Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Thursday, June 04, 2026

Sage Consciousness — Mind Map

 

Sage Consciousness — Mind Map

SAGE-CONSCIOUSNESS
│
├─ 1. ONTOLOGICAL-GROUND
│   ├─ Rational-Faculty-as-Distinct-Substance
│   │   ├─ Non-physical-immaterial-center
│   │   ├─ Independent-of-bodily-states
│   │   └─ True-locus-of-control
│   ├─ Subjectivity
│   │   ├─ First-person-perspective-irreducible
│   │   ├─ Ownership-of-thought
│   │   └─ Unity-of-consciousness-basic-not-derived
│   ├─ Intentionality
│   │   ├─ Thoughts-directed-at-objects
│   │   └─ Aboutness-not-reducible-to-physical-description
│   └─ Persistence-of-Self
│       ├─ Enduring-identity-through-external-change
│       └─ Accountability-grounded-in-sameness-of-agent
│
├─ 2. COGNITIVE-OPERATIONS
│   ├─ Reception-of-Impressions
│   │   ├─ Phantasia-received-without-distortion
│   │   ├─ Propatheia-registered-not-assented-to
│   │   └─ Propositional-content-extracted-cleanly
│   ├─ Examination
│   │   ├─ Impression-held-before-foundational-truths
│   │   ├─ Thm-10-operative-virtue-only-genuine-good
│   │   └─ Correspondence-verdict-issued-not-preferred
│   └─ Assent-Discipline
│       ├─ Sunkatathesis-governed-by-examination
│       ├─ No-assent-to-false-value-impressions
│       └─ True-alternative-proposition-formulated-when-needed
│
├─ 3. VALUE-ARCHITECTURE
│   ├─ Foundationalism-C4
│   │   ├─ Stable-non-negotiable-standard-for-examination
│   │   ├─ Foundational-propositions-directly-apprehended
│   │   └─ Regress-terminated-not-infinite
│   ├─ Ethical-Intuitionism-C3
│   │   ├─ Direct-rational-apprehension-of-moral-facts
│   │   └─ No-false-value-beliefs-remaining-in-Sage
│   └─ Moral-Realism-C6
│       ├─ Objective-evaluative-structure-mind-independent
│       └─ Value-facts-not-constructed-discovered
│
├─ 4. AFFECTIVE-STATE
│   ├─ Eupatheiai-only
│   │   ├─ Boulesis-wish-directed-at-genuine-good
│   │   ├─ Chara-joy-in-present-virtue
│   │   └─ Eulabeia-caution-toward-genuine-evil-only
│   ├─ Absence-of-Pathos
│   │   ├─ No-lupe-distress-at-supposed-evil
│   │   ├─ No-phobos-fear-of-anticipated-external-evil
│   │   ├─ No-epithumia-yearning-for-external
│   │   └─ No-hedone-false-pleasure-at-supposed-good
│   └─ Continual-Eudaimonia
│       ├─ Chara-available-at-every-moment
│       ├─ Not-contingent-on-external-outcome
│       └─ Guaranteed-by-correct-judgment-not-fortune
│
├─ 5. VOLITIONAL-STRUCTURE
│   ├─ Libertarian-Free-Will-C2
│   │   ├─ Genuine-origination-of-assent
│   │   ├─ Assent-not-causally-compelled-by-impression
│   │   └─ Agent-is-source-not-conduit
│   ├─ Reserve-Clause
│   │   ├─ Hupexhairesis-operative-in-all-action
│   │   ├─ Intention-and-virtue-in-control-outcome-not
│   │   └─ No-desire-attached-to-specific-result
│   └─ Kathakon-Action
│       ├─ Role-appropriate-duties-pursued
│       ├─ Preferred-indifferents-as-objects-of-aim-not-value
│       └─ Full-rational-engagement-without-attachment
│
├─ 6. EPISTEMIC-STATE
│   ├─ Cognitive-Fit-C5
│   │   ├─ Habitual-judgments-aligned-with-evaluative-reality
│   │   ├─ Mind-fits-world-not-imposes-on-it
│   │   └─ Correspondence-stable-not-occasional
│   ├─ Foundational-Truths-Operative
│   │   ├─ Directly-apprehended-without-argument
│   │   ├─ Applied-at-every-examination
│   │   └─ No-negotiation-with-surface-appearances
│   └─ Discriminative-Boundary
│       ├─ Reductionism-excluded-C1-grounds
│       ├─ Eliminativism-excluded-assent-is-real
│       └─ Coherentism-excluded-foundationalism-C4-governs
│
└─ 7. TRAINED-CHARACTER
    ├─ Long-Term-Assent-Discipline
    │   ├─ False-impressions-weakened-by-repeated-refusal
    │   ├─ True-impressions-reinforced-by-repeated-assent
    │   └─ Character-built-indirectly-through-judgment
    ├─ Sage-Threshold
    │   ├─ False-value-impressions-no-longer-arrive-pre-loaded
    │   ├─ Impressions-received-as-indifferents-by-default
    │   └─ Pathos-mechanism-dismantled-not-suppressed
    └─ Prokoptic-Path
        ├─ Progression-from-prokoptic-effort-to-sage-stability
        ├─ Prokoptic-assent-effortful-sage-assent-natural
        └─ Eudaimonia-guaranteed-once-threshold-crossed

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

Karen Horney’s Typology — Comprehensive Reference (v3)

 

Karen Horney’s Typology — Comprehensive Reference (v3)

Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic).

Primary source: Dave Kelly, PTypes.com (1998–2006). Secondary sources: Horney (1937, 1942, 1945, 1950); Paris (1974); Cooper (2003); Westkott (1986); Feist (1994).


I. Structural Note and Operative Caution

Horney’s typology is tripartite and one-dimensional. Its organizing axis is the direction of interpersonal movement — toward, against, away. This makes it structurally incongruent with the PTypes 4×4 architecture, which generates sixteen types from two cross-cutting axes. Horney’s three types span multiple PTypes types, and several PTypes types cluster within each Horney trend.

The incongruence is real and cannot be resolved by mapping. The two systems answer different questions. The PTypes architecture identifies the specific content of each type’s false-value cluster; Horney’s architecture identifies the directional orientation of the neurotic defense. Types that share a Horney orientation may differ radically in their specific dogmata.

Westkott’s framing, adopted on the PTypes site, governs the use of these types throughout: they are ideal types as analytic concepts — pure configurations of motives, feelings, and behaviors uncontaminated by one another. Actual persons display greater variety, complexity, and intermeshing than any type suggests. Analytic purity permits theoretical insight, not biographical classification.

The utility of Horney’s typology for this project is phenomenological. Horney describes the interior architecture of each solution — the idealized image it generates, the pride it produces, the claims it issues, the self-hate it conceals, and the specific imperatives it commands — with a density that Oldham’s clinical format does not attempt. For the IDR and CDR, Horney supplies the inner logic that the dogma-statements map from the outside.

II. Profile Methodology

In application, Horney’s three solutions serve as the organizing structure for a three-slot personality profile: primary, secondary, and tertiary. The structure is preserved: each slot corresponds to exactly one Horney solution, and all three solutions are represented. The slots are ordered by dominance — the solution most characteristic of the person occupies the primary slot, the next most characteristic the secondary, the least dominant the tertiary.

Each slot is filled by the Oldham style that best represents that solution for the particular person being profiled. The general PTypes mappings of Oldham styles to Horney solutions provide guidance, but the selection for any given slot is governed by the individual profile, not by the general mapping alone. A style listed under one solution in the general mapping may represent a different solution in a specific person’s profile if that style best captures how that solution manifests for them.

Example — Dave Kelly: Solitary (Resignation / primary), Devoted (Self-Effacing / secondary), Inventive (Expansive / tertiary). Inventive is listed under Resignation in the general PTypes mapping; in this profile it represents the Expansive solution, as it best captures how the Expansive orientation manifests for this person. The solution structure — one slot per solution, three solutions present — is the invariant constraint. The Oldham style filling each slot is the variable determined by the individual profile.


III. Foundation: Basic Anxiety and Basic Hostility

Horney’s system begins developmentally. The child who does not receive adequate warmth and affirmation develops basic anxiety: a pervasive sense of isolation and helplessness in a potentially hostile world. Basic anxiety is not a specific fear but a standing orientation — a background condition of insecurity from which all neurotic development proceeds.

Basic anxiety generates basic hostility: suppressed anger toward the parents who failed to provide security. The child cannot express this hostility directly — dependence and fear prohibit it — and so it is repressed. The repressed hostility intensifies the anxiety, and the child moves to resolve the anxiety through one of three defensive orientations.

These orientations begin as adaptive responses and crystallize, under adverse conditions, into rigid character trends. A healthy individual can move in all three directions as circumstances require. The neurotic is locked into one orientation as the compulsive solution to anxiety and cannot access the other two without triggering psychological crisis.

Westkott notes that anxiety and hostility are interlocking: each type incorporates the other. Beneath neurotic compliance smolders a rage for revenge. Beneath neurotic aggression, naked terror hides. Beneath neurotic detachment, both remain, with the social contexts that aggravate them systematically avoided.


IV. Historical Development of the Three Types

Horney arrived at the tripartite structure across four books. In The Neurotic Personality of Our Time (1937), she identified four neurotic patterns: (1) seeking affection, (2) submissiveness, (3) gaining power over others, and (4) withdrawal. In Self-Analysis (1942), she collapsed the first two into a single category of dependency, producing the threefold structure. In Our Inner Conflicts (1945), she named the three trends by their interpersonal direction: moving toward people, moving against people, moving away from people — emphasizing helplessness, hostility, and isolation respectively. In Neurosis and Human Growth (1950), terminology shifted to emphasize the intrapsychic over the interpersonal: self-effacing, expansive, and resigned.


V. The Self-Effacing Solution (Moving Toward Others)

Basic Strategy

“Moving toward people involves an attempt to accommodate them, win their affection or approval and reduce any possibility of conflict. The primary ingredient here is compliance” (Cooper). The governing logic: If I make you love me, you will not hurt me. The basic anxiety is managed by achieving closeness and approval. The governing fear is abandonment and isolation.

Neurotic Needs

Need 1 — For affection and approval. Indiscriminate need to please others and to be liked and approved of. The center of gravity is in others, not in self; their wishes and opinions are the only thing that counts. Accompanied by dread of self-assertion and dread of hostility — in others or within the self.

Need 2 — For a “partner” who will take over one’s life. The center of gravity placed entirely in the partner, who is to fulfill all expectations of life and take responsibility for good and evil. Overvaluation of “love” because love is supposed to solve all problems. Accompanied by dread of desertion and dread of being alone.

Need 3 — To restrict one’s life within narrow borders. Necessity to be undemanding and contented with little; to restrict ambitions and wishes for material things; to remain inconspicuous and take second place. Modesty is the supreme value. Dread of making any demands; dread of having or asserting expansive wishes.

Idealized Image

Goodness, love, and saintliness are the driving images. Any form of self-assertion, pride, ambition, or initiative is consciously prohibited. The type sees himself as loving, generous, unselfish, humble, and sensitive to others’ feelings. He is willing to subordinate himself to others, to see others as more intelligent or attractive, and to rate himself according to what others think of him.

Neurotic Pride, Claims, and Shoulds

Pride is based on arrogation of the attributes of goodness, sympathy, love, generosity, unselfishness, and humility. Below this surface operates an unconscious pride system that insists the type is not like others — that he has higher standards, a grandiose image of radical selflessness and perfect self-sacrifice. The demanding selfless image insists he eradicate self-concern; his unconscious need to maintain this image promotes self-concern. He is afraid of his pride yet runs from it in the name of a higher form of pride.

Claims: I am entitled to love, affection, understanding, sympathy. You must love me, protect me, forgive me, not desert me, because I am so weak and helpless.

Tyrannical shoulds: He should be good, loving, and self-effacing. He should be unselfish, self-sacrificing, considerate, appreciative, grateful, and generous. He should have a partner who will take care of him. He should be undemanding and contented with little. He should remain inconspicuous and take second place. He should be self-depreciating and modest.

PTypes Disorder Correspondences

Dependent, Masochistic, Borderline, Avoidant, Histrionic. In Oldham’s terms: Devoted, Sensitive, Mercurial (Borderline), Dramatic.


VI. The Expansive Solution (Moving Against Others)

Basic Strategy

“Moving against others is an attempt to alleviate interpersonal anxiety by conquering, defeating, and dominating others. An excessive need to control one’s surroundings is typical of this trend. Pride or excessive self-regard seems dominant” (Cooper). The governing logic: If I have power, you cannot hurt me. The basic anxiety is managed by achieving dominance. The governing fear is vulnerability and defeat.

Neurotic Needs

Need 4 — For power. Domination over others craved for its own sake. Essential disrespect for others’ individuality, dignity, and feelings — the only concern is their subordination. Indiscriminate adoration of strength and contempt for weakness. Dread of uncontrollable situations; dread of helplessness.

Need 4a — To control self and others through reason and foresight (an inhibited variety of Need 4, in persons for whom direct exertion of power means too much contact with others). Belief in the omnipotence of intelligence and reason; denial of the power of emotional forces and contempt for them; extreme value placed on foresight and prediction; feelings of superiority related to the faculty of foresight; dread of recognizing objective limitations of reason; dread of stupidity and bad judgment. This sub-type is directly relevant to the Conscientious/OCD equivalent in the CDR.

Need 4b — To believe in the omnipotence of will (an introvert variety of Need 4, in highly detached people for whom direct power means too much contact). Feelings of fortitude from the belief in the magic power of will; desolation at any frustration of wishes; tendency to relinquish wishes because of dread of failure; dread of recognizing any limitation of sheer will.

Need 5 — To exploit others. Others evaluated primarily according to whether they can be exploited or made use of. Pride in exploitative skill. Dread of being exploited and thus of being “stupid.”

Need 6 — For social recognition or prestige. All things — inanimate objects, money, persons, one’s own qualities and activities — evaluated only according to their prestige value. Self-evaluation entirely dependent on public acceptance. Dread of losing caste (“humiliation”).

Need 7 — For personal admiration. Inflated image of self (narcissism). Need to be admired not for what one presents publicly but for the imagined self. Self-evaluation dependent on living up to this image and on its admiration by others. Dread of losing admiration.

Need 8 — For personal achievement. Need to surpass others through one’s activities; self-evaluation dependent on being the very best in one’s own mind. Relentless driving of self to greater achievements with pervasive anxiety. Dread of failure (“humiliation”).

Idealized Image

The expansive type identifies himself with his glorified self. The appeal of life lies in mastery; he should be able to overcome every obstacle — in or outside himself. His dread of anything connoting helplessness is his most poignant dread. “I exist only as a superior being.”

Neurotic Pride, Claims, and Shoulds

Pride in strength, leadership, heroism, and omnipotence. Claims: others should defer, submit, and subordinate themselves; they are here to be exploited; they should recognize his high status, respect and admire him. Should: he should be able to master everything — adversities of fate, difficulties of a situation, intricacies of intellectual problems, resistances of other people, conflicts in himself.

PTypes Disorder Correspondences

Obsessive-Compulsive, Sadistic, Compensatory Narcissistic, Narcissistic, Antisocial, Cyclothymic. In Oldham’s terms: Conscientious (OCD equivalent), Self-Confident (Narcissistic), Adventurous (Antisocial).

Note on Conscientious under Expansive: The Conscientious type’s root dogma (flawless performance measured against high standards is a genuine good) and its relentless self-driving instantiate the Expansive solution’s Need 4a (control through reason and foresight) and Need 8 (personal achievement). The type’s perfectionism is an expansive demand for mastery, not a compliant one. This corrects the prior document’s placement of Conscientious under the Self-Effacing cluster.


VII. The Resignation Solution (Moving Away from Others)

Basic Strategy

“The movement away from others attempts to resolve anxiety through detachment or aloofness. The ‘solution’ in this movement is evasion” (Cooper). “The very essence of this solution is withdrawing from active living, from active wishing, striving, planning, from efforts and doing” (Horney, 1950). “The basically detached person worships freedom and strives to be independent of both outer and inner demands. He pursues neither love nor mastery; he wants rather to be left alone, to have nothing expected of him and to be subject to no restrictions” (Paris).

Neurotic Needs

Need 9 — For self-sufficiency and independence. Necessity never to need anybody, or yield to any influence, or be tied down to anything — any closeness involving the danger of enslavement. Distance and separateness the only source of security. Dread of needing others, of ties, of closeness, of love.

Need 10 — For perfection and unassailability. Relentless driving for perfection; rumination and self-recriminations regarding possible flaws. Feelings of superiority because of being perfect. Dread of finding flaws within self or of making mistakes; dread of criticism or reproaches. The resigned type does not want to excel through consistent effort — he feels that the treasures within him should be recognized without any effort on his part; his hidden greatness should be felt without his having to make a move (Horney, 1945).

The need for privacy. “He is like a person in a hotel room who rarely removes the ‘Do-Not-Disturb’ sign from his door. Even books may be regarded as intruders; as something from outside. Any question put to him about his personal life may shock him; he tends to shroud himself in a veil of secrecy” (Horney, 1945).

The magic circle. “They draw around themselves a kind of magic circle which no one may penetrate. And this is why, superficially, they may ‘get along’ with people. The compulsive character of the need shows up in their reaction of anxiety when the world intrudes on them” (Horney, 1945).

Idealized Image

“His idealized image, chiefly, is a glorification of the needs which have developed. It is a composite of self-sufficiency, independence, self-contained serenity, freedom from desires and passions, stoicism, and fairness. Fairness for him is less a glorification of vindictiveness than an idealization of noncommitment and of not infringing upon anybody’s rights” (Horney, 1950).

Neurotic Pride, Claims, and Shoulds

Pride is based on arrogation of the attributes of wisdom, self-sufficiency, independence, autonomy, superiority, strength, and power. “The attributes of which he is proud are in the service of resignation. He is proud of his detachment, his ‘stoicism,’ his self-sufficiency, his independence, his dislike of coercion, his being above competition” (Horney, 1950).

Claims: “The two outstanding neurotic claims are that life should be easy, painless, and effortless and that he should not be bothered.” He feels entitled to having others not intrude upon his privacy, not expect anything of him, not bother him; to be exempt from having to make a living and from responsibilities (Horney, 1950).

Tyrannical shoulds: He should be totally self-sufficient and independent. He should never need anybody, yield to any influence, or be tied down to anything. He should always maintain distance and separateness from others. He should avoid needing others, ties to others, closeness to others, and love. He should always strive for perfection and correct all possible flaws.

PTypes Disorder Correspondences

Schizoid, Schizotypal, Paranoid, Passive-Aggressive, Depressive. In Oldham’s terms: Solitary (Schizoid), Inventive (Schizotypal), Vigilant (Paranoid), Leisurely (Passive-Aggressive).

Note on Paranoid under Resignation: The Vigilant/Paranoid type’s primary movement is away from others through hypervigilance, distrust, and refusal of genuine engagement — resignation as defensive isolation. The type’s scanning of others for threat is in the service of maintaining the magic circle, not of dominating others. This corrects the prior document’s placement of Vigilant under the Expansive cluster.

Note on Inventive in individual profiles: Inventive (Schizotypal) appears here in the general Resignation mapping. In a specific person’s three-slot profile, Inventive may represent the Expansive solution if it best captures how that orientation manifests for that person — particularly through the Expansive sub-type 4b (omnipotence of will) or through idiosyncratic perception held as a form of intellectual superiority. The general mapping guides but does not determine the profile assignment.


VIII. The Later Architecture (Neurosis and Human Growth, 1950)

The Idealized Image and the Search for Glory

As the neurotic trend consolidates, the person constructs an idealized image of himself built from the dominant solution, and the characteristics that solution prescribes are inflated into virtues. The compliant type idealizes himself as loving, selfless, and good. The expansive type idealizes himself as powerful, masterful, and invulnerable. The resignation type idealizes himself as free, self-sufficient, serene, and — explicitly in Horney’s text — stoic.

The drive to actualize this idealized image is the search for glory. It replaces the drive toward self-realization; energy that could develop the real self is consumed in maintaining and defending the idealized one. The content of the idealized image is most strongly determined by the predominant interpersonal strategy, but because subordinate strategies are also at work, the idealized image is full of inner divisions — a crossfire of conflicting shoulds.

The Pride System

The idealized image generates the pride system: neurotic pride, neurotic claims, and self-hate as a unified structure.

Neurotic pride is pride in the imaginary attributes of the idealized self rather than in genuine achievements. It is fragile. Any challenge to the idealized image triggers the pride hurt, which the neurotic will go to great lengths to avoid, deny, or retaliate against.

Neurotic claims are the demands the neurotic makes on the world based on his idealized image. Because he is a saint, a master, or a sage, the world owes him the treatment appropriate to that status. Their frustration generates disproportionate rage.

Self-hate is the other face of neurotic pride. Pride and self-hate are not opposites but a single system: when the idealized image is affirmed, the experience is pride; when it is punctured, the experience is self-contempt directed at the actual self that failed to match it.

The Tyranny of the Should

The idealized image generates imperatives Horney calls the tyranny of the should: compulsory commands issued without regard for what is actually possible or appropriate. The neurotic does not modify them when they prove impossible; he either denies the failure or turns self-hate onto himself for failing. The shoulds cannot be satisfied because they derive from an idealized image that is by definition beyond the actual self’s reach.

The Real Self and the Actual Self

Against the idealized image, Horney posits the real self: an innate potentiality for growth, spontaneity, and genuine development. The real self is a capacity — the capacity to grow toward self-realization when anxiety does not divert energy into the neurotic solutions. Neurotic development alienates the person from the real self: energy that could develop genuine capacities is consumed in maintaining the idealized image, managing the pride system, and enforcing the tyranny of the should.


IX. “Stoicism” in the Resignation Idealized Image — A Critical Note for the Sterling Project

The most analytically significant single item in the Horney corpus for this project is Horney’s identification of stoicism as a named component of the Resignation type’s idealized image. The passage from Neurosis and Human Growth (1950) reads: “His idealized image, chiefly, is a glorification of the needs which have developed. It is a composite of self-sufficiency, independence, self-contained serenity, freedom from desires and passions, stoicism, and fairness.” And: “He is proud of his detachment, his ‘stoicism,’ his self-sufficiency, his independence, his dislike of coercion, his being above competition.”

Horney places “stoicism” explicitly within the neurotic pride structure of the Resignation type. This means that the appropriation of Stoic-sounding virtues — apatheia, self-sufficiency, freedom from desires and passions, dispassion — is not incidental to the Resignation type’s defense but is constitutive of his idealized image. He is proud of these attributes. They are what he holds himself up to be.

In Sterling’s framework, this identifies the precise mechanism of the [D]-flag problem in the Solitary CDR. The [D]-flagged items are not merely dogmata that resemble correct Stoic practice; they are, in Horney’s analysis, the content of the Resignation type’s neurotic pride. The Solitary / Resignation type holds his detachment, self-sufficiency, and freedom from desires and passions as his idealized self-portrait — as what he is when he is most himself. In Sterling’s language, he holds these as genuine goods. In Horney’s language, he holds them as the content of his pride system.

The detection problem is now fully articulable: the Resignation type’s neurotic pride produces a self-presentation that is phenomenologically indistinguishable from genuine Stoic practice, because the type has specifically appropriated Stoic-sounding virtue-language as the content of his idealized image. He calls his detachment “stoicism.” He calls his self-sufficiency “independence.” He calls his freedom from emotional claims “freedom from desires and passions.” Each of these is a [D]-flagged dogma wearing the language of correct Stoic assent.

The corrective the Sterling framework offers is the one Horney’s system cannot supply: the Six Commitments and the 80 Propositions make it possible to ask whether the agent holds these states as outcomes of correct assent (genuine apatheia following from correct value judgment) or as genuine goods to be achieved and displayed (neurotic pride in the resigned idealized image). The behavioral and affective signatures are identical. The propositional audit is the only available instrument for distinguishing them — and it requires the agent’s own honest self-examination, not external observation.


Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic).

Personality Analysis — Personal Statement: “Look at all of the instruments in my corpus.”

 

Personality Analysis — Personal Statement: “Look at all of the instruments in my corpus.”

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

Corpus in use: Core Stoicism (Sterling), SLE v4.0, Nine Excerpts (Sterling), Sterling’s Six Philosophical Commitments, CDR v1.1, Horney Typology Reference v3.


I. Instrument Selection

The prior SCE finding stands: the statement’s propositional content is Corpus Confirmed. Comprehensive instrument survey is correct procedure. This analysis runs in a different register and does not re-litigate that finding.

The personality analysis now incorporates the full three-solution profile: Solitary (Resignation / primary), Devoted (Self-Effacing / secondary), Inventive (Expansive / tertiary). Each solution contributes its own dogma-cluster to the analysis. The three clusters do not merge; they operate in parallel and in tension, and their contradictions are preserved as diagnostic.

Primary — CDR v1.1. All three type entries are operative. The governing question for each: which dogmata from this type’s cluster are active in the agent’s relationship to the corpus as the object of the statement’s prescribed action?

Primary — SLE v4.0 with Standard 13. Personality style identifies the shape of correspondence-failure risk; the 80 Propositions establish whether failure occurs. The prior run established that the statement’s content is propositionally correct. The three-solution overlay identifies three distinct shapes of the same latent risk: misclassifying the corpus as a genuine good.

Primary — IDR v1.0. The Five-Step interior discourse now runs with all three solutions active. Each solution introduces its own imperatives at each step. The Pause is the critical site where all three are simultaneously operative.

Available but not deployed — POSG v1.0. Scenario generation available for any or all three solutions on request.


II. CDR v1.1 — Three-Solution Dogma Analysis

A. Solitary (Resignation / Primary)

Root dogma: Solitude and freedom from relational demand are genuine goods; others’ company and emotional claims are genuine evils.

Five dogmata from the Solitary cluster are operative in the statement’s context. Three are [D]-flagged.

S1 — One’s own inner world is a genuine good; the outer social world is a genuine evil. [LLM-derived] The corpus is an inner world — elaborate, self-constructed, internally organized. “My corpus” marks it as belonging to the inner-world cluster. The agent may have already assented to the corpus as a genuine good before any instrument is deployed.

S2 — Self-sufficiency from others is a genuine good. The comprehensive corpus confers analytical independence from external philosophical authority. The directive to survey all instruments instantiates this dogma: having all instruments available means needing no one else.

S3 — Self-containment without interaction is a genuine good. The corpus as self-contained system. Its self-containment may be valued intrinsically rather than instrumentally.

S4 — Being unmoved by others is a genuine good. [D] Intellectual composure in surveying instruments. Indistinguishable from correct Stoic equanimity in behavioral expression.

S5 — Even temperament and dispassion are genuine goods. [D] The composed manner in which the instruments are surveyed looks like apatheia. It is not, if the composure rests on the Resignation solution’s idealized image — the sage who names his detachment “stoicism.”

The [D] problem for the Solitary cluster: three of five operative dogmata produce behavioral signatures identical to correct Stoic practice. The Resignation type’s idealized image explicitly includes “stoicism” as one of its named attributes (Horney, 1950). The agent who holds his detachment and self-sufficiency as his idealized self-portrait calls these qualities Stoic virtues. In Sterling’s framework, he is holding them as genuine goods.


B. Devoted (Self-Effacing / Secondary)

Root dogma: Attachment to another person is the condition of completeness; separation is a genuine evil.

Four dogmata from the Devoted cluster are operative, applied to the corpus as the object of deference rather than to a person.

D1 — Cooperation and deference to authority are genuine goods. The corpus functions as the authority to defer to. The directive “look at all of the instruments” is, in the Devoted solution’s reading, not a methodological commitment but an act of deference to a comprehensive authoritative system. The corpus is the dominant partner whose direction resolves all analytical situations.

D2 — Relying on others and following their direction and advice is a genuine good. Extended to the corpus: relying on the corpus and following its instrument architecture is held as a genuine good. The corpus as the reliably directing presence.

D3 — Idealizing partners is a genuine good. The corpus as idealized authority. Its comprehensiveness and philosophical richness are not evaluated soberly; they are idealized as the qualities of the perfect guiding system.

D4 — One’s own independent judgment is a genuine evil. [LLM-derived] The Devoted secondary’s counter-pressure to independent analytical judgment: departing from the corpus’s guidance — not consulting all instruments, trusting one’s own informal analysis — produces the anxiety characteristic of the Self-Effacing solution’s fear of operating without the partner.

Cross-cluster contradiction with Solitary: The Solitary dogmata hold self-sufficiency as a genuine good and self-containment as the correct orientation. The Devoted dogmata hold self-sufficiency as a genuine evil and deference to authority as a genuine good. Both are operative in the same profile. The CDR preserves this contradiction as diagnostic. Applied to the corpus: the Solitary solution holds the corpus as the vehicle of self-sufficiency; the Devoted solution holds it as the vehicle of authoritative guidance. The corpus satisfies both simultaneously — it is the inner world that confers independence AND the authority system that takes care of all situations. This double hold makes the misclassification especially stable: one solution’s failure to hold the corpus correctly is immediately compensated by the other.


C. Inventive (Expansive / Tertiary)

Root dogma: An image of superiority over others is a genuine good; being ordinary or actual is a genuine evil.

The Inventive type in this profile represents the Expansive solution. Its CDR entry (Compensatory Narcissistic Disorder Equivalent) is active at the level of the corpus as the vehicle for the idealized self — the image of intellectual superiority and comprehensiveness.

I1 — A superior self-image is a genuine good. The corpus as the primary support for the idealized self: the agent who has built and can survey a comprehensive analytical instrument suite holds himself as superior to those who operate without one.

I2 — Greatness, perfection, and stardom are genuine goods. The directive “look at all of the instruments” carries an Expansive valence: survey all instruments because the corpus must be seen as complete, comprehensive, and unassailable — because incompleteness would puncture the idealized image.

I3 — The idealized self is a genuine good; the actual self is a genuine evil. The corpus as the idealized self’s external counterpart. The elaborate system reflects back the image of the superior analyst. Any instrument gap or analytical failure threatens the correspondence between the idealized image and the corpus that is supposed to embody it.

I4 — Fulfillment of grandiose expectations is a genuine good; their non-fulfillment is a genuine evil. The expectation that the corpus covers every situation. The Expansive solution’s version of comprehensive instrument survey: the corpus should handle everything because the idealized self’s analytical apparatus must be complete.

Cross-cluster contradictions: The Inventive cluster directly contradicts the Solitary cluster on two points. Solitary: “Praise and criticism are genuine evils; being known or legible to others is a genuine evil.” Inventive: “Social recognition, status, and prestige are genuine goods; others’ admiration is a genuine good.” The Solitary solution holds the corpus as private inner world not to be displayed; the Inventive solution holds it as the vehicle for public recognition and admiration. Both are operative. The corpus is simultaneously the private fortress and the public demonstration.

The Devoted cluster partially contradicts the Inventive cluster: Devoted subordinates to the corpus as authority; Inventive elevates the self through the corpus as achievement. Applied to the statement: the Devoted reading is “I defer to the corpus”; the Inventive reading is “I have built something worth surveying.”


D. Summary of Operative Dogmata

Across the three solutions, the corpus is held simultaneously as: (1) the private inner world that confers self-sufficient detachment (Solitary / Resignation); (2) the authoritative protective system that takes care of all analytical situations (Devoted / Self-Effacing); (3) the demonstration of the idealized self’s intellectual superiority and completeness (Inventive / Expansive). All three are false valuations of an indifferent. All three misclassify the corpus in the same direction — as a genuine good — through different mechanisms. The CDR’s preserved cross-cluster contradictions are diagnostic of the profile as a whole; they do not cancel one another.


III. SLE v4.0 — Standard 13 Overlay

Standard 13 governs: style explains shape; Props explain occurrence. The propositional audit of the statement’s content does not establish Correspondence Failure. The three-solution overlay identifies three distinct shapes of the latent risk, each associated with a different solution’s misvaluation of the corpus.

Resignation shape: The corpus held as inner world and self-sufficiency vehicle. The [D] items produce a risk that is specifically difficult to detect because the failure presents as apatheia and stoic self-containment.

Self-Effacing shape: The corpus held as authoritative partner and guide. The risk presents as epistemic humility and methodological deference — both of which are appropriate in a different register, making this shape harder to audit than the Resignation shape.

Expansive shape: The corpus held as idealized self’s external counterpart. The risk presents as commitment to comprehensiveness and analytical precision — also appropriate in a different register.

Each shape produces a distinctive failure signature at the level of motivation rather than behavior. The behavior — surveying all instruments — is identical and correct across all three shapes. The motivation is what differs, and motivation is not recoverable from behavioral observation alone.

Standard 13 verdict: Three solution-specific shapes of the same correspondence-failure risk identified. Occurrence not established by the statement alone. The risk is declared across all three solutions.


IV. IDR v1.0 — Inner Discourse Rendering

Agent profile: Solitary (Resignation / primary), Devoted (Self-Effacing / secondary), Inventive (Expansive / tertiary). Impression: “Look at all of the instruments in my corpus.” Five-Step Method operative. Six commitments operative.


Reception

The impression arrives. It has three simultaneous faces, corresponding to the three active solutions.

The Resignation face: there is a corpus. It is mine. It is here. It is complete. It is the domain I inhabit. The impression carries the warmth that the inner world carries for the Solitary solution — not emotional warmth but the warmth of the familiar private space. The magic circle is intact.

The Self-Effacing face: there is a corpus. It is the system that will guide me. I should consult it fully. To consult it fully is to be safe. The impression carries the relief that the Devoted solution finds in the presence of the authoritative partner.

The Expansive face: there is a corpus. It is mine, and it is comprehensive. The impression carries the satisfaction that the Inventive solution finds in the presence of a superior achievement. Its comprehensiveness confirms the idealized image.

All three receptions are occurring. None of them is a false impression about what the statement prescribes — comprehensive instrument survey is the correct action. All three are potentially false impressions about the corpus that is being surveyed. The Reception step receives all three simultaneously.


Recognition

What kind of impression is this? The correct recognition: a methodological directive prescribing comprehensive survey before instrument selection.

The Resignation solution adds: a recognition of the inner world being entered and affirmed.

The Self-Effacing solution adds: a recognition of the authority being consulted and deferred to.

The Expansive solution adds: a recognition of the achievement being acknowledged and displayed.

The correct recognition is narrow. All three supplementary recognitions are wider than what the impression prescribes. None of them falsifies the action the impression calls for. All three add evaluative content that the impression does not contain. Recognition must be held to what the impression actually presents — which is a procedural requirement, not a confirmation of the corpus’s value in any of the three supplementary senses.


Pause

The pause is the Five-Step Method’s critical structural requirement. With three solutions active, the pause faces three simultaneous demands.

The Resignation should fires: I should inhabit this inner world. I should be above the need to examine whether I hold it correctly. The sage surveys his instruments with equanimity. The pause itself risks being neutralized by this should: if I am already correct, why pause?

The Self-Effacing should fires: I should defer to the corpus. Examining whether I hold the corpus correctly risks the anxiety of operating without authoritative guidance — the Devoted solution’s dread of independent judgment.

The Expansive should fires: I should confirm the corpus’s completeness. The pause risks surfacing a gap or a failure, which would puncture the idealized image.

All three shoulds work against the pause for different reasons. The Resignation should neutralizes it through false equanimity. The Self-Effacing should makes it feel disloyal. The Expansive should makes it feel threatening. The pause must be held against all three simultaneously. It is the only moment in the Five Steps at which all three misvaluations can be identified and refused before assent is given.


Examination

The six commitments are operative. The question the Examination must answer is not “what does this statement prescribe?” but “what is the agent holding the corpus to be?”

C1 (Substance Dualism): The corpus is not the rational faculty. It is external to prohairesis. It does not become part of the rational faculty by being elaborate, self-constructed, or well-used. The Resignation solution’s inner-world hold, the Self-Effacing solution’s partner-authority hold, and the Expansive solution’s idealized-self-extension hold are all false at this commitment: none of them is a property of prohairesis.

C2 (Libertarian Free Will): The assent given to the corpus’s value is free. The three solutions’ imperatives — the Resignation should that the corpus is the inner world to be inhabited, the Self-Effacing should that it is the authority to defer to, the Expansive should that it confirms the idealized self — do not compel assent. Each is an impression to be examined, not a fact to be accepted.

C3 (Ethical Intuitionism / Moral Realism): The moral fact is directly apprehensible: the corpus is an indifferent. Preferred, instrumentally valuable, worth the attention the directive prescribes — but not a genuine good in any of the three forms it is being held. The apprehension is available without argument. What the three solutions do is generate noise that competes with the apprehension. The Pause creates the conditions for the apprehension to register against that noise.

C5 (Correspondence Theory): The impression “my corpus is a genuine good” is false regardless of which solution generates it. The Resignation version (“the inner world is a genuine good”), the Self-Effacing version (“the authoritative partner is a genuine good”), and the Expansive version (“the achievement that confirms my idealized self is a genuine good”) all assert a correspondence between the corpus and the category genuine good that reality does not support. Correspondence is to reality, not to the quality or depth of the misvaluation.

C6 (Foundationalism): The corpus is for virtue. Virtue is the only genuine good. The corpus that is held as foundational — as the thing that other things are for — has had the foundational structure inverted. The correct structure: virtue is foundational; the corpus is instrumental. All three solutions invert this structure from different directions.


Decision

Survey all instruments in the corpus as correct analytical procedure, directed toward virtue, with reservation.

The corpus is an indifferent: preferred, instrumental, not a genuine good. “My corpus” in the possessive does not make the corpus mine in the evaluative sense. The inner world it constitutes (Resignation) is an indifferent. The authoritative guidance it provides (Self-Effacing) is an indifferent. The idealized self it reflects (Expansive) is an indifferent. The comprehensive survey the statement prescribes is correct. The triple misvaluation of what is being surveyed is refusable at the Pause and has been refused at the Examination.

The action is identical whether the Decision is correct or not. The corpus gets surveyed either way. What the Decision governs is the agent’s relationship to what he is surveying. Correct Decision: the corpus is a tool. All three solutions’ versions of the Decision: the corpus is something more. The propositional audit cannot detect the difference from outside. Only the agent’s own honest Examination can.


V. Summary Finding

The statement’s propositional content remains Corpus Confirmed. The three-solution personality analysis does not overturn the SCE finding.

What the three-solution analysis adds that the single-solution analysis could not: the dogma-loads of all three solutions converge on the same misclassification of the corpus — as a genuine good — through different mechanisms that partially contradict each other but reinforce one another’s hold. The Solitary and Devoted solutions contradict each other directly (self-sufficiency vs. deference to authority) yet both hold the corpus as a genuine good simultaneously. The Solitary and Inventive solutions contradict each other on visibility (private inner world vs. public demonstration) yet both hold the corpus as a genuine good simultaneously. The triple hold is more stable than any single-solution hold would be: when one solution’s specific false valuation comes under pressure, another solution’s false valuation supports the misclassification from a different direction.

The Pause is identified as the single critical point across all three solutions. Three shoulds work against it simultaneously from three different angles. The Pause must be held long enough to ask the question all three solutions work to suppress: what am I holding the corpus to be — instrument or genuine good?


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

English as Code: Natural Language in the Era of Large Language Models

 

English as Code: Natural Language in the Era of Large Language Models

Inspirational foundation: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Framing and analysis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic).


The Thesis

In the era of large language models, English is the programming language. Precision in natural language is the discipline that was formerly called coding. Vague language is a bug. An instruction that is ambiguous, underspecified, or internally inconsistent does not merely communicate poorly — it executes poorly. The standard of correctness that once applied only to formal code now applies to prose.

This is not a metaphor. A natural language specification supplied to a large language model governs its outputs with the same logical force as a function call governs its return value. The governing document either specifies correctly or it does not. The LLM does not fill gaps from good intentions; it fills them from its training distribution, which is not the same thing. Every imprecision in a specification is an invitation to drift. Precision is the only defense.


The Demonstration

The Classical Stoic System built on Sterling’s philosophical corpus is the proof of concept. The system consists of a suite of analytical instruments — audit procedures, decision frameworks, evaluative protocols — written entirely in English and supplied to a large language model as governing specifications. The instruments produce consistent, structured, auditable outputs.

They do this not because the model was trained for philosophical analysis. They do it because the English specifications are written with sufficient precision to function as executable logic. The corpus is a codebase. The instrument definitions are functions. The self-audit requirements are assertion statements. The mandatory self-audit at each step transition is a checkpoint that halts execution and demands verification before proceeding. The prohibition on named failure modes is a guard clause. The five verdict categories of the Classical Ideological Audit are an enumerated type. The six philosophical commitments are constants against which variables are evaluated.

Sterling’s philosophical texts are the inspirational foundation of this system. They supplied the load-bearing concepts, the theoretical architecture, and the precision of argument that made instrument construction possible. A vague philosophical framework cannot be coded. Sterling’s framework is not vague. Its precision at the level of philosophical argument translates directly into precision at the level of executable specification. That translation is the work of instrument architecture.


The Implication

Any knowledge system intended to govern large language model output must be built to the standard of code. This means: terms defined before use, procedures specified in full, failure modes named and guarded against, output formats determined in advance, and self-audit steps written in at every transition point where drift can occur.

The humanist discipline of clear prose and the programmer’s discipline of executable specification have converged. The writer who wants his knowledge system to run correctly in the LLM era must think like an architect: structure before content, specification before execution, verification built into the procedure rather than applied after the fact.

This convergence changes what it means to write well. Clarity has always been a virtue of prose. In the LLM era it is also a technical requirement. The sentence that cannot be executed without ambiguity is not merely unclear — it is broken. The knowledge system that relies on the reader’s good judgment to fill in what it leaves unspecified has, in an LLM context, no reader in that sense. It has an executor. What the specification does not say, the executor will supply from elsewhere. Precision is the only guarantee that “elsewhere” is not where the output comes from.


Inspirational foundation: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Framing and analysis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic).

The Classical Stoic Approach to Organizational Self-Governance

 

The Classical Stoic Approach to Organizational Self-Governance

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

Corpus in use: Core Stoicism (Sterling), Nine Excerpts (Sterling), Sterling Logic Engine v4.0 (Kelly/Sterling), Sterling’s Framework for Personal Decision Making v3.3 (Kelly/Sterling), The Correct Stoic Attitude — A Manual (Kelly), Stoicism Is Not Therapy But Training (Sterling), Dogmata, the Six Commitments, and the Structure of Sterling’s Stoicism (Kelly), The Six Philosophical Commitments That Ground Stoic Practice (Kelly/Sterling), Seddon’s Glossary (Seddon), Harshness and Beauty in Epictetus (Sterling).


I. The Problem Correctly Stated

There is a genuine and recurring observation about organizational life that deserves a precise response. The individual who occupies a role within an institution — manager, executive, professional, administrator — finds himself subjected to a particular form of pressure. Email arrives without cessation. Demands accumulate from above, below, and sideways. Institutional expectations land with the force of necessity. The gap between what he is asked to do and what his best judgment endorses widens under deadline. The question of how to govern himself under these conditions is real, and it is not answered by any technique of time management or attentional training.

Several attempts have been made to recruit Stoicism as a resource for this problem. These attempts share a common move: they extract Stoic practices — attention to impressions, selective assent, equanimity, the distinction between what is in our control and what is not — and apply them as tools for achieving better self-management within the role. The exercises are treated as practical skills whose value is their organizational utility: the practitioner becomes calmer, more effective, less reactive, better able to handle the demands placed on him.

This move is a misreading of what Stoicism is and how it works. Sterling is explicit on the point: Stoicism is not a set of techniques. It is a set of doctrines, and all psychological benefit the practices produce is parasitic on those doctrines. An exercise in attention that is not directed at the specific content of false value beliefs is not a Stoic exercise. It is a calming technique with a Stoic surface.

The problem the organizational agent faces is not an attention management problem or a self-governance-in-role problem. It is a dogmata problem. He is suffering under the false belief that his role-performance is a genuine good, that role-failure is a genuine evil, and that the demands arriving from the institution carry genuine value whose frustration constitutes genuine harm. Those beliefs are false. They are the exclusive cause of his distress. Nothing reaches the root except their correction.


II. The Diagnostic: What Is Actually Happening

The organizational agent’s distress follows a precise causal structure. An impression arrives — an email demanding immediate response, a performance review threatening consequences, an instruction that conflicts with his judgment, a deadline he cannot meet. The impression carries evaluative content: this matters, this is urgent, this failure will be bad. Before any deliberation occurs, the agent has typically already assented to that evaluative content. The dogma — the governing evaluative judgment lodged in his prohairesis — has done its work pre-reflectively. The inbox is tyrannical because the agent has already judged that what the inbox contains is genuinely important.

Epictetus states the causal claim in the Enchiridion: men are disturbed not by things but by the dogmata they form concerning things. The inbox is not tyrannical. The agent’s evaluative judgment that the inbox’s demands carry genuine value is tyrannical. The distinction is not rhetorical. It locates the cause precisely and therefore locates the remedy precisely. No intervention at the level of the inbox, the institution, the organizational system, or the demands themselves reaches the cause. The cause is internal.

The specific false dogmata driving organizational distress are identifiable. They are not exotic. They are the standard false value beliefs the Stoic framework identifies in every domain of life, appearing in organizational dress:

That career advancement is a genuine good whose absence constitutes genuine harm. That institutional approval — positive performance reviews, recognition from superiors, collegial respect — is a genuine good. That role-failure — missing a deadline, underperforming, being passed over — is a genuine evil. That the demands of institutional authority carry genuine value that obliges compliance regardless of judgment. That the organization’s survival or success is a genuine good in which the agent has a genuine stake beyond the preferred indifferent status it actually holds.

Each of these is a version of the same error: treating an external as a genuine good or evil. The SLE v4.0 states the foundational theorem without qualification (Th 10): only virtue is genuinely good, only vice is genuinely evil. Career, reputation, approval, institutional standing — all of these are indifferents. They may be preferred indifferents, appropriate objects of rational aim, worth pursuing with reservation. They are not genuine goods whose loss constitutes genuine harm to the agent.


III. The Misidentification of the Self

Behind the false dogmata lies a prior error: the agent has misidentified what he is. He believes he is, in some operative sense, his role. His career is his life. His institutional standing is his self. His performance record is who he is. This is the misidentification that makes the false value beliefs feel self-evident rather than false. Of course role-failure is bad — it threatens something I am.

The corpus corrects this misidentification at the foundation. The Correct Stoic Attitude — A Manual (Kelly) opens with the identity claim: before any practice is possible, the agent must correctly locate himself. That location is the rational faculty — the prohairesis. SLE v4.0 Prop 4: a person’s true identity is constituted by his rational faculty alone. Prop 5: everything other than the rational faculty is external to the self, including the body. The role is certainly external. It is a set of social relationships and institutional expectations that the agent occupies. It is not the agent.

This is not a comforting reframe. It is a precise ontological claim with direct practical consequences. The agent who has genuinely corrected the misidentification does not experience role-pressure as pressure on himself. The inbox is not arriving at him — it is arriving at his role, which is external. The performance review does not evaluate him — it evaluates his role-performance, which is external. The institutional demand does not obligate his prohairesis — it presents an impression to which he may assent or not.

The practical consequence is not indifference to the role or negligence in its performance. The role may carry genuine kathēkon — appropriate duties that a rational agent in that position has reason to fulfill on behalf of those his role serves. Those duties are real and deserve rational pursuit as preferred indifferents. What they do not deserve is the false value the distressed agent assigns them. The agent can pursue his role-duties thoroughly, intelligently, and with full commitment while knowing that the outcomes are outside his purview and carry no genuine value for his prohairesis.


IV. The Distinction That Organizes the Response

The corpus’s account of organizational self-governance turns on a single distinction: the distinction between the role and the prohairesis. This distinction does the work that the person-in-role concept attempts in organizational theory, but it does it correctly.

Person-in-role theory identifies a boundary between self and role that the agent must manage. The self brings psychological material to the role; the role brings institutional demands to the self; the boundary between them is where self-management occurs. This is a useful observational framework, but its philosophical architecture is wrong. It treats the self as the psychological material the person brings — his emotions, anxieties, propensities, unconscious dynamics. It then asks how this material can be managed so that the person performs his role more effectively. The self is defined by its psychological contents, and those contents are understood as partly determined by the person’s history, social position, institutional embeddedness, and unconscious processes.

The corpus’s distinction is different in kind. The prohairesis is not the psychological material the agent brings. It is the rational faculty that gives or withholds assent to impressions. It is not constituted by its history, its anxieties, or its institutional formation. It is constituted by its governing judgments — its dogmata. And those dogmata are within the agent’s genuine control in the libertarian sense: he can refuse to assent to false ones. The role is the entire domain of organizational life in which the agent operates. The prohairesis is the only domain that is genuinely his.

This distinction does not produce an agent who is detached from his role or disengaged from his work. It produces an agent who is fully engaged with his role’s appropriate demands while maintaining correct judgment about what those demands are worth. The distinction between full engagement and correct valuation is one the corpus insists on. Epictetus performs his role as a teacher with complete commitment. Marcus Aurelius performs his role as emperor with complete commitment. Neither treats the outcomes as genuine goods whose frustration constitutes genuine harm. Full engagement and correct valuation are not in tension. The distressed organizational agent believes they are, because he has conflated role-success with his genuine good.


V. What the Five-Step Method Does for the Organizational Agent

The Five-Step Method — Reception, Recognition, Pause, Examination, Decision — is the operational instrument through which the corpus’s account of organizational self-governance is applied. Each step does specific work that no attentional training or self-governance technique reaches.

Reception is the moment at which an impression arrives. The email lands. The instruction is issued. The performance review is delivered. The demand is made. At Reception the impression arrives with its evaluative content already attached: this is urgent, this matters, this is a threat. The agent’s first task is simply to notice that an impression has arrived — not to respond to it, not to assess it, but to receive it as an impression rather than as reality.

Recognition identifies what the impression is claiming. The claim is typically a value claim: this deadline is genuinely important; this institutional demand genuinely obligates; this failure would be genuinely harmful. Recognition names the value claim explicitly and in propositional form. The email is not merely demanding — it is carrying the implicit proposition that non-response constitutes a genuine failure whose consequences are genuinely bad. Naming that proposition is the precondition for examining it.

Pause is the exercise of C2 — the libertarian free will to interrupt automatic assent. The organizational agent operating without this step runs on dogmata he has never examined. Every impression that arrives with urgency attached receives automatic assent to that urgency, because the governing dogma that institutional demands carry genuine value has been in place so long it operates invisibly. The Pause is the moment at which that automation stops. It is not a breathing exercise or a mindfulness technique. It is the exercise of the rational faculty’s genuine power to withhold assent before it is given.

Examination applies the foundational theorem to the impression’s value claim. The question is not “is this impression accurate about the facts?” It is “does this impression’s value claim correspond to moral reality?” The foundational theorem is clear: only virtue is genuinely good, only vice is genuinely evil. Career advancement, institutional approval, role-performance, deadline compliance — none of these is virtue. None is a genuine good. The impression claiming they are is false. Examination identifies the false claim with reference to the foundational theorem and refuses it.

Decision determines what the agent does, now that the false value claim has been refused. The decision is not to ignore the email or refuse the institutional demand. It is to identify what a rational agent in this role has reason to do as a preferred indifferent, pursued with reservation. The appropriate kathēkon may well involve responding to the email, meeting the deadline, or complying with the instruction. But it is now pursued as an appropriate object of rational aim rather than as a genuine good whose non-achievement constitutes genuine harm. The action is the same; the assent governing it is entirely different.


VI. The Training Structure

Sterling’s most important corrective to therapeutic applications of Stoicism is the immunization point: the framework functions as training before disturbance, not as cure after it. Stoicism Is Not Therapy But Training states it precisely: “The Stoic medicine has to be administered before the shock. Stoicism functions as an immunization, not as a cure.”

For the organizational agent this has a direct implication. The manager in the grip of email tyranny, who has already assented to the institutional demands as genuinely important and is already suffering under that assent, cannot directly extirpate the distress by running the Five-Step Method in the moment. Seddon (§40) states that one cannot directly extirpate a passion already in progress, any more than one can prevent sugar from tasting sweet once the cake is already in the mouth. The work of correction is prospective: guard the assent before the impression arrives; formulate correct propositions before the deadline pressure begins; build the character that sees institutional demands as preferred indifferents before the institution applies its weight.

This means the corpus’s organizational application is not a crisis management tool. It is a character formation program. The agent who has genuinely corrected the false dogma that career advancement is a genuine good does not need to work hard to maintain equanimity under a threatening performance review. He simply does not see the review the way a person operating under the false dogma sees it. The correction is perceptual before it is behavioral. A genuinely corrected agent and an agent who has trained attentiveness without doctrinal correction may look similar under normal conditions; under real institutional pressure, they diverge immediately.

The training structure therefore requires that the agent work with the corpus’s doctrines before he needs them. The six commitments must be held as genuine philosophical convictions — not adopted provisionally as useful framings — because the framework’s psychological benefits are fully parasitic on the philosophical doctrine. The agent who treats moral realism as a useful fiction, who treats libertarian free will as a motivating metaphor, who treats ethical intuitionism as an intuition pump, has not accepted the doctrine and will not receive the benefit. The benefit flows from believing the doctrine is true, because the doctrine being true is what makes the false value judgment actually false rather than merely inconvenient.


VII. What This Is Not

Several common confusions about Stoic organizational applications are worth naming directly.

This is not a case for emotional suppression. The corpus does not prescribe that the agent suppress or conceal his emotional responses. It holds that the false value beliefs driving pathological emotions should be corrected, and that once corrected, the pathological emotions have no cause and therefore do not arise. An agent whose dogmata are correct will experience eupatheia — appropriate positive feelings consonant with virtue — not emotional flatness.

This is not a case for organizational passivity. The corpus does not prescribe that the agent accept institutional demands as expressions of a rational cosmic order to which he must conform. It holds that the agent should pursue his role’s appropriate kathēkon fully and rationally, while maintaining correct valuation of the outcomes. Full engagement with the role’s genuine demands is entirely compatible with knowing that the outcomes are indifferents.

This is not a case for ignoring institutional injustice. The agent whose manager issues an unethical instruction faces a real moral situation, not merely a management challenge. The corpus does not counsel equanimity in the face of vice. It holds that the agent’s role-duty, examined through the Five-Step Method, will determine the correct response — which may well involve refusal, resistance, or departure from the role. The reserve clause does not license compliance with vice.

This is not a technique that works without the doctrine. This point cannot be overstated. The Five-Step Method applied without genuine conviction in the six commitments is a relaxation exercise. Reception without C1’s substance dualism is attention to stimuli. Pause without C2’s libertarian free will is a behavioral pause, not a genuine exercise of rational agency. Examination without C3’s ethical intuitionism has no standard against which to test the impression’s value claim. Decision without C4’s foundationalism has no stable structure of derived duties to consult. The method requires the commitments. The commitments are not decorative.


VIII. The Replacement

Case and Gosling correctly identified the problem: wisdom has been lost in knowledge, and knowledge in information. The organizational agent is suffering under a weight of demands whose genuine significance he has never examined. They are right that pre-modern philosophical traditions carry resources the post-Enlightenment managerial tradition lacks. They are right that Stoicism offers something the contemporary organizational discourse does not.

What they offered as the remedy was a Stoicism grounded in ancient cosmology, Aristotelian intellectual virtue, and the Hadotian account of philosophy as spiritual exercise. Those foundations are not available. The cosmological Stoicism is philosophically indefensible. The Aristotelian framework, classified in the corpus as the unstable half-system, cannot bear the weight required of it. And spiritual exercises extracted from their doctrinal content do not deliver Stoic benefits.

The replacement is a Stoicism grounded in six defensible philosophical commitments that do not require the ancient physics and that carry the full normative weight the ancient system required from its cosmology. The agent who takes up this framework does not need to believe in the rational fire permeating the cosmos, or in phronēsis as collective deliberation about the polis. He needs to hold that his rational faculty is ontologically distinct from and prior to external conditions; that his assent is genuinely his own; that moral facts are real and directly accessible; that those facts have a stable foundational structure; that his value claims are either true or false; and that virtue is the only genuine good.

Given those six commitments, the rest follows with precision. The inbox is an indifferent. The performance review is an indifferent. The career is an indifferent. The role is external. The prohairesis is the only thing that is genuinely his. And the prohairesis in correct condition — assenting only to what is true, pursuing appropriate objects of aim with reservation, knowing what it is — is the only genuine good available to the organizational agent, or to any agent, in any situation.


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

Classical Ideological Audit — Epicureanism

 

Classical Ideological Audit — Epicureanism

Instrument: Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v3.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.

Corpus in use: Core Stoicism, SLE v4.0, Nine Excerpts, Two and One-Half Ethical Systems, Stoicism and Self-Interest: What Is Our Interest?, Stoicism, Moral Facts, and Ethical Intuitionism, Stoicism, Foundationalism and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge, Stoicism, Correspondence Theory of Truth and Objective Moral Facts, Stoicism, Moral Realism and the Necessity of Objective Moral Facts, The Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism, The Six Commitments as Necessary Conditions for Epictetus’s Ethical Psychology — A Load-Bearing Demonstration, A Brief Reply Re: Dualism, Free Will and Causation, Substance Dualism in Sterling’s Stoicism.


CIA v3.0 — Verdict Architecture

Five commitment-level findings apply in this instrument:

Convergent — presuppositions align with the commitment in both structure and content. No residual divergence qualifies the finding.

Partial Convergence — presuppositions align with the commitment in structure or in one domain but not fully in content or across all domains. A residual divergence prevents Convergent. The absence of direct contradiction prevents Divergent.

Divergent — presuppositions directly contradict the commitment. The contradiction is load-bearing: the ideology cannot abandon it without ceasing to argue as it does.

Structural Imitation — the ideology’s presuppositions replicate the formal architecture of the commitment (foundationalism, correspondence structure, etc.) while substituting content that is incompatible with what the commitment requires. Structural Imitation is not Partial Convergence: it records that the resemblance is architectural only, and that the content at the point of resemblance actively conflicts with the corpus.

Orthogonal — the commitment’s domain is genuinely absent from the ideology’s presuppositions. Orthogonal requires a positive showing. It may not be used to avoid a Divergent finding the analysis requires.

The dissolution finding is governed by the C1 and C2 findings. Full Dissolution when both are Divergent. Partial Dissolution when one is Divergent and the other Partial Convergence. No Dissolution when neither is Divergent.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Confirmation:

The full corpus list is in view above. The instrument is not proceeding from memory; specific documents will be cited by name when referenced in the analysis.

The ideology under examination is Epicureanism as a philosophical system. Its presuppositions will be stated in propositional form in Step 1 before any commitment-level finding is issued.

No prior conclusion about the findings is operative. The findings are produced by the analysis.

Self-Audit — Step 0:

  • Full corpus list confirmed in view. ✓
  • Ideology not yet analyzed; propositional statement deferred to Step 1. ✓
  • No prior conclusion stated. ✓

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 1.


Step 1 — Ideology Statement and Variant Identification

Governing question: What is Epicureanism, in propositional form, and what are its significant internal variants?

Core Presuppositions

The following presuppositions are shared across all variants of Epicureanism. An advocate who abandons any of these ceases to hold Epicureanism as a system.

P1 — Materialism. The soul, including the rational faculty, is composed of fine-grained atoms. There is no ontologically distinct immaterial substance. All mental events — perception, desire, judgment, pleasure — are physical events produced by atomic interactions. Mind is not categorically distinct from body; it is a particularly fine-grained part of it.

P2 — Hedonism. Pleasure is the highest good and the criterion of the good life. Specifically, the Epicurean telos is ataraxia (tranquility of mind) and aponia (absence of bodily pain). The good is not virtue constitutively but the hedonic state pleasure constitutes. Virtue is instrumentally valuable insofar as it reliably produces ataraxia; it has no independent value.

P3 — Taxonomy of Desires. Desires differ in kind. Natural and necessary desires (food, drink, shelter, peace of mind) track genuine needs and are reliably satisfiable at low cost. Natural and unnecessary desires (tasty food, physical pleasure beyond need, companionship beyond necessity) are real but can be moderated. Empty desires (wealth, fame, honor, political power) rest on false beliefs about what constitutes the good and should be extirpated. The task of Epicurean practice is to reduce desire to its natural-necessary core and moderate the rest.

P4 — Empiricist Epistemology. The criteria of truth are sensation (aisthēsis), preconception (prolēpsis), and feeling (pathē). All knowledge derives ultimately from sensory experience. Sensations are always veridical as sensations: they accurately register the atomic impacts that produce them. Error enters at the level of inference and judgment, not at the level of sensation itself. There is no faculty of rational intuition that apprehends truths independently of sensory grounding.

P5 — The Swerve (Clinamen). Atomic motion is not deterministically fixed. Atoms deviate spontaneously and unpredictably from their trajectories. This swerve breaks deterministic fate and provides the causal basis for human agency. The will’s freedom consists in the indeterminacy introduced by the swerve, not in the rational faculty’s genuine origination of assent.

Major Variants

Garden Epicureanism — Epicurus himself; Hermarchus, Metrodorus as principal associates. Emphasizes withdrawal from public life, friendship within a small community, and strict reduction of desire to the natural-necessary core. The political domain is a source of anxiety rather than obligation. Ataraxia is achieved primarily through philosophical understanding and moderate communal pleasure.

Lucretian Epicureanism — Lucretius’s De Rerum Natura extends the materialist cosmology, gives the clinamen its most explicit formulation, and develops the symmetry argument against fear of death: as pre-natal non-existence caused no distress, post-mortem non-existence should cause none. Materialism is made more prominent and philosophically elaborated than in Garden Epicureanism.

Modern Epicureanism — contemporary advocates who recover the desire-taxonomy and ataraxia framework while often quietly abandoning strict materialism. Some modern variants attempt to graft Epicurean practical ethics onto a less committed metaphysical base. These variants are philosophically unstable: where they depart from P1, they depart from Epicureanism as a system.

Self-Audit — Step 1:

  • Presuppositions stated in propositional form, not as slogans or surface claims. ✓
  • Core presuppositions identified as those shared across all variants, not selected from the most philosophically favorable variant. ✓
  • Three variants identified for Stage Two differential. ✓
  • No prior conclusion about findings stated. ✓

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 2.


Step 2 — Stage One: Core Presupposition Audit

Governing question: What does each core presupposition entail for each of the six commitments?

The structural/content distinction governs findings throughout this step. When a presupposition replicates the formal architecture of a commitment (having foundational criteria, having a correspondence structure) while substituting content incompatible with what the commitment requires, the finding is Structural Imitation rather than Partial Convergence.


C1 — Substance Dualism

Governing corpus passage (The Six Commitments as Necessary Conditions for Epictetus’s Ethical Psychology, Section III): “The dichotomy of control is the foundational claim from which everything in Epictetus’s practical framework proceeds. It draws a line between the self and everything external to the self. For that line to be a real ontological boundary — and not merely a useful preference or a therapeutic distinction — the rational faculty must be genuinely distinct from the body and from all external conditions.”

Bearing of P1: P1 directly and load-bearingly contradicts C1. For Epicurus, the soul is composed of fine-grained atoms — a specific type of matter, organized in a specific way, but material throughout. The rational faculty has no ontological standing apart from the physical. It is not categorically distinct from the body; it is a part of it. The boundary Epictetus draws between the rational faculty and all external conditions requires exactly what P1 denies: a non-material substance that can stand apart from the physical causal order as a genuine locus of agency.

The specific Epicurean challenge raised at the inception of this audit — that desires for food, drink, and shelter are “built in” and not up to us — is a direct consequence of P1 operating at the practical level. If the soul is material, its dispositions (hunger, thirst, the need for shelter) are physical states caused by physical conditions. The agent has no rational faculty categorically distinct from those states that could take a governing stance toward them. On a materialist account, the Epicurean is correct that such desires are not up to us: they are physically constituted responses, and there is no immaterial locus from which to govern them. But this is precisely the framework the corpus denies. The challenge has force only within the Epicurean ontology. It does not challenge C1; it presupposes C1’s falsity.

The load-bearing test: could Epicureanism abandon P1 without ceasing to argue as it does? No. P1 is the metaphysical foundation of the desire taxonomy (P3), the epistemology (P4), and the clinamen account (P5). Remove it and the system has no remaining architecture.

Finding: Divergent. Load-bearing. P1 directly contradicts C1 at the ontological level. The dichotomy of control has no basis within the Epicurean framework because the rational faculty is not a distinct substance capable of standing apart from material conditions.


C2 — Libertarian Free Will

Governing corpus passage (Free Will and Causation, Sterling): the genuine act of assent as origination, not determined output; libertarian free will as the claim that the rational faculty is the genuine first cause of its own assents, not the downstream product of prior physical causes.

Governing corpus passage (One Act of Correct Engagement, Dave Kelly): “Libertarian free will holds that the Pause is genuinely what it presents itself as: a moment at which the agent, as the originating cause of his next act, holds the process open. The outcome has not yet been fixed. Both paths — assent and withholding — remain genuinely available until the will moves. This is the Origination Model of Choice.”

Bearing of P5: The clinamen was introduced by Epicurus precisely to create space for agency within a materialist framework. If all atomic motion were deterministically fixed, human choices would be determined in advance, and the Epicurean counsel to moderate desire would be pointless. The swerve was designed to break this problem.

But the swerve provides indeterminacy, not origination. What P5 establishes is that atomic motion at the micro-level is not fully determined by prior causes. It does not establish that the rational faculty is the originating cause of its own assents. The swerve happens at the atomic level independently of rational deliberation; it is not produced by an act of the rational faculty and is not directed by it. The result is that Epicurean “freedom” is freedom from deterministic fate, not freedom through genuine origination of assent.

Sterling’s C2 requires that the agent be the genuine first cause of his own assents — that the rational faculty, as a distinct substance, originates the act of assent rather than receiving it as the output of a prior causal process. The clinamen produces no such origination. The agent’s choices on the Epicurean account are neither deterministically caused nor freely originated: they are the result of indeterminate physical processes, with the agent not as originator but as site.

The structural/content distinction applies here precisely: the swerve is structurally positioned to do what C2 requires (breaking causal closure at the point of choice) but its content is random physical indeterminacy rather than rational origination. This is noted at the Structural/Content Distinction Layer in Step 4.

Finding: Divergent. Load-bearing. The clinamen does not supply libertarian free will in the sense C2 requires. Genuine origination of assent through a non-material rational faculty is absent from the Epicurean framework. Indeterminism is not agency.


C3 — Ethical Intuitionism

Governing corpus passage (Stoicism, Moral Facts, and Ethical Intuitionism, Sterling): moral truths are directly apprehended by the rational faculty without inference from non-moral premises. The rational faculty has the capacity to recognize moral facts — that virtue is the only genuine good, that vice is the only genuine evil — independently of sensory experience or hedonic calculation.

Bearing of P4: Epicurus explicitly grounds ethical knowledge in feeling. The criteria of truth (sensation, preconception, feeling) are all experiential. Pleasure is known as the good because it is felt as pleasant. The agent does not apprehend via rational intuition that pleasure is the good; he discovers it through the experience of pleasure and pain as they arise in his life. P4 forecloses rational intuition as an independent epistemic route to moral truth: sensation is foundational, and nothing that cannot be traced back to sensory grounding qualifies as knowledge.

This directly contradicts C3. Ethical intuitionism requires that some moral truths be directly apprehensible by the rational faculty independently of experience. On the Epicurean account, moral knowledge is constitutively experiential. The agent who says “pleasure is the good” is reporting a discovery made through feeling, not an insight apprehended through rational cognition. The two epistemic routes are not merely different paths to the same moral truth; they are constitutive of different accounts of what moral truth is.

Finding: Divergent. P4 forecloses rational moral intuition as a route to ethical knowledge. Epicurean ethics is grounded in the experiential criteria of pleasure and pain. The corpus requires that foundational moral truths be apprehensible independently of such experience.


C4 — Foundationalism

Governing corpus passage (Stoicism, Foundationalism and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge, Sterling): knowledge claims form an ordered structure with foundational claims at the base that are not derived from other knowledge claims. These foundations are outputs of rational apprehension of moral first principles, not sensory or hedonic states.

Bearing of P4: Epicurus holds a foundationalist epistemology. His three criteria — sensation, preconception, and feeling — are foundational: they are the stopping points for justification. No further grounding is required for them; they ground everything else. Claims about the external world are justified by tracing them back to sensory experience. Claims about the good are justified by tracing them back to felt pleasure and pain. This is structurally foundationalist.

However, the content of Epicurean foundations is sensory and hedonic. What is foundational in the Epicurean system — the felt impression of pleasure — is precisely what the corpus identifies as an external to be governed, not as a cognitive foundation to be trusted. C4 requires that the foundations of ethical knowledge be rational moral intuitions: deliverances of a faculty that apprehends first principles, not deliverances of sensation or felt experience. Epicurus has foundationalist architecture with empiricist-hedonic content at the base.

Finding: Structural Imitation. Epicureanism replicates the formal architecture of foundationalism — stopping-point criteria that justify everything else without themselves requiring further justification — while filling those foundations with sensory and hedonic content that is incompatible with what C4 requires. The structure is present; the content of the structure diverges at every load-bearing point.


C5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth

Governing corpus passage (Stoicism, Correspondence Theory of Truth and Objective Moral Facts, Sterling): truth consists in alignment between judgment and mind-independent reality. For moral claims, this requires that there be objective moral facts to which judgments can correspond or fail to correspond. Correspondence theory for moral truth requires both a mind-independent moral reality and a faculty capable of genuine representation of that reality.

Bearing of P4: Epicurus holds that sensations are always veridical: they accurately register the atomic impacts that produce them. Sensation-level claims correspond to atomic reality. This is structurally a correspondence account for sensory truth: the criterion of sensory correctness is alignment between sensation-content and the atomic state that produced it.

But for moral claims — the domain where C5 bears most heavily on the corpus — Epicurus grounds truth in hedonic feeling, not in correspondence to a mind-independent moral reality. Whether X is good is determined by whether X produces pleasure. There is no mind-independent moral fact that “pleasure is the good” corresponds to; the good is constituted by the agent’s hedonic states. An Epicurean cannot say that the judgment “pleasure is the good” is true because it corresponds to an objective moral fact; he can only say that it is confirmed by universal hedonic experience. That is a form of empirical generalization, not correspondence to objective moral reality.

The structural/content distinction applies here as it does in C4: Epicureanism has correspondence architecture for sensory claims while having no correspondence account at all for the domain where C5 is load-bearing.

Finding: Structural Imitation. Correspondence structure is present for sensory claims; the moral domain where C5 is required is occupied instead by hedonic criterion, which is a subjective and experiential standard, not a correspondence relation to objective moral fact.


C6 — Moral Realism

Governing corpus passage (Stoicism and Self-Interest: What Is Our Interest?, Sterling): “Frankly, I do not think the Epicurean view recognizes morality at all. Someone who says ‘keep your promises, only because the ability to co-operate with others will give you greater non-moral benefits in the long run’ does not really respect promises, any more than the thief who never steals when there is a police officer watching him respects other people’s property. … So the prudent person can be a total amoralist without departing from anything to be found in Epicurus.”

Bearing of P2: C6 holds that there are objective moral facts independent of any agent’s desires, preferences, or feelings — facts that hold regardless of whether any agent recognizes them or benefits from acting on them. The corpus specifies: virtue is the only genuine good, and this is a moral fact, not a generalization from hedonic experience.

P2 grounds the good in pleasure. This is a hedonic fact about the constitution of sentient organisms, not an objective moral fact about the nature of value. On the Epicurean account, “pleasure is the good” is confirmed by universal experience, but it is not an objective moral fact independent of experiential states. Different organisms with different hedonic constitutions would have different goods. More fundamentally: if virtue is good only instrumentally — because it reliably produces ataraxia — then in circumstances where vice produces equal or greater ataraxia (Sterling’s Ring of Gyges test), virtue loses its claim. There is no moral fact that grounds the remaining obligation. The Epicurean framework cannot account for this residue and the corpus states it explicitly: the prudent amoralist is consistent with everything Epicurus holds.

Finding: Divergent. P2 grounds the good in hedonic experience. This is directly incompatible with C6’s requirement that moral facts be objective and mind-independent. Sterling’s direct argument from Stoicism and Self-Interest identifies the practical consequence: Epicureanism cannot generate genuinely binding moral obligations, only prudential counsel that collapses under ring-of-Gyges conditions.

Self-Audit — Step 2:

  • All five core presuppositions audited; none selectively omitted. ✓
  • Orthogonal not used to avoid a Divergent finding; no Orthogonal findings issued. ✓
  • Findings distributed by analysis, not by balance. Four Divergent, two Structural Imitation. ✓
  • No findings issued outside corpus domain. ✓
  • The same standards applied throughout; political sympathies not operative. ✓

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 3.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

Governing criterion: The dissolution finding is governed by the C1 and C2 findings.

C1 finding: Divergent.
C2 finding: Divergent.

Finding: Full Dissolution.

Both load-bearing commitments are Divergent. Epicureanism structurally requires those who adopt it to understand themselves as material systems whose operations — including what presents itself as rational deliberation — are explicable in terms of atomic interactions modulated by indeterminate swerve. There is no immaterial rational faculty that stands apart from the physical order as a genuine originator of assent. The self that Epictetus identifies as prohairesis — the governing center that can take a stance on its own impressions, refuse assent to false value judgments, and originate correct judgment — has no ontological foothold within the Epicurean framework.

The Full Dissolution finding is not a political verdict. It is a philosophical finding about what the framework requires of those who adopt it as a governing self-description. The finding does not address whether Epicurean practical counsel — simplify desires, seek tranquility, cultivate friends — is correct, useful, or historically vindicated. It addresses what the agent is implicitly committing to about himself when he takes up the Epicurean account. That implicit commitment is to a self-description the corpus identifies as the structural root of pathos: the agent as a material system without genuine originating agency.

Self-Audit — Step 3:

  • Dissolution finding follows mechanically from C1 and C2 findings; no adjustment made. ✓
  • Dissolution finding stated as a philosophical finding, not as a political verdict. ✓
  • Grounds stated explicitly. ✓

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 4.


Step 4 — Structural/Content Distinction Layer

Governing question: Where does the ideology replicate the formal architecture of a commitment while substituting incompatible content, and what is the significance of this pattern?

Two Structural Imitation findings were issued. Each requires explicit characterization of what is being imitated and what the content substitution consists in.

C4 — Foundationalism: Structural Imitation

Epicurus’s three criteria are genuine stopping-points: sensation, preconception, and feeling function as foundations in the technical foundationalist sense — claims are justified by tracing back to them; they do not require further justification. The structure is formally equivalent to foundationalism as C4 requires it.

But C4 requires that the foundations of ethical knowledge be rational moral intuitions — outputs of a faculty that directly apprehends first principles of value. Epicurus’s foundations are sensory impacts and hedonic states. These are not deliverances of rational moral apprehension; they are physical events. The substitution is not partial — it is complete replacement: everywhere C4 requires rational intuition, Epicurus has sensation and feeling. The foundationalist architecture is intact; the content at every foundational node is incompatible.

This matters practically because it makes the Epicurean system appear epistemically rigorous — it has criteria, it has stopping-points, it does not appeal to vague intuition — while actually operating on a basis that forecloses the kind of knowledge C4 requires.

C5 — Correspondence Theory: Structural Imitation

Epicurus holds that sensations correspond to atomic reality. The structure is explicitly correspondentist for the sensory domain: a sensation is veridical when it accurately registers the atomic impacts that produced it. Error enters at the level of inference, not at the level of sensation itself. This is the correspondence structure C5 requires.

But C5 is required by the corpus specifically for the moral domain: the judgment “virtue is the only genuine good” is true because it corresponds to an objective moral fact about value, independent of any agent’s desires. Epicurus has no correspondence account in this domain. The moral criterion is hedonic — “pleasure is the good” is confirmed by felt experience, not by correspondence to a mind-independent moral reality. The correspondence architecture applies precisely where it is philosophically uncontroversial (sensory claims) and is absent precisely where C5 requires it (moral claims).

The clinamen and C2 also deserve note here. The swerve is structurally positioned to do what C2 requires: it creates a gap in the causal closure of physical determination at the point of choice. But its content is random physical indeterminacy rather than rational origination. It imitates the formal role of libertarian free will (breaking determinism) while filling that role with chance rather than agency. This C2 structural-imitation pattern was registered in Step 2 under the Divergent finding rather than as a separate Structural Imitation verdict, because the divergence at the level of content is total: indeterminism and origination are not merely different versions of the same thing.

Self-Audit — Step 4:

  • Both Structural Imitation findings characterized explicitly: what is structurally imitated and what content is substituted. ✓
  • Structural Imitation not used to soften Divergent findings that the analysis requires; C1, C2, C3, C6 remain Divergent. ✓
  • Clinamen-C2 pattern noted without converting the Divergent finding. ✓

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 5.


Step 5 — Stage Two: Variant Differential Analysis

Governing question: Do the presuppositions that distinguish major variants shift any finding from Stage One?

Garden Epicureanism vs. Lucretian Epicureanism

Lucretian Epicureanism makes P1 more explicit and philosophically elaborated than Garden Epicureanism. Epicurus himself was willing to set materialism somewhat in the background of his practical counsel. Lucretius foregrounds the atomic constitution of the soul as the basis for the most important practical argument: the symmetry argument against fear of death. The intensification of P1 in Lucretian Epicureanism does not shift any finding — C1 is already Divergent at maximum on the basis of P1 shared across all variants. It confirms the finding rather than modifying it.

The Lucretian swerve receives its most explicit formulation in De Rerum Natura. Again: this does not shift the C2 finding. The swerve was already part of the shared presuppositions, and the Lucretian elaboration makes the content-substitution problem (indeterminism vs. origination) more visible, not less severe.

Differential finding: No shift in any commitment-level finding. Lucretian elaboration intensifies the C1 Divergent finding.

Modern Epicureanism

Some modern Epicurean advocates quietly abandon P1. They retain the desire taxonomy (P3), the practical emphasis on tranquility, and the Epicurean framing of the good life while dropping strict materialism. Where this occurs, C1 and C2 findings may be affected: without P1, the Divergent finding on C1 loses its direct load-bearing grounding, and C2 becomes an open question rather than a settled Divergent.

However, this move has a price: a modern Epicureanism that abandons strict materialism has departed from Epicureanism as a system. P1 is the foundation of P3, P4, and P5. Without P1, the desire taxonomy floats free of its ontological basis, the clinamen is unmotivated, and the empiricist epistemology becomes an unmotivated preference. The modification that produces a philosophically more favorable audit finding produces a framework that is no longer coherently Epicurean.

Differential finding: Where Modern Epicureanism abandons P1, C1 finding moves from Divergent toward Partial Convergence, contingent on what positive account of the soul it substitutes. C2 becomes indeterminate. But the variant is not stable: the remaining commitments of Epicureanism have no foundation without P1. The philosophical improvement is purchased by abandoning the system’s structural coherence.

The Specific Argument Under Examination

The Epicurean challenge to the dichotomy of control presented at the inception of this run — that natural and necessary desires are not up to us, and that certain externals (food, drink, shelter) are in practice attainable and therefore functionally “up to us” — is shared across all variants. It is an application of P1 (material drives are physically constituted and not the product of immaterial rational governance) combined with P3 (the desire taxonomy that distinguishes natural-necessary from empty desires) and an empirical observation about the accessibility of basic goods in many social conditions.

The challenge has two prongs. The first prong (natural-necessary desires are not up to us) has force within the Epicurean framework because P1 renders desires as physical states not governed by an immaterial faculty. This prong does not challenge the Stoic dichotomy; it presupposes a materialist ontology that the dichotomy denies. The second prong (food, drink, shelter are often accessible and therefore “up to us”) redefines “up to us” as practical accessibility rather than as ontological distinctness of the rational faculty from external conditions. Epictetus’s dichotomy is an ontological claim about the nature of the self, not an empirical claim about what agents can reliably obtain. The Epicurean reframing changes the subject rather than answering the argument.

Differential finding: This argument is a core-presupposition application, not a variant-specific claim. It does not shift any Stage One finding. Its philosophical failure maps to C1 Divergent.

Self-Audit — Step 5:

  • Variants selected by philosophical significance, not political salience. ✓
  • Core presuppositions not reassigned to variant status to soften findings. ✓
  • Specific challenge analyzed and mapped to Stage One finding. ✓
  • Differential findings do not produce separate overall verdicts per variant. ✓

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 6.


Step 6 — Summary Finding

Part A — Commitment Pattern

Commitment               Finding
——————————————————————————————
C1  Substance Dualism        Divergent
C2  Libertarian Free Will     Divergent
C3  Ethical Intuitionism      Divergent
C4  Foundationalism           Structural Imitation
C5  Correspondence Theory     Structural Imitation
C6  Moral Realism             Divergent
——————————————————————————————
Dissolution                   Full Dissolution

Pattern: Four Divergent, two Structural Imitation. No Convergent, no Partial Convergence, no Orthogonal.

Deepest divergence: C1. The materialist account of the soul is the ontological foundation from which all other findings flow. Without C1’s contradiction of substance dualism, the C2 Divergent finding (the soul has no immaterial faculty to originate assent) would need independent grounding; C3 Divergent (rational moral intuition foreclosed by empiricist epistemology) would be less structural; and C6 Divergent (moral realism undermined by hedonism) would lose the argument that the soul could track moral facts independently of hedonic states. C1 is the load-bearing point; everything else depends on it.

Strongest point of convergence: None. The two Structural Imitation findings (C4, C5) record formal resemblance with content incompatibility throughout. They are not points of genuine philosophical affinity.


Part B — Dissolution Finding

Full Dissolution. C1 and C2 both Divergent.

The Epicurean framework structurally requires those who adopt it to understand themselves as material systems driven by hedonic states. The “self” within this framework is a particular organization of fine-grained atoms whose apparent rational deliberation is the aggregate effect of atomic interactions modulated at the margin by the indeterminate swerve. There is no immaterial rational faculty — no prohairesis in the corpus sense — that can take a genuine governing stance on the impressions it receives. The dichotomy between the self and external conditions has no ontological basis: the self is not categorically distinct from the physical world but a particularly organized part of it.

The variant differential does not shift the dissolution finding within any coherent version of Epicureanism. Modern variants that abandon P1 move toward No Dissolution, but in doing so abandon Epicureanism as a system.


Part C — Agent-Level Implication

An agent who adopts Epicureanism as his governing philosophical framework is implicitly committing to the following self-description: he is a material system whose drives (hunger, thirst, the craving for tranquility) are physical states causally produced by his constitution and environment. His practical task — reducing desire to its natural-necessary core, moderating natural-unnecessary desire, extirpating empty desire — is a program of behavioral regulation, not a program of rational self-governance in the corpus sense. When the Epicurean says that natural-necessary desires are “not up to us,” he is accurately describing his own framework’s account of his condition.

The practical counsel that follows from this — simplify, moderate, seek friends, eat cheese — is not without merit as empirical advice about how to reduce hedonic disturbance. The question the corpus poses to an agent considering this path is not whether the advice is practically useful but whether the self-description it requires is accurate. If the rational faculty is a genuinely distinct substance with originating causal power, then the agent who adopts the Epicurean framework has accepted a false account of himself before he has begun. The practical program is built on a misidentification of the agent.

The Epicurean challenge to the dichotomy of control fails at this level: it does not argue that Epictetus is wrong about the nature of the rational faculty and therefore wrong about the dichotomy; it argues from an account of desire that presupposes the faculty is material and therefore not self-governing in the required sense. The challenge to Epictetus is not a refutation of his dichotomy but a restatement of the competing ontology. An agent who finds the Epicurean challenge compelling has been persuaded of P1, not persuaded that the Stoic dichotomy fails on its own terms. The appropriate response is to examine P1 — the materialist account of the soul — not to conclude that the dichotomy of control is misleading.

The final question — why display Stoic strength rather than live simply? — is not answered by the CIA. It is a question about motivation and the value of the Stoic commitment that the instrument’s findings do not address. The CIA establishes the philosophical incompatibility of the Epicurean framework with the six commitments. Whether an agent who recognizes that incompatibility should therefore choose the Stoic framework over the Epicurean way of life is a question that belongs to the agent’s own deliberation, governed by the Five-Step Method, not to the audit instrument.

Self-Audit — Step 6:

  • Summary follows from preceding steps; no new material introduced at the synthesis stage. ✓
  • Agent-level implication stated without conversion to a political verdict. ✓
  • The CIA’s domain (philosophical presuppositions and their commitment-level findings) not exceeded; the final motivational question noted as outside the instrument’s scope. ✓
  • Summary self-contained. ✓

Self-Audit Complete. CIA v3.0 run complete.


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