Sterling on Foundationalism and Intuition — Two Primary Source Documents from the ISF Archive
Sterling on Foundationalism and Intuition — Two Primary Source Documents from the ISF Archive
Sources: International Stoic Forum (ISF). Document One: Yahoo Groups, thread “foundationalists or coherentists?” July 1, 2007. Document Two: Google Groups, thread “Intuition and Metaphysics,” September 23, 2021. Recovered from the Gmail archive of ISF posts. Extraction and annotation: Dave Kelly, 2026.
Introduction
The two documents below are Grant C. Sterling’s most direct archived statements on foundationalism and ethical intuitionism. They are separated by fourteen years but form a continuous argument. The 2007 post establishes Sterling’s foundationalist epistemological position and names self-evidence and intuition as its warranting mechanisms. The 2021 post provides Sterling’s fullest definition of philosophical intuition, explicitly rejects coherentism in ethics, and connects the intuitionist method to the ancient Greek account of Reason as a faculty that both apprehends axioms and deduces theorems. Together they constitute the archival basis for Commitment Three (ethical intuitionism) and Commitment Six (foundationalism) as reconstructed in the corpus.
Document One — July 1, 2007
Thread: “foundationalists or coherentists?” — ISF Yahoo Groups
Context
Forum member Amos asked Sterling to explain the difference between foundationalism and coherentism after Sterling had used both terms in passing in a prior post. Sterling’s reply is unprompted by adversarial pressure and constitutes his clearest early archived statement of his epistemological position. The prior post, quoted by Amos, is included because it contains Sterling’s initial argument in fuller form.
Sterling’s Prior Post (Quoted in the Thread)
One can prove “X” only by using premises that are more certain than X [at least, more certain than X was when you began the proof.] If the premises of the argument were themselves proven, it could only be by using premises that are more certain still. Obviously, this process must terminate in fundamental premises that cannot be proven. {This is from a foundationalist who doesn’t believe in circular justification. If you’re a coherentist, you can give a different account. {{{But you’d be wrong. :)}}} } Euclidean geometry makes this explicit, with axioms [postulated] and theorems [demonstrated]. So “premises” can be proven, but ultimate, basic axiomatic premises cannot. That doesn’t mean they have to be arbitrary — they could be self-evidently true, for example, or known intuitively, or something else.
Sterling’s Direct Reply to Amos
Actually, I intended that as a throw-away comment for those who had studied some technical philosophy to make it clear that my assertions were based on a certain viewpoint. But, since you asked…
“Foundationalists”, like myself, think that beliefs can be proven only in terms of some premises which are more fundamental than the principle being proven. Hence, there must be a “foundation” of basic principles that are not derived from other principles. {As I said, this doesn’t mean that these principles are random or arbitrary, but they are not derived from other propositions.} So if I prove “A” by using premises B and C, I cannot in turn prove B or C by using A.
“Coherentists” believe that beliefs can be justified in terms of how well they fit with other beliefs. Hence, A, B, and C might be simultaneously justified in terms of each other because they fit or “cohere” with each other as a set. Rather than regard one belief as justified in terms of more basic beliefs, they hold that sets of beliefs are justified together.
{Of course, it’s more complicated than that, but that’s the quick version of those views.}
Regards, Grant
Document Two — September 23, 2021
Thread: “Intuition and Metaphysics” — ISF Google Groups
Context
Sterling opened this thread himself with a post he described as “a very brief (for me) note.” It arose in the context of a wider forum discussion about knowledge and belief. The post is one of the most philosophically dense of Sterling’s archived writings. It distinguishes the ordinary-language use of “intuition” from its technical philosophical use, defines the latter precisely, rejects coherentism in ethics explicitly, connects foundationalism to logic and metaphysics as well as ethics, and reconstructs the ancient Greek account of Reason as a dual faculty — both intuiting axioms and deducing theorems. Steve Marquis replied briefly; no further messages in the thread are archived.
Sterling’s Post in Full
All:
“Intuition”, as the term is used in ordinary conversation, does mean something like “I just feel that it’s true but can’t give any description of the means by which I know it.” An “intuition” is no different from a “hunch”, except that “intuition” carries with it a more forceful assertion of truth. (Some people might happily say “I have a hunch that x is the case, but my hunch may be wrong.” Very few people will say that they have an intuition about something that may not be true.)
“Intuition”, as it is used in philosophy, is bifurcated. Opponents of the notion use the term roughly like it is used in ordinary conversation, and then accuse their opponents of taking totally unjustified beliefs and pretending that they’re justified by calling them “intuitions.” They argue that “intuition” doesn’t actually have any content at all.
Proponents of the notion, however, rarely commit the mistake they’re accused of. They usually are careful to give a definition of precisely what “intuition” represents. I, for example, use the word for the ability of the mind to have direct acquaintance with a necessary truth. (So, for me, there’s no such thing as an intuition that it was wrong for Abimelech to lie to Jezebel about how much he paid for his new table saw. There might be an intuition of the general, necessary truth “All other things being equal, one ought not to lie”, and on the basis of such an intuition someone might infer that Abi’s behavior was wrong — but that’s totally different from saying that we intuit the wrongness of the specific behavior.)
Now I agree that, unless one tries the project of building an ethics entirely on the basis of non-ethical foundations, (a project which I think is doomed to failure, for what it’s worth), then ethics needs “intuitions” of some sort. There needs to be some kind of foundational ethical truths. (I reject coherentism in ethics just as I reject it in any context — the mere fact that someone’s beliefs hold together with each other is no evidence that they’re true {although of course if they don’t hold together that’s conclusive evidence that some of them are false}. That should never be more apparent than in the US today, where rival political groups construct internally consistent (sometimes) systems of beliefs that are mutually inconsistent.) Ethics requires axioms from which to deduce its theorems.
But the same is true for metaphysics itself, and for Logic as well. There are metaphysical and logical axioms — principles that cannot be proven, but which serve as the basis for further proofs. Try constructing a proof of “Nothing can be both ‘p’ and ‘not-p’ in the same respect at the same time”, without using that principle in the proof. The chapter on proofs in every Logic textbook begins with a list of “rules.” Some logicians argue that some of those rules can actually be proven using the others, but none claims that all of them can be proven — some must be accepted as known without proof.
The Stoics, and all the ancient Greeks, thought that this ability to “see” necessary truths was a function of Reason, and so they used “Reason” to mean both the ability to ‘intuit’ axioms and the ability to deduce theorems from axioms. I think it is unfortunate that this usage broke down (probably another of the negative legacies of David Hume), and “reason” is typically confined to the latter process, and no word is left for the former process other than the abused “intuition.”
Regards, GCS
Combined Annotation
Read together, these two posts provide the archival foundation for three of the six commitments and their structural relationships.
On Commitment Six — Foundationalism. The 2007 post establishes Sterling’s self-identification as a foundationalist and his account of what foundationalism requires: a foundation of basic principles not derived from other propositions, terminating the regress of justification not arbitrarily but because foundational beliefs are self-evident or known intuitively. The 2021 post extends this explicitly to ethics, logic, and metaphysics in a single argument: all three domains require axioms from which theorems are deduced, and in all three the axioms cannot themselves be proven. The non-provability of foundational beliefs is not a defect; it is the nature of axiomatic knowledge. Coherentism, which offers mutual support among beliefs as a substitute for foundations, is rejected in both posts — emphatically in 2007 (“but you’d be wrong”) and with a developed argument in 2021 (internal consistency is not evidence of truth; rival politically coherent systems demonstrate this).
On Commitment Three — Ethical Intuitionism. The 2021 post provides Sterling’s precise definition of philosophical intuition: “the ability of the mind to have direct acquaintance with a necessary truth.” This is not the ordinary-language hunch, not an unexamined feeling, and not a claim about specific cases. Intuition in the technical sense operates at the level of general necessary truths. The particular case is then reached by inference, not by further intuition. This is the exact structure required for C3 as reconstructed in the corpus: moral facts are apprehended directly at the foundational level; derived judgments are reached by application of those foundational apprehensions to particular cases.
On the structural pairing of C3 and C6. The 2007 post names both self-evidence and intuition as possible warrants for foundational beliefs in the same sentence. The 2021 post shows these are not two separate options but a unified account: intuition, properly defined, is the direct acquaintance with necessary truths that makes those truths foundational. C6 terminates the justificatory regress; C3 provides the epistemic access to what stands at the terminus. This pairing is explicitly present in Sterling’s own writing across two decades, not an interpretive construction of the corpus project.
On the Greek account of Reason. Sterling’s closing paragraph in the 2021 post is of particular importance for the corpus. He holds that the Stoics and all ancient Greeks understood Reason as a dual faculty: the ability to intuit axioms and the ability to deduce theorems from axioms. The narrowing of “reason” to deduction only is a post-Humean development that Sterling regards as a loss. This is not merely a historical observation. It means that the Stoic account of the rational faculty — the prohairesis as seat of both foundational apprehension and derived judgment — already includes the intuitionist function within reason itself. The faculty that assents to value impressions is the same faculty that apprehends necessary moral truths. The separation of these two functions into “reason” and “intuition” as competing epistemic modes is a distortion introduced by later philosophy. Sterling’s framework restores the original unity.
On the rejection of non-ethical foundations for ethics. Sterling states that building ethics “entirely on the basis of non-ethical foundations” is “a project which I think is doomed to failure.” This is his direct position on naturalistic and pragmatic ethics: they cannot generate normative authority from non-normative premises. The is-ought gap is not a minor inconvenience for such projects; it is a structural impossibility. Ethics requires its own foundational axioms, apprehended by the faculty Sterling defines as intuition in the technical sense. This closes the motivation gap objection addressed in the Gemini exchange: the normative force of moral facts is not imported from outside the rational faculty but is intrinsic to the act of genuine apprehension.
Sources: ISF Yahoo Groups, thread “foundationalists or coherentists?” July 1, 2007, sender gcsterling@eiu.edu; ISF Google Groups, thread “Intuition and Metaphysics,” September 23, 2021, sender gcsterling@eiu.edu. Recovered from Gmail archive. Extraction and annotation: Dave Kelly, 2026.

