God could have approved of cruelty, and cruelty would then have been good), or God approves of something because it is good (in which case the goodness is antecedent logically to God’s approval, and God’s will is not the ground of goodness). The first horn makes morality arbitrary. The second horn makes God morally dependent on a standard that exists independently of him. Neither is acceptable as a foundation for ethics. The Euthyphro closure establishes that the foundational moral truths cannot be theological — they must be rational, self-evident, and independent of any divine decree. Sterling is a theist, but his ethics is not theistic in its foundation.

Non-Sensory Moral Premise 2 as the Hinge

MORAL PROPERTIES CANNOT BE SENSED. That is the fulcrum — Sterling’s own capitalisation. The hinge formulation names what the non-sensory Premise 2 is: it is a foundational moral claim that cannot be derived from sensory premises because its content — moral property — is not a sensory property. The hinge is not one premise among others in a standard argument. It is the premise on which the entire inferential structure turns: below it, descriptive empirical claims accumulate indefinitely without generating moral conclusions; above it, moral conclusions follow from the combination of the foundational claim with empirical premises. The non-sensory Premise 2 is the point at which the empirical and the evaluative dimensions of practical reasoning connect — and that connection requires a foundational moral claim that is not itself derivable from the empirical dimension.

Theorem 10 as the Architectural Anchor

Theorem 10 — only virtue is genuinely good, only vice is genuinely evil — is the architectural anchor of Sterling’s Stoicism. Everything else in the system derives from it or presupposes it. Theorem 12 (externals are neither good nor evil) derives directly from Theorem 10: if only virtue is good, then externals — which are not virtue — are neither good nor evil. Foundation Two (unhappiness caused by falsely believing externals are good or evil) presupposes Theorem 12 and hence Theorem 10. Foundation Three (right assent guarantees eudaimonia) presupposes that aligning with Theorem 10 constitutes the only genuine good, making its attainment eudaimonia rather than mere preference satisfaction. The anchor is what the entire system hangs from. If Theorem 10 is false, the system does not merely need revision — it collapses.

Smorgasbord Warning

Sterling’s warning — that denying one theorem tends to affect everything else in the system — is foundationalism stated as a practical caution. The warning is addressed to those who might be tempted to accept parts of Stoicism while rejecting others, combining Stoic elements with elements from incompatible frameworks. The smorgasbord approach fails because the system is not a collection of independent theses. It is a structured hierarchy of claims in dependency relations. Select some and reject others, and the selected claims lose their foundation: they were supported by what you rejected. This is the practical face of theorem dependency: the system can only be taken as a whole or not at all, because the parts derive their content and their support from their position within the whole.

Concepts Defined Through Simpler Concepts

Sterling’s discussion of language and conceptual structure in the January 2015 message has a direct bearing on foundationalism. Complex concepts are meaningful only insofar as they are composed of simpler properties we are aware of. This conceptual structure mirrors the foundationalist structure of knowledge: just as complex moral judgments are grounded in foundational moral claims, complex moral concepts are constituted by simpler moral properties. The concept of justice is not primitive — it is built from the simpler concepts of role-duty, promise-fidelity, and fair-dealing, which are in turn built from even more basic evaluative concepts. At the base of the conceptual hierarchy are the simple moral properties that are directly apprehended: goodness and evil in their fundamental sense. These cannot be defined further — like the experience of yellow, they can only be recognised, not decomposed into simpler parts.

Non-Variable Self-Evidence

Sterling distinguishes rational perception of self-evidence from extra-sensory experience precisely on the grounds of universality: what is self-evident is self-evident to any rational faculty that attends to it. This universality is what gives the foundational moral truths their stability as fixed reference points. They do not vary with who perceives them, when, or under what circumstances. Theorem 10 is as true for the agent in 2026 as it was for the agent in antiquity, as true for the prisoner as for the philosopher, as available to the untrained rational faculty as to the Sage — though the untrained faculty may need to clear its obstructions before the self-evidence becomes fully apparent. Non-variable self-evidence is what makes the foundational level genuinely foundational: it does not shift under changing conditions, cultural pressures, or evolving social norms. It is fixed by the nature of the truths themselves.

Connection Does Not Entail Support

The infidelity analogy in the June 2017 message establishes a precise logical point: two beliefs can be connected — each illuminating and cohering with the other — without either being the logical ground of the other. This point has immediate application to the relationship between Sterling’s ethics and his theology. He arrived at each independently. He connects them because each makes the other more coherent as a whole. But the connection is not a support relation. If his theology were refuted tomorrow, he would not take that as evidence that his ethics is false — because his ethics does not stand on his theology. This logical precision is what saves the framework from the vulnerability of ancient Stoic cosmology. The ethics is not a superstructure built on theological foundations that have collapsed. It is an independent structure that connects with the theology but does not depend on it.

Already Know Virtue Is Good

Sterling’s most practically significant foundationalist claim is that the Stoics think we already know what virtue is and that it is good. The foundational moral truth is not something that needs to be discovered or proved. It is already known — in the sense of rational perception of self-evidence — by any rational faculty that has attended to it clearly. The problem is not epistemic lack but practical obstruction: desires obscure our vision of what we already know. This claim is deeply important for how the corrective project is conceived. It is not an educational project aimed at producing moral knowledge that the agent lacks. It is a practical project aimed at removing the obstructions that prevent existing moral knowledge from functioning as the governing standard of assent. The foundation is already there. The work is clearing the path to it.

Desires Obscure, Not Refute

The relationship between desires and foundational moral knowledge is one of obscuration, not refutation. The agent who desires money and allows that desire to dominate his judgments is not thereby shown to be epistemically justified in believing that money is a genuine good. He has not refuted Theorem 10 by desiring money. He has allowed his desire to obstruct his vision of a truth that remains in place regardless of his desire. This distinction — between obscuration and refutation — is foundationalist in its precise structure: the foundational truth is not vulnerable to being overturned by the agent’s desires, because the truth does not depend on the agent’s assent for its status as truth. The desires interfere with the agent’s apprehension of the truth. They do not interfere with the truth itself.

Correction by Tracing to Foundation

The corrective procedure of the framework — examining an impression, identifying the false value judgment it contains, and replacing it with a correct one — has a specific structure that is foundationalist in form. The examination proceeds by tracing the false judgment back to the foundational principle it contradicts. The impression represents a loss as a genuine evil. The examination traces this to Theorem 12 (externals are neither good nor evil). Theorem 12 derives from Theorem 10 (only virtue is good). The correction replaces the false evaluative content of the impression with the true evaluative content specified by Theorem 12 as derived from Theorem 10. Without the foundationalist architecture, the correction would be case-by-case and unprincipled — the agent would know that this particular impression is false but would have no systematic basis for assessing the next one. Foundationalism makes the correction systematic: every false impression is traceable to the same foundational theorem it contradicts.

Arbitrary Language, Non-Arbitrary Concepts

Sterling observes that words are arbitrary and conventional while the basic concepts they refer to are not. This distinction has foundationalist implications. The conceptual content that foundational moral terms refer to — goodness, virtue, obligation — is not conventional. It is fixed by the nature of the evaluative properties these concepts pick out. Different languages use different words, but the concepts the words refer to are the same concepts, and their relationships are the same relationships. The dependency of Theorem 12 on Theorem 10 is not a dependency of one conventional label on another. It is a dependency of one genuine moral truth on another. The structure of the hierarchy is as non-arbitrary as the hierarchy itself.

Non-Regress

The foundationalist structure terminates the regress of justification. Sterling states that the moral axioms cannot be established by any kind of reasoning at all — or else they would not be axioms. This is the non-regress claim stated at the level of justification: if every moral belief required justification from a prior moral belief, the regress would continue indefinitely and no moral belief would ever be fully justified. Foundationalism provides the termination point: the foundational moral beliefs are self-evident — they are justified by their own rational perceivability rather than by any prior belief. The regress stops at the foundation because the foundation does not need the kind of support that derived beliefs need. It stands on its own epistemic ground.

Ethics as Standalone

Sterling states autobiographically: I am a Stoic for reasons that have nothing to do with theism. If you convinced me tomorrow that monotheism was false, I would not take that as evidence that my ethics or my epistemology were false. This is foundationalism stated as a personal intellectual commitment. The ethical foundations are sufficient without any external support — theological, cosmological, or otherwise. They stand on rational perception of self-evidence. They were reached independently of the beliefs they are sometimes connected with. They survive the refutation of those connections because the connections were never the supports. Ethics as standalone is the practical expression of the foundationalist structure: the system can stand by itself because it is genuinely grounded at its own foundation.

Promise-Keeping Requires Only Understanding Promises

Sterling observes that the claim “it is wrong, ceteris paribus, to break a promise” seems to require only that he understand what promises are and how they work — not that he understand anything about God. This is foundationalism stated at the level of a specific moral claim. The wrongness of promise-breaking is not derived from theology. It is not derived from social agreement. It is apprehended through rational understanding of what a promise is — a commitment that creates a genuine obligation, independent of the agent’s desire to keep it, independent of any divine decree. The moral content is accessible through rational understanding of the concept. This is foundationalism in its most direct practical form: the foundational moral truths are available through rational conceptual understanding alone, requiring no external support beyond the concepts themselves.


The Three Foundations

Foundation One — only internal things are in our control — is supported by foundationalism through the structure of the theorem hierarchy. The claim that only internal things are in our control derives from the foundational claim about what is genuinely good (Theorem 10) and the claim that only what is in our control can be genuinely good or evil (Theorem 11). The foundationalist architecture makes this derivation traceable and stable: the control dichotomy is not an arbitrary practical convention but a derived truth that stands as long as its foundational support stands.

Foundation Two — unhappiness is caused by falsely believing externals are good or evil — is where foundationalism does its most direct practical work. The identification of a belief as false requires tracing it to the foundational principle it contradicts. Foundationalism provides the tracing structure: the belief that a loss is a genuine evil contradicts Theorem 12, which derives from Theorem 10. The correction is systematic: it returns to the foundation and rebuilds the derived judgment correctly. Without the foundationalist architecture, this tracing is impossible — the agent can note that something seems wrong but cannot pinpoint where the error occurs or how to correct it at the right level.

Foundation Three — right assent guarantees eudaimonia — requires foundationalism to ensure that the standard of correctness is stable and non-revisable. The guarantee holds because aligning with the foundational moral truths constitutes genuine flourishing. If those truths were revisable — if the foundation could shift — then what counted as right assent might change, and the guarantee would become contingent on which version of the foundation happened to be in place. Foundationalism ensures that the standard of right assent is fixed: it is correspondence with the necessary foundational truths apprehended through rational perception, truths that could not have been otherwise and cannot be revised by changing circumstances or evolving consensus.


Integration with the Other Commitments

Foundationalism requires substance dualism (C1) to establish the rational faculty as the agent capable of tracing impressions back to foundational truths and applying the hierarchical structure systematically. The faculty must be one — unified — to perform this systematic operation. A divided soul could not maintain a single hierarchy of foundational and derived truths, because there would be no single agent to whom the hierarchy belongs.

Foundationalism requires libertarian free will (C2) to make the correction of errors a genuine act rather than a causal outcome. The agent who traces a false impression back to its foundational source and replaces it with the correct derived judgment has performed a genuine originating act. Without libertarian free will, the correction is a causal event in a physical system, not a genuine act of a free agent correcting his own error.

Foundationalism requires moral realism (C3) to ensure that the foundational truths in the hierarchy are genuine truths rather than conventional assumptions. Theorem 10 is the anchor because it is objectively true, mind-independently true, necessarily true. If moral realism were false and value were merely constructed or subjective, then the foundational truths would be foundational by convention only, and the hierarchy would be a useful structure rather than a map of how things actually are.

Foundationalism requires correspondence theory (C4) to specify what makes derived judgments correct or incorrect by reference to the foundational truths. A derived judgment corresponds to reality when it correctly tracks the foundational truth from which it derives. Without correspondence theory, foundationalism has a hierarchy of truths but no account of what makes a judgment correctly or incorrectly derived from its foundation.

Foundationalism requires ethical intuitionism (C5) to explain how the foundational truths are reached. The foundation is accessible through rational perception of self-evidence — not through inference from prior premises, not through empirical observation. Intuitionism specifies the epistemic operation that gives the agent access to the foundational level. Without intuitionism, foundationalism has a foundation but no account of how the agent reaches it.


The Discriminatives

Coherentism holds that moral justification is a matter of mutual support within a web of beliefs, with no single belief having special foundational status. It fails on the is/ought-gap dimension and the smorgasbord-warning dimension. Coherentism cannot close the is/ought gap: a coherent web of moral beliefs is still a web of moral beliefs, and the web as a whole is not justified by its internal coherence alone but by its relationship to the foundational truths it either tracks or fails to track. Coherentism also cannot account for the smorgasbord warning: if beliefs merely support each other in a web, there is no architectural reason why denying one theorem should affect the others. But Sterling’s warning is precisely that it does — because the theorems stand in dependency relations, not in a mutual support web.

Anti-foundationalism denies that there are basic moral beliefs with special epistemic status. It fails on the non-sensory-Premise-2 dimension and the non-regress dimension. If there are no basic moral beliefs, then every moral claim requires support from prior moral claims, the regress is infinite, and no moral claim is ever fully justified. Anti-foundationalism also cannot close the is/ought gap: without a non-sensory moral Premise 2 accepted as foundational, the gap is in principle unclosable, and the entire domain of moral reasoning has no secure starting point. Anti-foundationalism is not a rival to Sterling’s foundationalism. It is the position that makes systematic moral reasoning impossible.

Theological grounding holds that moral foundations derive their authority from the will or nature of God. It fails on the Euthyphro-closure dimension and the independence-from-theology dimension. The Euthyphro dilemma shows that divine command ethics either makes morality arbitrary or presupposes a standard of goodness antecedent to divine approval. Sterling closes this option directly: he rejects the call for grounding ethical beliefs in theology, because ethics cannot be grounded in the will of God. Furthermore, his own experience demonstrates that the ethical foundations are reachable and stable without theological support: he came to Stoicism independently of his theism, and the refutation of his theological beliefs would not touch his ethical beliefs. The foundation is rational, not theological — it stands on self-evident necessary truths apprehended by the rational faculty, not on divine authority.


Sterling/Kelly Philosophical System. C6 — Foundationalism (Structured Dependency of Truths). Corpus-governed recovery essay. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Analytical judgments and architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.

C5 — Ethical Intuitionism (Direct Apprehension of Moral Truth)

 

C5 — Ethical Intuitionism (Direct Apprehension of Moral Truth)

Within Sterling’s Stoicism, ethical intuitionism is the answer to a question the framework cannot avoid: if moral properties cannot be sensed, and if the moral axioms cannot be established by reasoning without already presupposing a moral premise, then how does the agent reach the foundational moral truths the system requires him to hold? Sterling’s answer is unequivocal: either the rational faculty can see into the moral realm — however dimly — or it is blind. If it is blind, the corrective project has no target, the guarantee has no content, and the word “falsely” in Foundation Two is empty. Ethical intuitionism is not one epistemological option among several. It is the only alternative to moral nihilism that the framework’s structure permits.


Intuitionism or Nihilism — No Third Alternative

Sterling states this in the March 2020 ISF message with maximum directness: either we can see into the moral realm however dimly, or we are blind. His interlocutor had pressed for an account of how one sees the goodness of survival. Sterling’s response is to deny that the question is about the goodness of survival specifically. It is about whether any non-empirical moral claim can be justified at all. Sterling’s argument: if one allows a single non-empirical assumption into an ethical system — existence is better than non-existence, for instance — then one is already doing intuitionism. Once one non-empirical assumption is permitted, the objection to further non-empirical claims loses its force: you cannot deny the legitimacy of other intuitively apprehended truths while relying on one of your own. The only coherent alternative to intuitionism is to permit no non-empirical assumptions at all — which is moral nihilism, because without any non-empirical premise the is/ought gap cannot be crossed and no moral conclusion can be reached. There is no third position.

Every System Requires a Non-Empirical Assumption

Sterling demonstrates in the March 2020 message that every ethical system covertly uses a non-empirical starting assumption. Systems that claim to derive ethics from evolution use the assumption that evolutionary fitness is good. Systems that claim to derive ethics from consequences use the assumption that welfare or pleasure is good. Systems that claim to derive ethics from rational agreement use the assumption that what rational agents would agree to under ideal conditions is binding. In each case, a non-empirical value judgment has been introduced at the beginning. The system then derives its conclusions from that assumption while claiming to be non-intuitionist. Sterling’s point is not that these systems are dishonest but that they are incomplete: they have not explained why their foundational assumption is justified. Intuitionism is the only position that names what it is doing — it acknowledges that the foundational moral claim is directly apprehended rather than derived, and it gives an account of the epistemic operation involved rather than smuggling it in without acknowledgment.

Moral Terms Cannot Be Sensed

Sterling states in the March 2020 message that goodness, badness, right, wrong, virtuous, vicious — none of these can be heard, smelt, tasted, seen, or felt. If there are moral facts that can be known, then we must have a non-empirical way of knowing them. This claim is not merely about the limits of our current sensory instruments. It is a claim about the categorical nature of moral properties: they are not the kind of properties that sensory experience can detect. One can observe that an action harmed someone. One cannot observe that the action was wrong in the moral sense — that it violated a genuine moral obligation. The wrongness is not a sensory property. It is an evaluative property accessible only to a faculty capable of non-empirical apprehension.

Moral Properties Cannot Be Sensed — That Is the Fulcrum

Sterling’s most emphatic formulation appears in the January 2015 foundationalism message: MORAL PROPERTIES CANNOT BE SENSED. That is the fulcrum. The capitalisation is Sterling’s own. This is not a subsidiary point. It is the pivot on which the entire epistemological argument turns. Once this claim is accepted, the question is not whether non-empirical access to moral truth is required — it clearly is — but only what form that access takes. Sterling’s answer is rational perception of self-evidence. The fulcrum claim also closes the option of grounding ethics in the natural sciences, in evolutionary psychology, in neuroscience, or in any other empirical discipline. If moral properties cannot be sensed, empirical methods have no access to them. The moral foundation of the framework must be reached by a different route.

Rational Perception of Self-Evidence

Sterling’s taxonomy of knowledge sources in the January 2015 message identifies category (c) — rational perception of self-evidence — as the correct account of how foundational moral propositions are known. This category is defined by three features that distinguish it from all other knowledge sources. First, it is not experiential: the agent does not learn the truth because he receives new sensory or extra-sensory input. Second, it is not inferential: the truth is not derived from prior premises. Third, it yields necessary truths: a self-evident truth is one that can only be evident through itself, and since it must be evident independently of any input or inference, it must be a necessary truth. Category (c) is the epistemic home of Theorem 10: only virtue is good, only vice is evil. That theorem is not derived from experience or inference. It is directly apprehended by a rational faculty attending to a necessary moral truth.

Self-Evidence Cannot Vary Between Rational Persons

Sterling draws a crucial contrast in the January 2015 message. Extra-sensory experience (category b) can vary between persons: if you learned a truth by clairvoyance, I cannot know it unless I have the same clairvoyant experience. Innate knowledge (category d) could in principle vary: I could know things innately that you do not. But rational perception of self-evidence (category c) cannot vary between rational persons. A self-evident necessary truth is self-evident to any rational faculty that attends to it. What is self-evident does not depend on what inputs you have received — it depends only on being a rational faculty capable of attending to the truth in question. This universality is what gives intuitionism its normative force in the framework: the agent who fails to recognise that virtue is the only genuine good has not had the wrong experiences or the wrong innate endowment. He has allowed his vision to be obscured by false desires. The truth was available to him all along.

No New Input Required

Sterling specifies that rational perception of self-evidence is different from all other knowledge sources in a precise way: it involves gaining a new understanding without having new information inputted. In sensory experience, input arrives through the senses. In extra-sensory experience, input arrives through non-physical channels. In innate knowledge, the input was received at birth. But in rational perception of self-evidence, there is no input at all — the understanding emerges from the rational faculty’s own operation on what is already there. This is the epistemic operation that intuitionism names. It is not mysterious. It is precisely the operation performed when one sees the validity of a logical argument, recognises the truth of 2+2=4, or grasps that virtue is the only genuine good. The understanding is achieved by attending, not by receiving.

Same Rational Faculty as Mathematics and Logic

Sterling’s most accessible formulation of intuitionism is the mathematical analogy, stated explicitly in the May 2021 ISF message: we know moral truths by using our Reason, in the same way that we know that 2+2=4 and that from “if p then q” and “p” we can deduce “q.” The same rational faculty that gives knowledge of mathematical and logical truths gives knowledge of moral truths. This is not an analogy in the loose sense of resemblance. It is a claim about the unity of the rational faculty: the operation by which we recognise 2+2=4 and the operation by which we recognise that virtue is the only genuine good are instances of the same kind of epistemic act — rational perception of self-evidence, requiring no sensory input, yielding necessary truths, non-variable between rational persons. The mathematical analogy is Sterling’s most direct argument that intuitionism is not a special or mysterious claim but an extension of what we already accept about mathematical and logical knowledge.

Necessary Truths, Not Contingent

Sterling holds that moral truths are necessary, not contingent. This is stated explicitly in the March 2020 message and connects directly to the mathematical analogy: 2+2 could not possibly have been anything other than 4, and the fundamental truths of ethics are necessary in the same sense. They are not truths that happen to hold given certain features of human nature, or truths that hold given a certain social structure, or truths that hold given a certain divine decree. They are truths that could not have been otherwise — unalterable facts about the universe whose necessity is of the same kind as the necessity of mathematical and logical truths. This modal claim is what prevents intuitionism from collapsing into a merely contingent cultural orientation. If moral truths were contingent, they might vary with circumstances. Because they are necessary, they are universal, unalterable, and accessible to any rational faculty that attends to them.

Correction Requires Access

The corrective project of the framework — examining impressions, identifying false value judgments, replacing them with correct ones — requires that the agent have access to the moral truth that the false judgment contradicts. If the agent cannot reach the foundational moral truth, he cannot determine that his impression is false. He can notice that it conflicts with other impressions, or that it produces bad consequences, or that it is culturally non-standard. But he cannot determine that it is objectively false unless he has access to the objective moral standard it fails to meet. Ethical intuitionism provides that access: the rational faculty can directly apprehend that virtue is the only genuine good and that externals are indifferent, and it can use this apprehension as the standard against which to test any impression that attributes genuine goodness or evil to an external.

The Is/Ought Gap Cannot Be Closed Empirically

Sterling states in the January 2015 message that one can run through all the descriptive observations one wants, add up a million Premise 1s, and without a non-sensory moral Premise 2 never reach a moral conclusion. The is/ought gap — the impossibility of deriving an evaluative conclusion from purely descriptive premises — is a structural feature of the relationship between empirical description and moral evaluation. No accumulation of empirical data closes it. At some point the agent must bridge the gap with a non-empirical moral claim. Intuitionism is the account of where that claim comes from: it is directly apprehended by the rational faculty, not derived from experience or inferred from non-moral premises. Without intuitionism, the is/ought gap is in principle unclosable, and the Stoic corrective project — which requires passing from description of an impression to evaluation of it as false — has no principled foundation.

Type A Presupposes Non-Empirical Access

Sterling’s Type A/C distinction in Document 19 (the moral realism document) has direct implications for intuitionism. Type C moral rules — rules of thumb built from experience — presuppose Type A rules — inherent moral considerations that determine what counts as a moral reason in the first place. I can only build up a rule of thumb by already knowing what things count as weights in the moral balance. That prior knowledge is not itself built up from experience. It is the non-empirical foundation that makes the empirical learning possible. Ethical intuitionism is the account of how that foundation is reached: the inherent moral considerations — the Type A rules — are directly apprehended through rational perception of self-evidence, not inductively accumulated from experience.

Dimness Without Blindness

Sterling’s formulation in the March 2020 message is precise: either we can see into the moral realm however dimly, or we are blind. The qualifier “however dimly” is important and often missed. Sterling does not claim that moral intuition is infallible or that moral truths are always apprehended with full clarity. He claims that the rational faculty has some access — however imperfect, however obscured by bad habits and false desires — to the moral truth that is there to be seen. This is a weaker claim than full-blown moral certainty, and it is stronger than moral skepticism. Dimness without blindness is the position: imperfect access is still access; obscured vision is still vision; and the work of Stoic practice is not to create access that does not exist but to clear the obstructions that prevent existing access from functioning clearly.

Axioms Cannot Be Established by Reasoning

Sterling states in the January 2015 message that the moral axioms cannot be established by any kind of reasoning at all — or else they would not be axioms. This is a logical point, not a philosophical preference. If the moral foundations could be derived from prior premises, they would not be foundational — the prior premises would be. The regress would continue until something is accepted without derivation, which is precisely what an axiom is. Ethical intuitionism names this acceptance: the rational faculty directly apprehends the foundational moral truth without deriving it. This does not make intuitionism irrational. It makes it honest about the structure of epistemic justification: at some point, something must be accepted on its own evidence. Intuitionism claims that Theorem 10 — only virtue is good — is self-evident in the required sense.

Bad Habits Obscure But Do Not Eliminate

Sterling acknowledges that bad habits — developed since childhood, of believing that things that seem to benefit us are genuinely good — make it difficult to apprehend obvious moral truths. We tend to deny obvious moral truths when they are inconvenient. But Sterling treats this as obscuration, not elimination. The rational access to moral truth is present; the bad habits make it harder to exercise. This is why Stoic practice is described as training rather than discovery: the truths do not need to be discovered — the Stoics think we already know what virtue is and that it is good. What we need is to eliminate the desires that obscure our vision of the true good. Intuitionism provides the target of the training; the training is the progressive removal of the obstructions that prevent the faculty’s natural access to moral truth from functioning clearly.

Anger Test as Self-Revelation of Access

Sterling’s diagnostic in the May 2021 message is unique to the corpus and deserves careful attention. The man who refuses to repay his debts and pretends he has no obligation to do so gets furious when someone else refuses to repay a debt to him. This anger is self-revealing. It demonstrates that the debt-denier has rational access to the moral truth he is theoretically denying. He knows, in the sense that matters, that obligations are real, that failing to meet them is a genuine failure, and that the agent who fails is genuinely responsible. He cannot sustain the denial practically even while maintaining it theoretically. The anger test is evidence that moral intuition is not a special achievement of the philosophically trained. It is the natural operation of the rational faculty, present even in agents who theoretically deny it, revealing itself whenever those agents encounter others’ failures to meet obligations they simultaneously deny and rely on.

Mathematical Analogy

The mathematical analogy is Sterling’s most concise argument for the parity of moral and mathematical knowledge. We know that 2+2=4 by Reason. We do not derive this from sensory experience. We do not infer it from prior premises. We recognise it as a necessary truth through direct rational apprehension. We know that virtue is the only genuine good by the same operation. We do not derive this from sensory experience — moral properties cannot be sensed. We do not infer it from prior non-moral premises — the is/ought gap cannot be crossed without a moral Premise 2. We recognise it as a necessary truth through direct rational apprehension. The analogy is not decorative. It is the argument that the operation intuitionism describes is already accepted in mathematics and logic, and that the resistance to it in ethics is not principled but motivated by the inconvenience of accepting moral obligations one would prefer not to hold.

Modus Ponens Analogy

Sterling pairs the mathematical analogy with the logical analogy: we know that from “if p then q” and “p” we can deduce “q” by the same rational faculty that gives moral knowledge. The modus ponens analogy is more specific than the mathematical analogy and connects directly to substance dualism. Sterling had already argued in the dualism document that the concept of modus ponens is not a physical property of any brain state. Physics can describe the electro-chemical correlates of the brain state accompanying the recognition of modus ponens, but it cannot describe the recognition itself as a recognition of logical necessity. The same rational faculty that performs this non-physical recognition of logical necessity performs the non-physical recognition of moral necessity. The modus ponens analogy therefore does double work: it supports intuitionism by showing that non-empirical rational apprehension is already accepted in logic, and it connects intuitionism to substance dualism by showing that both depend on the same non-physical operation of the rational faculty.

Cataleptic Impression Structure

Sterling uses the Stoic technical concept of the cataleptic impression in the February 2020 message to ground the intuitionist claim in Stoic epistemology. Cataleptic impressions are those that always match the facts — they are the impressions that give certain knowledge. They are still inside the mind; they are still impressions. But they are a special class that always corresponds to reality. Sterling’s argument is that cataleptic impressions in the mind require facts outside the mind in order for them to be true. Applied to moral knowledge: the cataleptic moral impression — the direct apprehension of a necessary moral truth — is an impression that always corresponds to the moral fact. It gives certain knowledge of that fact because the fact is necessary and because the operation of rational perception of self-evidence is precisely the operation that produces cataleptic moral impressions.

Desires Obstruct Vision of the True Good

Sterling’s most practically significant formulation in the foundationalism document is this: the Stoics think we already know what virtue is and that it is good. What we need is to eliminate the desires that obscure our vision of the true good. This formulation places the entire problem of moral education and Stoic practice in the correct frame. The problem is not epistemic in the sense of providing new information. It is practical in the sense of removing obstructions to existing access. The agent does not need to be taught that virtue is good — he already knows this in the sense of rational perception. What he needs is to stop allowing his desires — his falsely-valued preferences for externals — from obscuring the clear vision of what the rational faculty can already apprehend. Intuitionism is therefore not a thesis about the beginning of moral education but about its target: the access that Stoic practice aims to clear is already present, already real, already pointing at the moral truth. Practice is its progressive unobstruction.


The Three Foundations

Foundation One — only internal things are in our control — is supported by ethical intuitionism through the faculty’s self-sufficiency. The agent does not need to consult external authorities, empirical data, or social consensus to determine what is genuinely good. The rational faculty has direct, non-empirical access to the foundational moral truth. This access is internal to the faculty and requires no external input. The agent’s moral knowledge is therefore as independent of externals as his assent is — it is something the rational faculty carries with it regardless of external conditions.

Foundation Two — unhappiness is caused by falsely believing externals are good or evil — requires ethical intuitionism to give the corrective project its target. To identify a belief as false, the agent must have access to the truth it contradicts. Ethical intuitionism provides that access: the rational faculty can directly apprehend that externals are indifferent — that Theorem 12 is true — because Theorem 12 derives from Theorem 10, and Theorem 10 is a self-evident necessary truth apprehended through rational perception. Without intuitionism, the agent can note inconsistencies but cannot determine objective falsity.

Foundation Three — right assent guarantees eudaimonia — requires ethical intuitionism to ensure that correct assent is always available to the agent in principle. The guarantee holds because the moral truth that right assent must correspond to is always accessible through rational perception. The agent cannot be deprived of access to moral truth by external conditions — because moral truth is necessary, not contingent, and because the access to it is through the rational faculty rather than through the senses. However the agent’s circumstances change, the faculty’s capacity to apprehend that virtue is the only genuine good remains intact.


Integration with the Other Commitments

Ethical intuitionism requires substance dualism (C1) to establish the kind of knower capable of non-empirical rational apprehension. The moral perception that intuitionism describes is not a physical event. It is not the reception of a sensory input. It is the rational faculty’s own operation on a necessary truth that is there to be seen. Only a non-physical rational faculty with genuine epistemic access to non-physical truths can perform this operation. Substance dualism establishes that faculty; intuitionism specifies its moral operation.

Ethical intuitionism requires libertarian free will (C2) to make the agent genuinely responsible for whether he exercises his intuitional capacity or allows it to remain obscured. The capacity is there; the exercise of it is up to the agent. The agent who allows bad habits to obscure his vision of moral truth has genuinely failed — not been determined to fail. The freedom to exercise or not exercise the intuitional capacity is what makes the failure a genuine failure and the correction a genuine achievement.

Ethical intuitionism requires moral realism (C3) to provide the moral facts that the intuitional capacity reaches. Intuitionism is the epistemological claim: the faculty can apprehend moral truth directly. Moral realism is the metaphysical claim: there are moral truths to apprehend. Without moral realism, intuitionism would be the operation of a faculty that produces moral impressions with no corresponding reality — which is not moral knowledge but moral hallucination.

Ethical intuitionism requires correspondence theory (C4) to specify what makes a moral intuition correct rather than incorrect. The rational faculty apprehends a moral truth; correspondence theory specifies that the apprehension is correct when it corresponds to the actual evaluative structure of the world. Without correspondence theory, intuitionism has no standard of correctness — every sincere moral impression would count as genuine apprehension, and the distinction between clear vision and obscured vision would collapse.

Ethical intuitionism requires foundationalism (C6) to organise the moral truths the faculty apprehends into a structured hierarchy. The faculty apprehends Theorem 10 as foundational; foundationalism specifies that Theorem 12 derives from Theorem 10, that role-duties derive from the foundational value claim, and that the systematic examination of impressions proceeds by tracing them back to the foundational theorem they contradict. Without foundationalism, intuitionism gives access to moral truths but no architecture for applying them.


The Discriminatives

Empiricism holds that all knowledge derives from sensory experience. It fails on the moral-properties-cannot-be-sensed dimension and the fulcrum dimension. If all knowledge derives from sensory experience and moral properties cannot be sensed, then there is no moral knowledge. Empiricism applied to ethics produces either the reduction of moral properties to natural properties (which cannot derive a genuine ought from an is) or the elimination of moral properties altogether (which produces nihilism). Sterling’s framework requires genuine moral knowledge; empiricism cannot provide it.

Inferentialism holds that knowledge is the product of reasoning from prior premises. It fails on the axioms-cannot-be-established-by-reasoning dimension. If the moral axioms could be derived by reasoning from prior premises, they would not be axioms — the prior premises would be foundational instead. The regress continues until something is accepted without derivation. Inferentialism does not explain how that foundational acceptance is made — it defers it. Intuitionism explains it: the foundational acceptance is rational perception of self-evidence, the recognition of a necessary truth that is evident through itself. Inferentialism cannot account for the foundation it implicitly relies on.

Skepticism about moral knowledge holds that we cannot have justified beliefs about moral truth. It fails on the dimness-without-blindness dimension and the anger-test dimension. Sterling’s argument is that strong moral skepticism requires blindness: the complete absence of any rational access to moral truth. But the anger test reveals that even those who theoretically endorse skepticism cannot practically sustain it. They know, in the practical sense, that moral obligations are real. The skeptical position is theoretically coherent but practically unstable: it cannot be lived, because living requires making choices on the basis of moral evaluations, and those evaluations reveal the intuitional access the skepticism theoretically denies.


Sterling/Kelly Philosophical System. C5 — Ethical Intuitionism (Direct Apprehension of Moral Truth). Corpus-governed recovery essay. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Analytical judgments and architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.