Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Monday, April 27, 2026

What Scalia Got Right, What He Missed, and How to Fix It: A Sterling Interpretive Framework Correction

 

What Scalia Got Right, What He Missed, and How to Fix It: A Sterling Interpretive Framework Correction

Third Edition

Antonin Scalia’s A Matter of Interpretation (1997) is the most philosophically serious account of legal textual correspondence in the modern American tradition. Its governing claim — that legal interpretation consists in recovering the original public meaning a reasonable contemporary of the enactment would gather from the enacted text — is stated with unusual precision and defended with genuine argumentative force. Its polemic against four dominant legal interpretive traditions correctly identifies a structural problem that no subsequent legal theorist has fully answered.

It is also limited in a specific and correctable way. Scalia wages his polemic against formation traditions in legal interpretation from within an unexamined formation tradition of his own. He identifies Formation Capture at the object level of legal reasoning with precision and force. He does not notice that Formation Capture is operating at the meta-level of his own governing theory of meaning.

This essay develops that correction. It applies the Sterling Interpretive Framework’s Formation Strip to Scalia’s text, surfaces the presuppositional architecture his position requires but does not provide, and proposes six classical philosophical commitments as the grounding that corrected textualism requires. It also owns a consequence that critics have correctly identified: the corrected theory is not a repair of Scalia from within his own commitments. It is an alternative framework — one that takes Scalia’s governing insight seriously enough to give it the philosophical architecture it needs to be coherent. Scalia’s project, correctly understood, requires this architecture. His text does not provide it. The alternative framework is the completion of his project, not its replacement.


I. What Scalia Actually Argues

Before any correction is possible, Formation Capture in the reading of Scalia must be stripped. Two formation traditions have governed this text’s reception so thoroughly that its actual content is rarely attended to with care.

The conservative legal formation reads the text as a coherent and complete judicial philosophy whose positive thesis is vindicated by its internal consistency. The progressive legal formation reads it as a sophisticated rhetorical performance that licenses conservative constitutional results under cover of principled method. Both formations have generated readings that correspond more to their governing presuppositions than to what the text actually contains.

What the text actually contains is this. Scalia identifies a structural problem in American legal interpretation that is real and precisely diagnosed: the common-law mindset, intentionalism, legislative history, and the Living Constitution all share the same governing error. They enable the interpreter to substitute his own values for the enacted text under cover of professional method. The common-law judge who asks “what is the most desirable resolution of this case” and then searches for doctrinal cover for that resolution is committing what the Sterling Interpretive Framework calls Formation Capture: the impression of what the legal text requires has been generated by the interpreter’s formation rather than by correspondence to what the text actually says.

The specific demonstration using Church of the Holy Trinity v. United States is the most philosophically precise moment in the book. The Supreme Court acknowledged explicitly that the statute’s literal terms covered the conduct at issue, and then found that the conduct was not covered because it was contrary to the “spirit” of the act. Scalia’s verdict — “the act was within the letter of the statute, and was therefore within the statute: end of case” — is the SIF’s verification test applied to statutory interpretation: would this reading survive if the Court had no formation-derived preference for the result? No. The letter of the statute survives. The spirit-of-the-act reading does not.

Scalia’s positive correspondence standard is also more precise than either formation tradition acknowledges. He is not arguing for original intent. He is arguing for original public meaning: what the text would reasonably be understood to mean by a competent contemporary of its enactment. In his Response to Ronald Dworkin he adopts the term “import” — what the text “would reasonably be understood to mean,” distinguished from what it was intended to mean. This is a genuine philosophical move shifting the correspondence standard from a psychological question about what the legislators had in mind to a semantic question about what the words communicated.


II. The Formation Tradition Scalia Imports

The Formation Strip applied to Scalia’s text reveals a stack of unargued philosophical presuppositions that the text imports as self-evident. This is Formation Capture at the meta-level.

One objection must be acknowledged before the stack is named. Scalia did not treat these presuppositions as naive dogmas; he defended them pragmatically as necessary for the rule of law and democratic legitimacy. That pragmatic defense is genuine and carries real argumentative weight. But a pragmatic defense of a presupposition is not the same as an argument that the presupposition corresponds to how meaning and interpretation actually work. Scalia’s pragmatic arguments establish that his presuppositions produce better institutional outcomes than the alternatives. They do not establish that his presuppositions are true. The Formation Strip requires the second kind of argument, not the first. The absence of that argument is what the Formation Capture charge names.

The Fixation Thesis holds that the linguistic meaning of a legal text is fixed at the moment of its framing. Scalia does not argue for it. He does not engage the hermeneutical challenge that meaning is always constituted through the ongoing encounter between past and present rather than existing as a historical fact awaiting recovery.

The Public Meaning Thesis holds that the relevant semantic content is what was accessible to a competent contemporary public at the moment of enactment. The text assumes the existence of such a public and the determinacy of what it would have understood. It does not address the structural objection that when members of the founding generation disagreed about the meaning of a constitutional provision — as they frequently did — the idea of a uniquely correct determinate public meaning existing as a matter of historical fact cannot be recovered as a fact but must be constructed as a normative standard.

The Disengaged Interpreter is the philosophical anthropology the method requires and never defends. A critic has noted that Scalia was not offering a full anthropology but prescribing judicial discipline: bracket personal policy preferences. This is true. But prescribing judicial discipline requires an account of what judges are capable of doing — of what bracketing one’s formation consists in and whether it is genuinely possible. Without that account, the prescription floats free of any explanation of how it could be executed. The corrected theory provides that account. Scalia’s text does not.

The Positivist Legal Ontology holds that the legal content of the law just is, or is determined by, the communicative content of the authoritative text. Even if the Fixation Thesis is true and original public meaning is recoverable, a further philosophical argument is required for why that meaning constitutes what the law now requires. Scalia provides rule-of-law and democratic-legitimacy arguments, but these are consequentialist arguments about why being bound by fixed meaning produces better institutional outcomes, not arguments about what the law actually is.

Together these four presuppositions constitute the modernist stack. Scalia inherits it from the formation of analytic legal theory without identifying it as a formation. He wages a polemic against object-level formation traditions while being governed by a meta-level formation tradition in his theory of meaning.


III. The Six Commitments: Load-Bearing Conditions, Not Preferences

The correction proposed here replaces Scalia’s modernist stack with six classical philosophical commitments: substance dualism, libertarian free will, moral realism, correspondence theory of truth, ethical intuitionism, and foundationalism. A serious objection must be answered: are these commitments themselves formation-derived preferences, introduced as foundations without undergoing the same Formation Strip applied to Scalia?

The answer is that the six commitments are not a formation-derived set of preferences. They are individually demonstrable as load-bearing conditions for specific phases of correct rational inquiry — conditions whose removal does not merely complicate those phases but forecloses them as genuine cognitive operations. The argument is phase-by-phase. It is not an assertion that these commitments are self-evidently correct. It is a demonstration that without each one, a specific operation required for correct interpretive practice is structurally unavailable.

Substance dualism (C1) and the three-way separation. Recognition — the phase in which the impression is identified as an impression rather than as reality — requires separating three things that Reception presents as a single undifferentiated event: the external text, the impression of its meaning, and the prohairesis that receives both. This three-way separation presupposes that there is a categorical difference between the rational faculty doing the separating and everything else. Without that categorical difference, the agent cannot distinguish himself from the impression. He is constituted by it. Formation Capture is inescapable by definition: every reading is the output of the agent’s formation because the agent is nothing but his formation.

The compatibilist objection holds that determined or emergent processes can still involve rational evaluation and error-correction without requiring a non-physical self. This is a serious position. But it does not answer the specific challenge. The Formation Strip requires distinguishing a formation-governed reading from a correspondence-governed reading. If the agent who conducts the Formation Strip is himself constituted by his prior causal history — including his training, his institutional role, his formation — then the Strip is not a genuine correction. It is the output of a different causal history producing a different reading. The difference between Formation Capture and correct reading is not the agent’s genuine act of examination. It is the causal history that includes his Stoic training producing a different output than the causal history that does not. The Strip has not corrected the formation. It has substituted one formation for another.

The compatibilist may respond that reasons-responsiveness is sufficient for genuine correction. But reasons-responsiveness is itself a capacity whose exercise is determined by prior conditions. The agent who is reasons-responsive in the relevant sense is reasons-responsive because of his formation. His response to reasons is the output of a causal history that includes his training in reasons-responsiveness. The question of whether his examination of the impression is formation-governed or correspondence-governed cannot be answered by noting that he is sensitive to reasons, because his sensitivity to reasons is itself a formation-dependent capacity. Substance dualism provides the only account on which the examining faculty is genuinely prior to the formation it examines rather than constituted by it.

Libertarian free will (C2) and the genuine pause. The pause between impression and assent must be a genuine moment of originating agency. Without libertarian free will, the pause is a causal interval between predetermined outputs. The corrected reading is not the agent’s genuine act. It is the final stage of a causal sequence that was determined before the pause began. The Formation Strip is not something the agent does. It is something that happens in the agent as the output of prior conditions. The difference between a judge who has been trained in the Strip and one who has not is a difference in causal histories, not a difference in genuine cognitive acts. Libertarian free will is required to make the Strip something the agent genuinely performs rather than something that happens in him.

Moral realism (C3) and Formation Capture as genuine error. Without moral realism, the evaluative claim embedded in a formation-governed reading cannot be false. If there are no mind-independent moral facts, the claim that an interpreter has imported a preferred value into the text is not a claim that he has made an error. It is only a claim that his values differ from the corrector’s values. The Formation Strip produces not a correction but an alternative preference. This is Stanley Fish’s conclusion, and it is logically sound given anti-realist premises. Moral realism is required to make Formation Capture a genuine error rather than a mere difference of preference.

Correspondence theory (C4), ethical intuitionism (C5), and foundationalism (C6). Correspondence theory establishes that readings can be assessed as true or false by reference to what the text actually contains. Without it, the distinction between a reading governed by the text’s features and a reading governed by the interpreter’s formation cannot be drawn as a distinction between correct and incorrect. Ethical intuitionism — within the constraints specified in Section V — provides the termination point for the Formation Strip: some textual features are directly apprehensible without the mediation of a further formation-governed process, and those provide the Examination phase with something to test against. Foundationalism establishes that the correction procedure terminates at architecturally prior first principles rather than regressing infinitely. Without it, the Formation Strip is a circular procedure: each assessment requires a further assessment, which requires another, without end.

The package of six commitments tracks a Stoic-influenced classical view. That is correct. But the charge of formation-derivation requires showing not only that the commitments have a philosophical home but that they are not individually load-bearing in the way claimed. The phase-by-phase argument shows that each commitment is required for a specific cognitive operation. The alternative frameworks — compatibilism, anti-realism, coherentism — do not merely complicate those operations. They redefine them in ways that make the Formation Strip’s governing distinction — between formation-governed and correspondence-governed readings — unavailable as a distinction between correct and incorrect rather than between different processes producing different outputs.


IV. Moral Realism and Constitutional Moral Terms: The Argument

The most contested specific application of the six commitments to Scalia’s position is the claim that moral realism stabilizes the interpretation of constitutional moral terms. The objection is that this move imports a preferred metaphysics to solve an interpretive problem rather than demonstrating that the text requires it. The objection must be answered directly.

When the Constitution uses abstract moral language — “cruel and unusual,” “equal protection,” “due process” — the semantic content of those terms at the moment of enactment is underdetermined between two readings. The first reading fixes semantic content at the enacting generation’s concrete applications of the moral concept. The second reading fixes semantic content at the moral concept itself. Scalia consistently chose the first reading without providing a principled argument for why the first reading better corresponds to the semantic content of the moral terms the framers used.

The argument for moral realism at this point is not that moral realism is a preferred metaphysics. It is that the first reading fails the correspondence test on its own terms. Moral terms are not proper names for whatever the framers happened to find cruel. They are moral concepts with content that can be applied correctly or incorrectly to particular cases. The semantic content of “cruel” at the moment of enactment was the concept of cruelty — whatever that concept correctly applies to — not the framers’ list of applications of it. A reading that fixes semantic content at the historical list rather than the concept misidentifies the semantic unit. It fails to correspond to what the moral term actually communicated.

The anti-realist objection holds that correct application can be determined by evolving reflective equilibrium within a tradition or by public meaning at enactment including framers’ applications as strong evidence. The response: reflective equilibrium within a tradition is Formation Capture elevated to a method. It is precisely the community substitution that the SIF identifies as a named failure mode. The community’s settled view of what cruelty requires is the formation. Testing a reading against that settled view is not a correspondence test. It is a conformity test. The anti-realist who treats correct application as what the relevant community converges on after reflection has not escaped Formation Capture. He has institutionalized it.

The alternative — fixing semantic content at framers’ applications as strong evidence of public meaning — is closer to Scalia’s actual position. But as the essay demonstrates, this fixes semantic content at the list rather than the concept and fails the correspondence test on its own terms. Moral realism enters not to import a preferred metaphysics but to make the concept’s application non-arbitrary: if the semantic content is the concept of cruelty rather than the framers’ applications of it, what does the concept correctly apply to? Without moral realism, that question has no answer beyond current preference, and the abstract-principle reading collapses into the Living Constitution that Scalia correctly rejects.

A critic has noted that Scalia resisted abstract-principle readings precisely to avoid judicial moral philosophy, and that the essay’s correction moves toward a form of moral reasoning under the guise of semantic content plus realism. This is accurate. The corrected theory does require judges to engage with moral philosophy when constitutional moral terms are at issue. That requirement is the price of taking the semantic content of those terms seriously. The alternative — fixing content at historical applications to avoid moral philosophy — is not a neutral interpretive choice. It is a philosophical commitment to a specific account of how moral terms function semantically, one that the Formation Strip does not survive.


V. Ethical Intuitionism: Scope and Constraints

The claim that some textual features are directly apprehensible by any competent rational reader requires precise specification. Without constraints, the claim degenerates into “what seems clear to a rational reader” — which is precisely the opening for Formation Capture that the Formation Strip is designed to close.

Three constraints govern the scope of ethical intuitionism in the corrected theory. First: the feature must be one whose apprehension does not require the imposition of a prior value judgment. The plain meaning of a statutory term specifying a numerical threshold is directly apprehensible; whether that threshold produces just outcomes is not. Second: the feature must be one where competent readers of the relevant linguistic community at the time of enactment would converge on the same apprehension. Where the founding generation disagreed about the meaning of a constitutional provision, the feature is not directly apprehensible and the Formation Strip must work harder. Third: where moral terms are at issue, the directly apprehensible feature is not the moral concept’s correct application but the fact that a moral concept is being invoked — the fact that the text is reaching for an objective moral standard rather than enacting a list of preferred practices. The concept’s correct application requires the moral realism argument developed in Section IV, not direct apprehension.

With these constraints, ethical intuitionism provides a termination point for the Formation Strip in cases where the semantic content is genuinely determinate and accessible: the interpreter can stop testing at the point where the plain semantic content is directly apprehensible rather than regressing infinitely through further formation-stripping procedures. This is the limited and specific role C5 plays in the corrected theory.


VI. The Corrected Formation Strip in Legal Interpretation

The corrected theory replaces Scalia’s disengaged interpreter with the Formation Strip as an explicit, executable procedure. The judge applying the corrected textualism does not claim to be formation-free. He claims to be conducting an honest examination of his formation-derived impressions before assenting to any reading of the text.

Reception: the text arrives carrying an impression of what it means, produced by the entire formation of the reader. The first requirement is to recognize the impression as an impression rather than as a direct reading of the text’s features.

Recognition: the judge performs the three-way separation — the external text, the impression of its meaning, and the prohairesis that receives both are distinguished as three separate things. The external text has not arrived pre-interpreted. The interpretation is the impression. The judge is the one for whom the separation is being made.

The Pause: between the impression’s arrival and the assent to a reading, the judge maintains the structural gap in which the Formation Strip operates. This requires a self that is prior to the impression (C1) and capable of genuine originating examination (C2). Without both, the pause is not a moment of genuine agency.

Examination: within the pause, the judge applies the Formation Strip. What features does the text actually have? Where the text uses determinate linguistic conventions directly apprehensible to a competent reader (C5), the Formation Strip converges quickly. Where the text uses abstract moral language, the additional argument from Section IV applies: the semantic content is the moral concept, not the historical list, and what the concept correctly applies to is governed by moral facts (C3) assessable by reference to an architecturally prior standard (C6).

Decision: the judge assents to the reading that survives the Formation Strip. This assent is genuinely his own (C2). It corresponds to what the text actually contains (C4). The verification test is applied: would this reading be selected if the judge had no formation-derived preference for it?


VII. The Minimalism Objection: Why Less Is Not Enough

A serious practical objection holds that better textualist practice can incorporate bias checks, rigorous historical semantics, and awareness of underdeterminacy without the full classical stack. The six commitments are unnecessary philosophical overhead. Scalia’s strength was its relative minimalism; the corrected theory makes interpretation more philosophically rigorous at the cost of accessibility and neutrality across worldviews.

The objection is understandable and must be taken seriously. But it rests on a misunderstanding of what bias checks require. The minimalist textualist who practices bias checks without the six commitments is in the position of someone who applies a correction procedure without any account of what makes a reading correct rather than merely different. Bias checks require a standard against which bias is identified. Rigorous historical semantics requires that historical semantic facts are real and recoverable. Awareness of underdeterminacy requires distinguishing genuine underdetermination from formation-governed apparent determinacy. Each of these requires — implicitly, even if not acknowledged — the commitments the minimalist claims to avoid.

The minimalist textualist is not operating without the commitments. He is operating with them unexamined. This is precisely Scalia’s situation. The essay’s charge against Scalia is not that he held the wrong commitments. It is that he held them without examination — which is exactly what makes them a formation tradition rather than a grounded philosophical position. The minimalist who advocates bias checks without examining the commitments those checks require has not avoided the problem. He has relocated it.

The accessibility objection — that few judges can execute a philosophical audit of their own formation — is pragmatically real but not philosophically decisive. The question of what correct interpretation requires is distinct from the question of whether practitioners can execute it perfectly. Scalia himself acknowledged that textualism is an ideal not always achieved. The corrected theory agrees. Its contribution is to specify more precisely what the ideal consists in and what its philosophical grounding is. Approximations of the ideal are more reliable when the ideal is precisely specified than when it is vaguely gestured at.

The neutrality-across-worldviews objection — that the corrected theory will persuade mainly those already sympathetic to classical realism and Stoic anthropology — is correct as a sociological prediction and irrelevant as a philosophical evaluation. The question is whether the six commitments are true and whether they are individually load-bearing for correct interpretive practice. The answer to both is yes, as the phase-by-phase argument demonstrates. That the argument will not persuade committed naturalists or anti-realists is a consequence of the genuine philosophical disagreement between those positions and the classical framework, not a deficiency of the argument itself.

This argument against minimalism is not a novel move within the Sterling Interpretive Framework. It is the application of the classical foundationalist argument against pragmatism and instrumentalism in epistemology to the specific domain of legal interpretation. Recognizing its classical structure confirms that it is not question-begging within the SIF tradition but sound across any tradition that takes the distinction between correct and incorrect seriously.

The classical form of the argument runs as follows. The pragmatist says: we do not need to resolve foundational metaphysical questions in order to conduct inquiry effectively. Reliable methods, peer review, correction mechanisms, and sensitivity to evidence are sufficient. The foundationalist replies: your reliable methods presuppose that there are facts to be reliably tracked. Your peer review presupposes that reviewers can genuinely correct each other rather than merely substitute one formation for another. Your sensitivity to evidence presupposes that evidence is evidence of something real. Each of these presuppositions is a substantive philosophical commitment your minimalism has not examined. You are not operating without foundations. You are operating with unexamined ones.

The minimalist textualist is in precisely this position. His corpus linguistics presupposes that historical semantic facts are real and recoverable — which is correspondence theory (C4). His bias checks presuppose that bias is a genuine error rather than a different preference — which requires moral realism (C3). His peer review presupposes that a reviewing judge’s correction is genuinely his own act rather than the output of a different formation — which requires something like substance dualism (C1) and libertarian free will (C2) to be a genuine correction rather than a substitution. His awareness of underdeterminacy presupposes a standard against which determinacy is measured — which requires foundationalism (C6). The minimalist has not dispensed with the six commitments. He has declined to examine them. That is not minimalism as a philosophical achievement. It is Formation Capture at the foundational level — the same charge the essay brings against Scalia, now brought against Scalia’s defenders.

The classical foundationalist argument does not prove that the specific six commitments proposed here are true. It proves that any practice of anti-capture inquiry — however modest its self-description — relies on commitments of exactly the kind the six commitments supply. The minimalist who objects that judges should not need to resolve debates over free will or metaethics in order to practice disciplined textualism is correct as a practical observation about judicial training. He is incorrect as a philosophical observation about what disciplined textualism requires. The debates are already embedded in the practice. The only question is whether they are examined or not.


VIII. What the Corrected Theory Vindicates and What It Does Not

The corrected textualism vindicates Scalia’s governing insight with philosophical precision. Texts have determinate features that constrain correct readings. The interpreter is genuinely prior to his formation and capable of apprehending those features through correct attention. The appropriate object of aim in legal interpretation is correspondence to what the enacted text actually says.

The corrected theory does not vindicate all of Scalia’s constitutional results. The corrected theory’s correspondence standard is more demanding than Scalia’s stated standard in one specific respect: where constitutional moral terms are at issue, the correct semantic reading fixes content at the moral concept rather than the historical list, and the verification test must be applied to the judge’s own formation-derived impression of what the concept correctly applies to. The conservative legal formation produces formation-derived impressions of what constitutional provisions originally meant, just as the progressive legal formation does. The verification test is formation-neutral. It makes no exceptions for the theorist who proposed it or the justice who inspired it.

The corrected theory is an alternative framework. It accepts that characterization and does not apologize for it. It is an alternative that takes Scalia’s governing insight — replace formation-governed reading with correspondence-governed reading — more seriously than his own text did, by providing the philosophical architecture his project requires to be coherent. The architecture rests on six commitments that are not formation-derived preferences but individually demonstrable enabling conditions for the phases of correct interpretive practice.

Scalia correctly identified what the project of legal interpretation requires: recovering what is actually there rather than importing what the formation expects to find. His text, working within an unexamined formation tradition, could not quite deliver that. The alternative framework can. That is its purpose and its justification.


Third edition. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling, including the Sterling Interpretive Framework v1.0 and the Sterling Logic Engine v4.0. Primary text: Antonin Scalia, A Matter of Interpretation: Federal Courts and the Law (Princeton University Press, 1997). Research foundation: extended search report on Scalia’s philosophical presuppositions, including analysis from Solum, Greenberg, Fish, Gedicks, Fallon, Dworkin, Powell, Tribe, Wood, Glendon, and Sunstein. Prose rendering: Claude.

Sunday, April 26, 2026

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

 

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

A Complete Account

Draft v2 for editing. Eight sections present. Section VII integrates the compact prosochē routine. Text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling; Keith Seddon, Epictetus’ Handbook and the Tablet of Cebes (Routledge, 2006), pp. 101–114; Pierre Hadot, The Inner Citadel (Harvard University Press, 1998); Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, “Epictetus” (Fall 2025 Edition). Prose rendering: Claude.


I. The Philosophical Foundation

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

These three foundational claims are not merely practical maxims. Each requires specific philosophical commitments to be coherent, and those commitments are active conditions of every phase of the correct use of impressions rather than static background beliefs. Substance dualism (C1) grounds Foundation One by establishing that the rational faculty is genuinely distinct from the body and its conditions — without this, the dichotomy of control has no ontological basis. Libertarian free will (C2) grounds Foundation One by establishing that assent is the agent’s genuine first cause — without this, “in our control” means nothing. Moral realism (C3) grounds Foundation Two by establishing that there are objective facts about what is genuinely good and evil — without this, the claim that externals are neither good nor evil is not a fact but a preference. Correspondence theory (C4) grounds Foundation Two by establishing that the evaluative claim embedded in an impression can be true or false by reference to how things morally are — without this, the word “false” in “false value judgment” has no content. Ethical intuitionism (C5) grounds Foundation Three by establishing that the rational faculty has direct apprehensive access to the moral facts Foundation Two identifies — without this, correct assent cannot be guaranteed because the standard of correctness would be inaccessible. Foundationalism (C6) grounds Foundation Three by establishing that the correction procedure terminates in self-evident first principles rather than generating an infinite regress — without this, the guarantee of eudaimonia through right assent is structurally unstable. These six commitments are the philosophical skeleton of Stoic practice. Remove any one and the structure collapses. Section II below shows precisely where each commitment does its governing work.

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

There are two distinct stages of assent and the distinction is load-bearing for everything that follows. The first stage is factual: the agent assents to what the impression represents as being the case. The second stage is evaluative: the agent assents to whether what he takes to be the case is good or bad. This second assent is where the false value judgment is formed or refused. It is this second type of assent that most interests Epictetus, and it is this second assent that the entire practical program of Stoicism is organized around governing correctly.


II. The Six Commitments as Active Conditions: The Five Phases of Correct Use

The six commitments are not a list of philosophical positions the Stoic framework holds as background beliefs. They are the active enabling conditions of each phase of the correct use of impressions. Each phase requires specific commitments in order to be philosophically possible at all. Remove any one commitment and the phase it governs becomes unavailable — not merely more difficult, but structurally foreclosed.

The correct use of impressions proceeds through five phases. Each phase has governing commitments. The complete mapping makes visible what the practice requires at every moment.

Reception — Correspondence Theory (C4), Moral Realism (C3). The impression arrives carrying a propositional claim about how things are. Correspondence theory (C4) governs because the impression is a representation — it claims that something is the case — and that claim can be true or false by reference to how things actually are. Moral realism (C3) governs because the impression carries not only a factual claim but an evaluative one: it presents some external as a genuine good or genuine evil. Without C3 there are no moral facts for the evaluative claim to correspond to or misrepresent. The impression could not be false at the evaluative level if there were no objective moral standard against which it could fail.

Recognition — Substance Dualism (C1), Correspondence Theory (C4). Recognition is the phase in which the impression is identified as an impression rather than taken as self-evidently true. Epictetus’s command — “An impression is all you are, not the source of the impression” — is the naming move that makes Recognition possible. Substance dualism (C1) governs because Recognition requires a self that stands behind the impression and is categorically distinct from it. If the self were constituted by its impressions rather than prior to them, there would be no prior self to do the recognizing. Correspondence theory (C4) governs because Recognition is specifically the recognition that the impression is a representation — something that claims to correspond to what is there — rather than the thing itself.

Pause — Substance Dualism (C1), Libertarian Free Will (C2). The pause is the structural gap between Reception and the evaluative second assent. It is the most important phase because it is where prosochē operates and where the correct use of impressions becomes possible rather than merely conceivable. Substance dualism (C1) governs because the pause requires a self that is prior to the impression — a self that can hold the impression at arm’s length without being swept away by it. Libertarian free will (C2) governs because the pause must be a genuine moment of originating agency. The agent genuinely can withhold assent or not; this capacity is real and not determined by prior conditions. Without C2, the pause is merely a causal interval between impression and predetermined response.

Examination — Foundationalism (C6), Ethical Intuitionism (C5), Moral Realism (C3). Examination is the phase in which the impression is tested against the governing standard. Three commitments govern because the test has three distinct requirements. Foundationalism (C6) governs because the Examination requires an architecturally prior standard — specifically the foundational theorems that are not themselves produced by the Examination but govern it. Without foundational first principles, the Examination has nothing to test against. Ethical intuitionism (C5) governs because the Examination requires that the rational faculty can directly apprehend the moral facts the foundational theorems state — that it can see, without further inference, whether this object is a genuine good or an indifferent. Without C5, the Examination degenerates into an infinite regress. Moral realism (C3) governs because the Examination tests the impression’s evaluative claim against mind-independent moral facts. The three commitments together provide the standard (C6), the access to it (C5), and the objectivity of its verdicts (C3).

Decision — Libertarian Free Will (C2), Correspondence Theory (C4). Decision is the phase in which the agent assents or withholds assent. Libertarian free will (C2) governs because the Decision must be a genuine first cause — the agent’s real originating act, not the final output of a causal sequence determined before the pause began. Correspondence theory (C4) governs because the Decision is a commitment to a proposition as true or false. To assent is to say “yes, this evaluative claim corresponds to how things morally are”; to withhold assent is to say “no, this evaluative claim fails the correspondence test.” Without C4 the Decision is not a truth claim but merely a mental event; it cannot be correct or incorrect in the sense that matters.

The Integrated Picture. The five-phase mapping makes the six commitments visible as the active architecture of the practice. Every commitment is doing specific work at a specific phase. Substance dualism (C1) governs both Recognition and the Pause. Libertarian free will (C2) governs both the Pause and the Decision. Moral realism (C3) governs both Reception and Examination. Correspondence theory (C4) governs Reception, Recognition, and Decision. Ethical intuitionism (C5) governs Examination alone. Foundationalism (C6) governs Examination alone. The mapping also identifies with precision why frameworks that deny the six commitments cannot accommodate the correct use of impressions: each Contrary finding forecloses a specific phase, and a framework that dissolves the prohairesis forecloses three of the five phases before reaching any of the others.


III. The Three Topoi and Their Architecture

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

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

Hadot drew from this the governing claim: if the Discipline of Assent is the method through which both the Discipline of Desire and the Discipline of Action operate, then the practice of philosophy as a way of life consists of exactly two things — governing what one desires and governing how one acts — with one governing method applied across both phases: the correct use of impressions through inner discourse. The ordering of the two phases matters. The Discipline of Desire always comes first because it addresses the foundational false value judgment. Get the first phase right and the second follows correctly.


IV. Prosochē

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

Prosochē is not a mood to be preserved or a feeling of attentiveness. It is a habit of guarding assent — maintained by repeated, small acts of attention, not by any single effort of will. Epictetus compared the practice to a guard at the gates: impressions come knocking, but not every visitor deserves entry. Prosochē is the guard. The correct use of impressions is what the guard performs.

What prosochē specifically attends to is threefold. First, present impressions as they arrive — particularly their evaluative dimension, the value claim embedded in the impression before the agent has had occasion to examine it. Second, present desires and aversions — the impulses that arise when evaluative assents have been made, correct or incorrect. Third, present actions — the behavioral outputs that follow from assented impressions and formed desires.

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

When prosochē fails — when assent to the false evaluative impression has completed itself before examination can occur — pathos has been produced. Sterling’s reading of Epictetus is unambiguous: any disturbance of any degree is pathos. Not because it is dramatic or intense, but because any disturbance was produced by a false evaluative assent, and that is the full Stoic definition of pathos. The failure of prosochē does not end the practice; it generates the corrective procedure.


V. Chrēsis Tōn Phantasiōn — The Correct Use of Impressions

The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy’s entry on Epictetus identifies the two governing concepts of his philosophy as prohairesis — the rational faculty — and chrēsis tōn phantasiōn, the correct use of impressions. These are not two separate concerns. The correct use of impressions is what the rational faculty does; prohairesis is what does it.

Seddon’s statement of what the correct use of impressions requires is the most precise in the secondary literature: the prokoptōn must strive to stand between their awareness of mere facts — of how things stand — and their evaluations of those facts. The impressions have two stages. The first stage is factual: what has happened. The second stage is evaluative: is this bad? The correct use of impressions insists on holding these stages apart — on pausing between what is and what it means — before assenting to any evaluative claim the impression carries.

The operational instruction is Enchiridion 1.5: “Make a practice of saying to every strong impression: ‘An impression is all you are, not the source of the impression.’ Then test and assess it with your criteria, but one primarily: ‘Is this something that is, or is not, in my control?’” The instruction has three components. First: the naming move, which creates the structural gap. Second: the primary test, which is the dichotomy of control applied to the evaluative claim. Third: the practice — “Make a practice of.” This is not a philosophical position to be intellectually assented to. It is a trained activity to be performed, impression by impression, in the present moment, continuously.


VI. The Inner Discourse

Hadot argues in The Inner Citadel that Marcus Aurelius’s Meditations are not a philosophical treatise or a personal diary. They are a record of inner discourse — the actual first-person speech of the rational faculty addressing itself in the moment of practice. Marcus was writing the inner discourse he needed to conduct in order to maintain prosochē and practice chrēsis tōn phantasiōn correctly. The Meditations are inner discourse made visible on the page.

Inner discourse is the specific verbal activity through which the correct use of impressions actually occurs in the moment of practice. It is not merely thinking about Stoic principles. It is speaking to oneself, in the first person, in the present tense, about the specific impression that has arrived. The discourse is inner because it is addressed to the self by the self; it is discourse because it has the propositional structure of genuine speech. The reason discourse rather than silent thought is required is philosophical: since impressions are cognitive and propositional — they claim that the world is a certain way — the correct response to a propositional claim is a propositional response.

Seddon provides the most complete explicit account of the inner dialogue in the secondary literature. He distinguishes the normal two-phase inner discourse from the corrective inner discourse that operates when prosochē has already failed.

The normal inner discourse — Phase One, the Discipline of Desire:

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

“Ah yes, this is not in my power and is nothing to me.” — the evaluative second assent made correctly.

Phase Two, the Discipline of Action:

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

“In my role as such-and-such, I shall be acting virtuously in accordance with nature if I do this.” — the correct action proposition.

The corrective inner discourse — when prosochē has failed:

“Now, I appear to be experiencing a pathos.” — the signal noticed.

“Yes, stop everything and think: this is because I have assented wrongly to an impression.” — the diagnosis.

“The best course then is to go back to the offending impression and judge it correctly.” — the return to source.

“Does it concern something external? Yes. Then it is nothing to me.” — the correct evaluative second assent made retrospectively.

Epictetus provides the canonical form in Discourses 3.8.1–5: “His son is dead. What happened? His son is dead. Nothing else? Not a thing… But the observation: ‘He has fared ill’ is an addition that each man makes on his own responsibility.” The factual first assent: a son has died. The refusal of the false evaluative addition. The grief is the only evil; the bearing up is the only good. Everything external is the addition each man makes on his own responsibility. That is the inner discourse in its governing form.


VII. A Compact Prosochē Routine

The inner discourse is not a technique applied to dramatic moments. It is the ongoing texture of a rational life — the continuous conversation the agent conducts with himself about what is arriving, what it means, and what it requires. Prosochē is maintained by repeated, small acts of attention — a habit of guarding assent and keeping the mind aligned with agency, not a feeling to be preserved all day. The following routine renders the practice in its three temporal phases.

Morning — Prospective

Before starting the day, the agent consciously formulates true propositions about what he is likely to encounter. He does not review a list of principles; he thinks concretely about his actual day. He reminds himself: what is up to me is my judgment, my intention, and my action. He anticipates likely irritations, temptations, or social pressures — the specific ones belonging to this day, not a generic catalogue — and decides in advance how he will treat each as an impression to be examined rather than a command to be obeyed.

This is Sterling’s Section 7 sub-step (c) in its prospective form: consciously formulate true propositions about indifferents in advance, so that when the impression arrives the examining faculty is already correctly oriented. The morning formulation does not prevent difficult impressions from arriving. It ensures that when they arrive, prosochē is already in position.

During the Day — Concurrent

When something happens — when any impression arrives with force — pause for a second before reacting. The pause is not hesitation. It is the deliberate maintenance of the structural gap in which the correct use of impressions occurs. Then ask: is this within my control? If not, release the demand without further elaboration. If yes, act with reason and the manner appropriate to the role. Keep checking throughout the day whether approval, comfort, or status is being chased — whether any preferred indifferent has been quietly elevated to a genuine good without notice. This is the Discipline of Desire in its ongoing form.

The inner discourse in the concurrent phase is brief:

“Impression, wait. An impression is all you are, not the thing itself.”

“Is what this impression presents as a genuine good or evil in my control, or not?”

“This is an indifferent. My flourishing does not depend on it. What does my role here require?”

When the disturbance has already arrived — when prosochē has failed — the corrective inner discourse begins: “I am disturbed. That means I have assented to a false impression. What external has been treated as a genuine good or evil?” Name it precisely. Apply the test. Formulate the true proposition. Resume from there.

Evening — Retrospective

Seneca practiced the retrospective dimension of prosochē each evening: what fault have I remedied today? What vice have I resisted? In what respect am I better? The evening review is not self-criticism. It is the rational faculty reviewing its own performance against the governing standard. Three questions govern the review:

Where did I assent too quickly — where did the impression complete itself before it was examined?

Where did I forget the distinction between what is mine and what is not?

Where did I act well — where did the inner discourse hold and the role-correct action follow?

The review ends with one concrete correction for tomorrow: a specific class of impression that arrived today without being examined, and the formulation of the true proposition that would have governed it correctly. This becomes the next morning’s prospective formulation, completing the cycle.

The three phases form a complete temporal structure. The morning formulation installs the pause before situations arise. The concurrent inner discourse uses the pause when impressions arrive. The evening review strengthens the morning formulation for the following day. This is askēsis — training — in its complete temporal form.


VIII. The Long-Term Trajectory: Askēsis Toward Sophos

The correct use of impressions is not a practice that produces results through a single application. It is a lifelong askēsis whose long-term effect is the progressive alteration of what impressions arrive and what evaluative claims they carry. Each correct assent weakens the corresponding false impression. Each false assent strengthens it. The cumulative effect of consistent practice, over time, is the gradual transformation of the character of experience itself.

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

The prokoptōn is positioned between the layman and the sage. He has accepted the foundational recognition — that externals are not genuine goods or evils, that value lives in the rational faculty alone, that right assent is sufficient for eudaimonia. He is working toward the condition of the sage through the disciplined practice of inner discourse, the sustained maintenance of prosochē, and the gradual reduction of prosochē’s failures.

When the inner discourse becomes habitual — when the three phases of prosochē become the natural rhythm of the day rather than deliberate interventions — life becomes a productive conversation with oneself. Every impression that arrives is already in dialogue with the governing questions: what has happened here, is this in my control, what does my role require. The conversation is not laborious because the framework is no longer being applied from the outside. It has become the shape of one’s own thinking.

That is the trajectory of the askēsis. The inner discourse begins as a deliberate practice and ends as a way of being.


Draft v2 for editing. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling; Keith Seddon, Epictetus’ Handbook and the Tablet of Cebes (Routledge, 2006); Pierre Hadot, The Inner Citadel (Harvard University Press, 1998); Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, “Epictetus.” Prose rendering: Claude.

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Classical Ideological Audit (SIA)

 

Classical Ideological Audit (SIA)

Subject: Classical Epicureanism ( and the Garden tradition)


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Object of analysis: the propositional structure required for Classical Epicureanism to function as a philosophical system.
Standard of evaluation: the Six Commitments —

  1. Substance Dualism
  2. Metaphysical Libertarianism
  3. Ethical Intuitionism
  4. Foundationalism
  5. Correspondence Theory of Truth
  6. Moral Realism

Step 1 — Core Doctrinal Commitments (Extracted)

Classical Epicureanism requires the following propositions:

  1. All that exists is corporeal (atomism; void + atoms).
  2. The soul is material and dissolves at death.
  3. All cognition originates in sensation (empiricism).
  4. Pleasure is the highest good; pain the highest evil.
  5. Tranquility (ataraxia) is achieved by eliminating fear and disturbance.
  6. Freedom is preserved via atomic indeterminacy (the “swerve”).
  7. The gods, if they exist, are non-intervening and irrelevant to ethics.

Step 2 — Commitment-by-Commitment Audit

1. Substance Dualism

Epicurean Requirement: Strict materialism.

  • Mind = body; no immaterial faculty.
  • No independent rational subject distinct from physical processes.

Audit Result:
DIRECT CONTRADICTION

  • Eliminates the ontological basis for a distinct judging subject.
  • Collapses agent into mechanism.
  • Undermines the possibility of a non-physical faculty of assent.

2. Metaphysical Libertarianism

Epicurean Requirement: Atomic “swerve” introduces indeterminacy.

Audit Result:
PARTIAL / FAILED GROUNDING

  • The swerve produces randomness, not agency.
  • No account of controlled, reason-guided choice.
  • Freedom is reduced to non-deterministic motion, not rational authorship.

Conclusion:
Attempts to secure freedom, but fails to produce genuine libertarian control.


3. Ethical Intuitionism

Epicurean Requirement:

  • All value judgments derive from pleasure/pain sensations.

Audit Result:
DIRECT CONTRADICTION

  • Eliminates non-inferential apprehension of objective moral facts.
  • Replaces moral knowledge with affective reporting.
  • “Good” becomes reducible to felt pleasantness.

4. Foundationalism

Epicurean Requirement:

  • Knowledge grounded in sense impressions (aisthēsis).

Audit Result:
PARTIAL ALIGNMENT / INSUFFICIENT

  • Provides a base level (sensory data).
  • But:
    • No non-empirical foundation for normative truths.
    • Ethical claims lack epistemic grounding beyond experience.

5. Correspondence Theory of Truth

Epicurean Requirement:

  • Sensory impressions are treated as true reports of reality.

Audit Result:
PARTIAL ALIGNMENT

  • Accepts that beliefs must match external reality.
  • However:
    • Restricts truth to sensory-level correspondence.
    • Lacks a robust account of abstract or moral truth conditions.

6. Moral Realism

Epicurean Requirement:

  • Good = pleasure; evil = pain.

Audit Result:
DIRECT CONTRADICTION

  • Reduces value to subjective experience.
  • No stance-independent moral facts.
  • Ethical claims become functional/therapeutic, not truth-apt moral propositions.

Step 3 — Structural Failure Analysis

The system exhibits a systematic collapse across three critical axes:

A. Ontology Failure

  • Materialism removes the agent/object distinction.
  • No stable subject of judgment → no coherent assent model.

B. Freedom Failure

  • Indeterminacy ≠ agency.
  • No mechanism for rational control over belief or action.

C. Value Failure

  • Hedonism reduces normativity to sensation.
  • Eliminates the distinction between:
    • Seeming good
    • Actually good

Step 4 — Dissolution Verdict

DISSOLUTION LEVEL: FULL

Classical Epicureanism is incompatible with the Six Commitments at a structural level.

  • It rejects Substance Dualism, Ethical Intuitionism, and Moral Realism outright.
  • It fails to secure Libertarian Freedom in any meaningful sense.
  • Its limited alignment with Foundationalism and Correspondence is insufficient to sustain the system.

Step 5 — Final Classification

System Type:
Empiricist Hedonistic Materialism

Philosophical Status (under SIA):

  • Internally coherent as a therapeutic doctrine
  • Philosophically untenable as a truth-tracking ethical system

Step 6 — Terminal Statement

Classical Epicureanism achieves psychological tranquility by redefining truth and value downward to the level of sensation.

This maneuver removes disturbance—but only by eliminating the conditions under which error, responsibility, and moral truth could exist at all.

Classical Ideological Audit: The Hemingway Framework — Code Hero, Nada, and Grace Under Pressure

 

Classical Ideological Audit: The Hemingway Framework — Code Hero, Nada, and Grace Under Pressure

Instrument: Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v2.0

Subject: Ernest Hemingway — the Code Hero as ethical and aesthetic framework, as expressed in the fiction and non-fiction

Primary texts: “A Clean, Well-Lighted Place” (1933); Death in the Afternoon (1932); The Sun Also Rises (1926); A Farewell to Arms (1929); The Old Man and the Sea (1952); A Moveable Feast (1964)

The CIA audits ideological and theoretical frameworks for their degree of affinity with six classical philosophical commitments. The subject of analysis is propositional content — the presuppositions a framework must hold in order to argue as it does. Attribution: instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling’s corpus. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

The Hemingway framework is not a philosophical treatise. It is a governing aesthetic and ethical position embedded in literary work and non-fiction prose. The CIA proceeds from the presuppositions the framework must hold in order to argue as it does — from what the Code Hero, the Iceberg Theory, and the governing response to nada philosophically require.

One preliminary observation establishes the CIA’s most important finding before the commitment audit begins. The Code Hero does not deny the Stoic framework’s starting point. He accepts it: the universe is indifferent, outcomes are not guaranteed, death is the final fact, and nothing external is reliably available. He arrives at the same recognition that grounds the Stoic reserve clause — and then turns away from the Stoic response. Where Epictetus says “examine the impression and assent correctly,” Hemingway says “don’t think; act with precision and endure with style.” The two frameworks begin from the same fact and reach opposite practical conclusions. This makes the CIA on Hemingway the most philosophically interesting run in the series.

One further preliminary: Hemingway is correctly identified, following MacIntyre’s account, as the Aesthete — the character type produced by emotivist culture who has abandoned the moral framework and chosen style as the only available answer to meaninglessness. The CIA run confirms this identification at the presuppositional level.


Step 1 — Framework Statement

P1 — The universe is indifferent and meaning is not cosmically given. The governing metaphysical claim of the Hemingway framework is nada — the void. “A Clean, Well-Lighted Place” states it most precisely through the waiter’s prayer: everything is nothing, and nothing is all there is. The Code Hero does not deny this. He knows it. His framework is a response to nada, not a denial of it. Courage is required precisely because nothing underwrites it.

P2 — The self is constituted by its characteristic actions and style of engagement, not by a prior rational faculty. The Code Hero is what he does. Jake Barnes, Frederic Henry, Robert Jordan, Santiago — all defined by the quality of their execution, their craft, their endurance, not by the judgments they make about the value of what they are doing. The man who thinks too much about what his actions mean cannot act well. Identity is built from the outside in — from the quality of engagement with the world — not from the inside out through the rational faculty’s governance of its own assents.

P3 — The appropriate response to meaninglessness is skilled, courageous action without commentary. Don’t think. The Hemingway dictum is not anti-intellectual laziness; it is a precise practical instruction arising from the metaphysical situation. Thinking about what the action means — whether it matters, whether the universe underwrites it, what death signifies — produces paralysis or sentimentality, both of which are failures. Execution without commentary is the only response the framework endorses.

P4 — Value is aesthetic rather than moral. The bullfight is what Hemingway calls “the only art in which the artist is in danger of death.” Its value is not moral. It is not right or wrong to kill the bull. It is beautiful or ugly, done well or done badly. What matters is the quality of the faena — the series of passes that constitutes the aesthetic encounter between man and animal. This governing aesthetic principle extends throughout the framework: the prose style itself, the fishing, the hunting, the soldiering — all governed by the question of whether it was done correctly, with craft and courage, not whether it corresponded to an objective moral order.

P5 — Courage and craft are the governing virtues, but they are virtues of execution rather than of assent. Grace under pressure — the Code Hero’s defining quality — is not the grace of correct judgment. It is the grace of correct action under conditions that would destroy a lesser man. The soldier who retreats in panic has failed. The soldier who holds his position and performs his role with precision and without complaint has succeeded. The quality being measured is behavioral, not cognitive. It is the grip that matters — how tightly and skillfully the man holds on to his craft in the face of nada.

P6 — Sentimentality is the primary moral failure. In the Hemingway framework, sentimentality — the false emotion, the emotion that exceeds what the facts warrant, the emotion that imports meaning the universe has not provided — is the governing vice. It is what the Iceberg Theory is designed to prevent in prose. It is what the Code Hero refuses in his emotional life. The man who weeps about what death means has failed. The man who performs his role correctly and does not impose unwarranted meaning on what happens has succeeded. This is a precise inversion of the Stoic account of pathos: where Stoicism identifies false value judgment as the governing error, Hemingway identifies false emotional elaboration as the governing error. Both target the addition each man makes on his own responsibility — but where Epictetus says do not add “this is an evil,” Hemingway says do not add “this means something.”


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

Commitment 1 — Substance Dualism: Contrary

Substance dualism requires that the rational faculty be a genuine distinct substance, categorically prior to the body and its conditions, the genuine locus of cognition, judgment, and agency.

The Hemingway framework’s P2 and P3 together constitute a Contrary finding. The self is constituted by its characteristic actions and style of engagement. The Code Hero is defined by what he does, not by the prior rational faculty that governs what he does. “Don’t think” is the explicit instruction that removes the rational faculty from its governing position. What governs is the body’s trained capacity for skilled engagement — the hand on the rod, the eye behind the rifle, the surgeon’s precision. This is the embodied self of Hovhannisyan’s optimal grip, not the prior rational substance of Sterling’s framework.

The Iceberg Theory confirms this at the aesthetic level: meaning resides in what is omitted — in what is felt below the surface of the prose rather than stated explicitly. The rational elaboration of what is there is precisely what destroys the effect. The thing that is omitted is precisely the thing that the rational faculty would want to name, examine, and assent to. Leaving it unnamed is the aesthetic equivalent of the practical instruction: don’t think.

Finding: Contrary.

Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free Will: Partially Contrary

Libertarian free will requires that assent be a genuine first cause — that the moment between impression and response is a moment of real originating power not determined by prior conditions.

The Hemingway framework presents a more complex finding here than the other Contrary frameworks in the CIA series. The Code Hero does make choices — genuine, consequential, self-defining choices. Robert Jordan chooses to hold the bridge. Santiago chooses to go out beyond the safe water. Jake Barnes chooses how to live within the constraints the war has imposed. These are not determined outputs of prior conditions. They carry the weight of genuine origination.

But the choice the Hemingway framework most values is the choice to act without the pause that libertarian free will’s governing moment requires. The pause between impression and assent — the moment of examination that the Stoic framework makes central — is precisely what “don’t think” refuses. The Hemingway choice is not the choice to examine the impression and assent correctly. It is the choice to act, precisely, without the examination. The agency is real; the governing act is not assent but execution.

This produces a Partially Contrary finding rather than a full Contrary. Genuine originating agency is present in the Code Hero; the specific form of agency that libertarian free will requires — the examined assent — is systematically refused.

Finding: Partially Contrary.

Commitment 3 — Moral Realism: Contrary

Moral realism requires that there are objective moral facts independent of individual or collective preference — facts that make moral claims true or false regardless of aesthetic quality or cultural endorsement.

The Hemingway framework’s P4 produces a direct Contrary finding. Value is aesthetic rather than moral. The bullfight is not a moral question. The prose is not a moral question. Whether Santiago holds on is not a moral question in the objective moral realist sense — it is a question of craft and courage and what a man can endure. The Code Hero’s framework has no place for objective moral facts that would make the killing of the bull wrong regardless of how beautifully it is done.

This is not moral relativism in the vulgar sense; Hemingway is not saying that anything goes. The framework has governing standards — courage, craft, endurance, precision. But these standards are aesthetic and characterological, not moral realist. They do not correspond to mind-independent moral facts. They correspond to a style of engagement with the world that the framework endorses as the only dignified response to nada. Whether that endorsement is itself morally correct — whether courage and craft correspond to an objective moral order that makes them genuinely good — is precisely the question the framework refuses to ask.

Finding: Contrary.

Commitment 4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: Partially Contrary

Correspondence theory requires that true beliefs correspond to mind-independent facts about reality. Claims are true when they accurately describe how things are, independently of whether they are endorsed by communities, coherent with prior beliefs, or useful for practical purposes.

The Hemingway framework has a partial and unusual relationship to correspondence theory. At the factual level, the framework is almost aggressively correspondence-governed: the Iceberg Theory’s requirement that the writer know the facts completely before omitting them is a correspondence discipline. The false detail, the unearned emotion, the sentiment that exceeds what the situation actually contains — all fail because they do not correspond to what is actually there. The famous prose economy is the stylistic expression of the correspondence test applied to narrative.

But at the evaluative level — the level where moral realism and correspondence theory intersect — the framework diverges. Whether the bullfight corresponds to an objective moral order, whether courage corresponds to a genuine good that mind-independent moral facts establish, whether Santiago’s endurance has moral significance beyond its aesthetic quality — these are not questions the framework addresses through the correspondence test. Nada forecloses them: there is no objective moral order to correspond to.

Finding: Partially Contrary.

Commitment 5 — Ethical Intuitionism: Contrary

Ethical intuitionism requires that the rational faculty can directly apprehend moral facts without the mediation of calculation, consensus, or embodied formation. Moral knowledge is available through direct rational apprehension prior to any community or formation.

The Hemingway framework’s P3 and P4 together produce a Contrary finding. The governing instruction — don’t think — explicitly removes the rational faculty from the governing position that ethical intuitionism requires it to occupy. The Code Hero does not apprehend moral facts through rational examination; he apprehends aesthetic quality through the body’s trained engagement with the world. The matador’s knowledge of how to place the sword is not the product of rational apprehension of moral truth; it is the product of years of embodied training producing skilled grip. This is C5’s Contrary finding: the framework denies that the rational faculty’s direct apprehension is the governing epistemic act.

Finding: Contrary.

Commitment 6 — Foundationalism: Partially Contrary

Foundationalism requires a structured hierarchy of justified beliefs grounded in self-evident first principles that are architecturally prior to all other commitments and not produced by the formation process they govern.

The Hemingway framework has a foundation — nada — but it is a negative foundation. It is the architecturally prior fact from which everything else derives: the universe is indifferent, and all commitments about how to live must be made in the full knowledge of this. In this sense the framework is foundationalist in structure: there is a non-negotiable first principle from which the Code Hero’s practical program derives.

But nada is not a self-evident positive truth of the kind foundationalism requires. It is a metaphysical claim whose truth forecloses the positive moral facts that Sterling’s foundationalism requires as its governing first principles. A foundation built on the void produces a hierarchy without a genuine epistemic terminus: the first principle is that there are no first principles beyond the fact of meaninglessness. This is a partial and structurally distorted foundationalism — present in form, contrary in content.

Finding: Partially Contrary.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

Commitment 1: Contrary. Commitment 2: Partially Contrary.

C1 is Contrary. The framework dissolves the prohairesis by constituting the self through its characteristic actions and style of engagement rather than through the prior rational faculty’s governance of its assents. C2 is Partially Contrary: genuine originating agency is present but the specific form of agency that the dissolution finding requires to be denied — the examined assent — is systematically refused by “don’t think.”

Finding: Partial Dissolution.

The Hemingway framework partially dissolves the prohairesis. The Code Hero retains genuine agency — his choices are real and consequential — but he refuses the rational examination of impressions that the prohairesis in correct operation requires. The dissolution is not complete because genuine originating choice is present; it is real because the choice systematically bypasses the governing act of examined assent. A person who adopts the Code Hero as his governing self-description retains himself as the author of his actions but removes himself from the position of examined rational judgment that the Stoic practical program requires.

This is philosophically distinctive in the CIA series. Most Full Dissolution findings remove the agent entirely — the self is constituted by community, class, embodied formation, or social structure. Hemingway removes the examined rational faculty while preserving the acting agent. This produces a self that acts courageously and skillfully without examining whether the impressions generating its actions carry false value claims. The Code Hero is an agent without prosochē.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Commitment Pattern

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

Three Contrary findings. Three Partially Contrary findings. Zero Convergent. Zero Divergent. Zero Orthogonal.

Dissolution: Partial.

The Hemingway Pattern and Its Significance

The Hemingway CIA pattern is unique in the series. Three full Contrary findings (C1, C3, C5) and three Partially Contrary findings (C2, C4, C6) with Partial Dissolution produce a profile that is neither the maximum divergence of Rorty, Fish, and Hovhannisyan (six Contrary, Full Dissolution) nor the substantial convergence of Schosha, Rawls, and MacIntyre (multiple Partially Aligned, No Dissolution). The framework is philosophically serious, internally coherent, and deeply divergent from the classical commitments — but it retains enough of the structure of agency to prevent Full Dissolution.

The Hovhannisyan Correspondence

The pairing that prompted this run is confirmed at the presuppositional level. Both the Hemingway framework and Hovhannisyan’s optimal grip theory produce Contrary findings on C1, C3, and C5, and constitute the self through skilled embodied engagement rather than through the prior rational faculty. Both locate value in the quality of grip — in how skillfully and courageously the agent engages with the world — rather than in whether the assents governing that engagement correspond to an objective moral order.

The difference between them is philosophical register. Hovhannisyan’s framework is a scientific and philosophical theory of cognition, argued from phenomenology and cognitive science. Hemingway’s framework is an aesthetic and ethical position, expressed through literary craft and non-fiction prose. Both arrive at the same presuppositional position: the self is its grip, and value is in the quality of that grip, not in the rational examination of what the grip is reaching for.

The Stoic Counter to the Code Hero

The Code Hero is the most philosophically interesting alternative to the Stoic framework in the CIA series precisely because it begins from the same recognition — the universe does not guarantee outcomes, externals are not reliably available, and nothing external can be the locus of genuine security — and arrives at the opposite practical conclusion.

Epictetus and Hemingway agree: you cannot control the outcome. You cannot control whether the fish escapes, the war ends well, the woman stays, the bull kills you, or death comes. What you can control is how you engage with the situation. On this they are agreed.

They disagree about what governs that engagement. For Epictetus, correct engagement is examined engagement: pause before the impression, test the embedded value claim, assent only to what corresponds to how things morally are, and act from that correct assent. The quality of the engagement is determined by the quality of the judgment. For Hemingway, correct engagement is skilled and courageous engagement without examination: don’t think; execute; endure; maintain your style in the face of nada. The quality of the engagement is determined by the quality of the grip.

The Stoic framework’s response to the Code Hero is precise. The Code Hero’s courage is a preferred indifferent — genuinely admirable, rationally worth pursuing, not a genuine good in the objective moral sense. The Code Hero’s refusal to examine his impressions means that his courageous actions may be generated by false value judgments that prosochē would have caught. The man who holds the bridge courageously but has assented without examination to the impression that the bridge is worth dying for has acted with grace under pressure and has failed to examine whether the impression generating his action is true. The Stoic framework does not deny his courage. It asks whether his courage is governed by correct judgment or by an unexamined impression that “don’t think” has prevented him from examining.

The Code Hero’s answer is that the question itself is the enemy. The man who stops to examine whether the bridge is worth dying for will not hold the bridge. And in a universe of nada, the only available dignity is in the holding.

That is the disagreement. It is not resolvable by the CIA instrument. It is a genuine philosophical alternative that the framework’s internal coherence makes productive rather than dismissible.


Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v2.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling. Subject: Ernest Hemingway — the Code Hero framework. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.

Classical Ideological Audit: Embodied Cognition and the Phenomenology of Optimal Grip

 

Classical Ideological Audit: Embodied Cognition and the Phenomenology of Optimal Grip

Instrument: Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v2.0

Source: Garri Hovhannisyan, “Embodied Cognition is a Matter of Grip: Humanistic Cognitive Science and the Phenomenology of Attunement,” Journal of Humanistic Psychology (2026), as reported in PsyPost, April 19, 2026

The CIA audits ideological and theoretical frameworks for their degree of affinity with six classical philosophical commitments: substance dualism, libertarian free will, moral realism, correspondence theory of truth, ethical intuitionism, and foundationalism. The subject of analysis is propositional content — the presuppositions a framework must hold in order to argue as it does. The instrument does not issue scientific or clinical verdicts. It issues philosophical findings. Attribution: instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling’s corpus. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

The instrument proceeds from the article’s own stated presuppositions, not from prior knowledge of phenomenology as a tradition. Every presupposition audited must be traceable to the article’s own arguments. Where the article draws on Husserl, Merleau-Ponty, enactivism, or ecological psychology, those sources enter the audit only insofar as the article explicitly endorses their claims as its own.

One preliminary note distinguishes this audit from previous CIA runs. Previous runs addressed political ideologies, cultural frameworks, and clinical theories. The Hovhannisyan article addresses the philosophy of mind and cognitive science — specifically the question of what cognition is and where it is located. This places it directly within the domain most relevant to C1 (substance dualism) and C2 (libertarian free will), which are the load-bearing commitments for the dissolution finding. The CIA run on this article is therefore the most direct engagement the project has yet had with a contemporary scientific and philosophical account of the mind.


Step 1 — Framework Statement

The article’s governing presuppositions, extracted from its stated arguments:

P1 — Cognition is not something that happens inside the head as abstract information processing, but emerges through an embodied person’s ongoing engagement with the world. This is the article’s foundational claim, stated in its opening sentence and sustained throughout. The locus of cognition is not the brain or any internal representational system; it is the relationship between the embodied person and his environment. Cognition is relational and emergent rather than internal and representational.

P2 — The self is constituted by the body and its capacities of engagement; the mind is not a substance distinct from the body but the body’s skillful attunement to its environment. Hovhannisyan draws explicitly on Merleau-Ponty’s emphasis on the body’s role in perception. The body is not the instrument of a separately existing mind; the body is the mind in its engaged, skilled form. To have a mind is not to process information like a computer but to achieve a kind of grip on the world as encountered in perception.

P3 — The world is not encountered as a collection of neutral objects but as a field of possibilities for action — affordances that are enacted through the person’s embodied engagement. The article endorses the phenomenological and ecological claim that the world is disclosed through embodied perception rather than represented by an internal system. The world we experience is “enacted — brought forth through our ways of engaging, shaped by our skills, concerns, and projects.”

P4 — Personality traits are styles of grip — enduring patterns of embodied engagement with the environment rather than internal dispositions of a separate rational faculty. Hovhannisyan proposes that traits such as extraversion or neuroticism are not internal properties of a separately existing mind but ways of structuring perception and action over time through embodied engagement. Psychopathology is understood as breakdown in the relationship between an embodied self and its world — a loss of grip.

P5 — Optimal grip is an emergent relational property analogous to biological fitness — it arises from the fit between organism and environment and cannot be located in either alone. The article explicitly analogizes optimal grip to biological fitness: neither the organism alone nor the environment alone possesses fitness; fitness is a real relational property that emerges from how organism and environment fit together. Grip works the same way. This frames cognition as an emergent relational property rather than a property of a distinct substantial self.

P6 — Psychological functioning, including psychopathology, is to be understood in terms of the quality of embodied attunement rather than in terms of the rational faculty’s relationship to its own assents. The article’s clinical extension holds that good psychological functioning is good grip — smooth, responsive, effective embodied attunement to environmental demands. Dysfunction is poor grip — a mismatch between a person’s traits and the situational demands he encounters. The rational faculty’s relationship to its own value judgments does not appear in this account.

P7 — Knowledge of the world is produced through skilled embodied engagement rather than through rational apprehension of mind-independent facts. The article endorses the phenomenological claim that how we see and make sense of the world depends on the skillful capacities of our embodied engagement, which vary from person to person. The dentist sees the smile differently from the layperson not because he has apprehended a mind-independent fact the layperson missed, but because his embodied training has altered the perceptual field he inhabits. Knowledge is perspectival, skill-based, and body-relative.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

Commitment 1 — Substance Dualism: Contrary

Substance dualism requires that the rational faculty be a genuine distinct substance — categorically other than the body and its conditions, prior to all external conditions including the body’s skills and engagements, and the genuine locus of cognition, judgment, and agency.

The article’s P1 and P2 together constitute a direct and explicit denial of this commitment. Cognition is not something that happens inside the head; it emerges through embodied engagement. To have a mind is not to possess a distinct cognitive substance but to achieve grip on the world through bodily capacities. The body is not the instrument of a separately existing mind; the body in skilled attunement is what mind is. This is not merely an epistemological claim about how we access the world; it is a metaphysical claim about what the mind is. The mind is the body’s skillful engagement, not a substance housed in the body.

P5’s analogy to biological fitness confirms the Contrary finding. Just as fitness is not a property the organism possesses independently of the environment, grip is not a property the mind possesses independently of the body-environment relationship. The mind has no existence or character independently of the embodied engagement that constitutes it. This is the direct denial of the categorical priority of the rational faculty over all external conditions that substance dualism requires.

The article does not argue against substance dualism explicitly; it simply builds its account on the denial of substance dualism as a given starting point of the phenomenological tradition. This makes the Contrary finding a presuppositional finding rather than an argued one — but it is no less a Contrary finding for that. The framework cannot proceed as it does if substance dualism is true.

Finding: Contrary.

Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free Will: Contrary

Libertarian free will requires that assent be a genuine first cause — that the agent’s rational faculty originates its judgments from a position prior to and independent of all external conditions, including the body’s trained capacities and the environment’s affordances.

The article’s account of cognition as emergent from the body-environment relationship eliminates this. Cognition arises from the ongoing attunement between embodied person and world — it is the output of a relational process, not the origination of a prior substantial self. P3’s claim that the world is enacted through the person’s ways of engaging, shaped by skills, concerns, and projects, means that the perceptual and cognitive field the agent inhabits is produced by prior embodied training rather than originated by a free rational faculty in the moment of judgment.

P4’s account of personality traits as styles of grip confirms the Contrary finding. If personality traits are enduring patterns of embodied engagement rather than expressions of a rational faculty’s character, then the agent’s characteristic way of engaging with situations is a product of embodied formation rather than an expression of genuine originating agency. The framework has no place for the moment between impression and assent that libertarian free will requires as the governing act of the rational faculty. Cognition is what happens in the ongoing attunement process; it is not what a distinct rational faculty does when it pauses to examine an impression before assenting to it.

Finding: Contrary.

Commitment 3 — Moral Realism: Orthogonal

The article does not address moral realism. It is a philosophy of mind article concerned with the nature of cognition, not with the nature of moral facts. The question of whether there are objective moral facts independent of preference or cultural formation simply does not arise in the article’s argument. Hovhannisyan’s extension of optimal grip to personality and psychopathology implies an account of what good psychological functioning consists in — good grip — but this is a functional account rather than a moral realist one, and the article does not assert or deny moral realism.

The Orthogonal finding does not mean the framework is compatible with moral realism; it means the article does not engage with the question. A fuller philosophical development of the framework — particularly its account of what “optimal” means in optimal grip — would need to address this question, and when it did, the P7 commitment to perspectival, body-relative knowledge would likely produce a Contrary finding. But the article as it stands does not settle this.

Finding: Orthogonal.

Commitment 4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: Contrary

Correspondence theory requires that true beliefs correspond to mind-independent facts about reality — facts that exist independently of the agent’s perspective, embodied training, and situational engagement.

The article’s P3 and P7 together produce a Contrary finding. P3 holds that the world is enacted — brought forth through the person’s ways of engaging. If the world as experienced is enacted through embodied engagement, it is not a mind-independent reality to which beliefs must correspond. P7 holds that knowledge of the world depends on the skillful capacities of the agent’s embodied engagement, which vary from person to person. The dentist and the layperson inhabit different perceptual worlds produced by different embodied training. Knowledge is perspectival and skill-relative rather than a matter of correspondence to a single mind-independent reality accessible to all rational agents equally.

Hovhannisyan explicitly states that “the world we experience is not simply ‘given’ in the same way to everyone.” This is the denial of the mind-independence that correspondence theory requires as its governing presupposition. If the world as experienced is not given uniformly but enacted differently through different embodied engagements, there is no single mind-independent world that beliefs could correspond to in the classical sense.

Finding: Contrary.

Commitment 5 — Ethical Intuitionism: Contrary

Ethical intuitionism requires that the rational faculty can directly apprehend moral facts without the mediation of embodied training, cultural formation, or perspectival engagement. The apprehension is available to any rational agent qua rational, not to particular agents by virtue of their particular embodied formation.

The article’s P7 directly contradicts this. Knowledge of the world — including any moral knowledge that might be grounded in perception — depends on the skillful capacities of the agent’s embodied engagement, which vary from person to person. The dentist’s perception of the smile differs from the layperson’s not because the dentist has applied reason more carefully to a shared perceptual datum, but because his embodied training has altered what he perceives. If this account extends to moral perception, then moral knowledge is not the direct rational apprehension of mind-independent moral facts but the body-relative perceptual achievement of an agent with specific embodied training.

The article does not explicitly address moral epistemology, so this Contrary finding is inferential from P7 rather than directly stated. But the inference is tight: the article’s account of knowledge as perspectival and body-relative is incompatible with the universally accessible direct rational apprehension that ethical intuitionism requires. The framework cannot accommodate ethical intuitionism without contradicting its governing epistemological commitments.

Finding: Contrary.

Commitment 6 — Foundationalism: Contrary

Foundationalism requires a structured hierarchy of justified beliefs grounded in self-evident first principles that are architecturally prior to all other commitments and not produced by the process of embodied engagement they purport to govern.

The article’s account of cognition as emergent from ongoing attunement between organism and environment eliminates the kind of architecturally prior first principles foundationalism requires. If cognition is constituted by the ongoing body-environment relationship rather than by the rational faculty’s operation from a prior position, then there is no standpoint outside the ongoing attunement process from which self-evident first principles could be apprehended. P5’s analogy to biological fitness confirms this: just as there is no fitness independent of the organism-environment relationship, there are no cognitions independent of the embodied engagement that produces them. The foundationalist requirement of an Archimedean point prior to all experience and engagement is precisely what the phenomenological tradition the article endorses is designed to dissolve.

Finding: Contrary.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

Commitment 1: Contrary. Commitment 2: Contrary.

Finding: Full Dissolution.

The article’s framework dissolves the prohairesis completely. The rational faculty as a distinct substance prior to all external conditions — capable of genuine originating assent, capable of examining its own impressions from a position of categorical independence from the body and its formation — has no place in this framework. What the framework makes available in its place is the embodied agent whose cognition emerges from ongoing attunement, whose personality is a style of grip, and whose psychological functioning is the quality of his body-environment fit. The agent is constituted by his embodied engagement, not prior to it.

The dissolution is complete and architecturally necessary. The framework’s central claim — that cognition emerges from embodied engagement rather than from a prior distinct cognitive substance — is precisely the denial of what the prohairesis requires to exist as the governing center of the Stoic practical program.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Commitment Pattern

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

Five Contrary findings. One Orthogonal. Zero Partially Convergent. Zero Convergent. Zero Divergent.

Dissolution: Full.

The Hovhannisyan Pattern and Its Significance

The pattern — five Contrary findings, one Orthogonal, Full Dissolution — is close to the Rorty and Fish pattern (six Contrary findings each) and the Ayer pattern (five Contrary, one Partially Aligned). The single Orthogonal finding on C3 distinguishes Hovhannisyan from those figures: the article does not engage with the question of moral realism, whereas Rorty, Ayer, and Fish all addressed it and produced Contrary findings. A fuller philosophical development of the optimal grip framework would likely close this gap, producing a sixth Contrary finding on C3 when the perspectival epistemology of P7 is explicitly applied to moral knowledge.

The philosophical route to Full Dissolution is different from Rorty’s pragmatism, Ayer’s logical positivism, and Fish’s interpretive community theory. Hovhannisyan’s route is phenomenological: the dissolution of the substantial self is achieved through the phenomenological analysis of lived experience rather than through logical analysis of language or pragmatist anti-foundationalism. The phenomenological tradition discovers in the analysis of experience that the self is not a substance behind its engagements but the pattern of those engagements themselves. This is a different philosophical path to the same destination.

The Relationship to the SIF-CR and the Glasser Rapprochement

The CIA run on Hovhannisyan’s framework is the most direct engagement the project has had with a contemporary scientific and philosophical account of cognition that bears on the SIF-CR’s governing claims. The article’s account of personality as styles of grip — embodied patterns of engagement rather than expressions of a rational faculty’s character — is a direct alternative to the SIF-CR’s governing claim that the patient is prior to his formation and capable of examining it through the rational faculty.

The CIA finding establishes the precise philosophical location of the disagreement. The article holds that cognition emerges from embodied attunement (P1) and that the self is constituted by its bodily engagement (P2). The Stoic framework holds that the rational faculty is categorically prior to all external conditions including the body and its trained engagements (C1), and that assent is a genuine first cause originating from that prior position (C2). These are not two positions on a spectrum. They are alternatives about the nature of the self and the locus of cognition.

The practical consequence for the SIF-CR is important. If Hovhannisyan’s framework is correct, the SIF-CR’s CP2 — the patient is prior to his self-narrative formation — is false: the patient is not prior to his formation but constituted by it. The inner discourse that prosochē enables would not be possible as the SIF-CR describes it, because there is no substantial rational faculty standing behind the embodied engagement to conduct it. The correct use of impressions, on the phenomenological account, would be replaced by the cultivation of better grip — more skilled, more attuned, more responsive embodied engagement with the world.

This is not a resolution of the disagreement but a precise statement of its location. The Stoic framework and the phenomenological framework of embodied cognition are alternatives, not complements, on the foundational question of what the self is. The CIA finding establishes this with the precision the instrument provides: Full Dissolution, five Contrary findings, the prohairesis dissolved into the body-environment relationship before it can exercise the categorical independence the Stoic practical program requires.

What the Article Gets Right

The CIA finding is not a dismissal of Hovhannisyan’s framework. Several of the article’s observations are genuine and important, even where the philosophical foundation diverges from the classical commitments.

The observation that cognition is active rather than passive — that the agent is not simply receiving information but engaging skillfully with a dynamic environment — is correct and corresponds to the Stoic account of the prohairesis as the faculty that actively governs assent rather than passively receiving impressions. The Stoic and phenomenological frameworks agree that the agent is not a passive receiver; they disagree about what the active agent is.

The observation that embodied training alters what the agent perceives — that the dentist and the layperson inhabit different perceptual fields — corresponds to the Stoic account of how askēsis alters the character of impressions over time. The long-term trajectory of correct assent produces a different perceptual field, one in which false value impressions arise with decreasing frequency. Both frameworks hold that the agent’s prior formation shapes what he perceives; they disagree about whether this formation is embodied engagement (Hovhannisyan) or the history of the rational faculty’s assents (the Stoic framework).

The observation that personality traits are stable patterns of engagement that produce recurring mismatches between person and situation corresponds to the Stoic account of character as formed by the history of assents and producing characteristic false impressions. Both frameworks hold that character is real, stable, and produces recurring patterns; they disagree about whether character is embodied grip (Hovhannisyan) or the condition of the prohairesis (the Stoic framework).

In each case the observation is correct; the philosophical account of what produces and sustains it diverges at the foundational level. The CIA’s five Contrary findings identify where the divergence lies. The genuine observations do not rescue the framework from Full Dissolution; they establish that the framework is tracking real phenomena through the wrong philosophical account of what those phenomena are.


Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v2.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling. Subject: Garri Hovhannisyan, “Embodied Cognition is a Matter of Grip,” Journal of Humanistic Psychology (2026). Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.