Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Two Frameworks, One Structure: The Correspondence Between Sterling’s Stoic Foundations and Glasser’s Choice Theory

 

Two Frameworks, One Structure: The Correspondence Between Sterling’s Stoic Foundations and Glasser’s Choice Theory

William Glasser arrived at his theoretical framework through forty years of clinical observation. Grant C. Sterling arrived at his reconstruction of classical Stoicism through philosophical analysis of Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius, and the ancient sources. The two men worked in different disciplines, drew on different traditions, and asked different questions. What they produced, examined carefully, is the same foundational structure stated at different levels of philosophical analysis.

Sterling’s framework rests on three foundational claims from which everything else derives. The first: certain things are in our control and certain things are not, and the distinction between them is the governing fact of practical life. The second: only virtue is genuinely good; everything else — health, wealth, relationships, achievement, pleasure — is an indifferent, appropriate to pursue but not to stake one’s identity or equanimity on. The third: right assent — the correct governance of one’s own judgments — guarantees eudaimonia; the flourishing life is not contingent on external conditions but on the quality of one’s own rational engagement.

Glasser’s framework rests on three governing claims that are less formally stated but no less philosophically precise. The first: the only person whose behavior I can control is my own. The second: all behavior is an attempt to satisfy one or more of five basic needs through internally held Quality World images. The third: all behavior has four simultaneously inseparable components — acting, thinking, feeling, and physiology — of which acting and thinking are directly chosen, while feeling and physiology follow from those choices.

The correspondence between the two sets of three is not analogical. It is structural. Each of Glasser’s governing claims occupies the same philosophical position as the corresponding Sterling foundation, addresses the same problem, and produces the same practical implication. The difference between them is one of depth rather than direction: the Stoic framework operates at a more fundamental level of the same structure Glasser identifies. What follows develops this correspondence precisely.


I. Foundation One and Glasser’s Central Axiom: The Dichotomy of Control

Sterling’s first foundation is the claim that certain things are in our control — specifically, our judgments, our assents, our impulses, our desires and aversions — and everything else is not. This is Epictetus’s opening statement in the Enchiridion and the governing claim from which the entire Stoic practical program derives. It is not a claim about what we can influence or affect; it is a metaphysical claim about the structure of agency. The things in our control are genuinely ours — they originate in us, they are the expression of what we are as rational agents. The things not in our control are external; they may go well or badly regardless of what we do, and our flourishing cannot depend on them.

Glasser’s central axiom is: the only person whose behavior I can control is my own. He states this with equivalent force and makes it the foundation of everything that follows. External control psychology — the set of beliefs and practices organized around the attempt to control other people’s behavior — is not merely ineffective; it is based on a false theory of how human behavior works. Other people’s behavior is not in our control in any meaningful sense. Our own behavior is. This is the claim from which the therapeutic procedure, the account of relationship failure, and the analysis of institutional dysfunction all derive.

The correspondence is exact. Both frameworks begin by drawing the same line between what is genuinely the agent’s own and what is not. Both hold that the failure to respect this line is the primary source of human suffering. Both hold that the recognition of the line — genuinely held, not merely intellectually assented to — is the beginning of practical wisdom.

The difference is in the precision of what is identified as genuinely the agent’s own. Glasser identifies behavior — specifically the acting and thinking components of Total Behavior. Sterling identifies assent — the moment between impression and response in which the agent governs his own judgment. The Stoic framework operates one level deeper: it locates the governing act not at the behavioral output level but at the cognitive event that generates the behavior. Both frameworks converge on the same practical instruction — attend to what is yours; release what is not — but the Stoic framework traces that instruction to a more fundamental level of the agent’s constitution.

For the person working within both frameworks simultaneously, Foundation One and Glasser’s axiom reinforce each other. The counseling conversation that consistently redirects to “what are you doing and what can you do differently?” is operationalizing Foundation One in clinical practice. The Stoic practitioner who has genuinely accepted the dichotomy of control finds the Glasser procedure immediately recognizable — not as something to be learned but as a specification of what the first foundation requires in the domain of practical action.


II. Foundation Two and the Quality World: Genuine Goods and Preferred Indifferents

Sterling’s second foundation is the most philosophically demanding of the three and the one most directly relevant to the counseling relationship. Only virtue is genuinely good. Everything else — love and belonging, achievement, freedom, pleasure, health, safety — is an indifferent. This does not mean these things do not matter or are not worth pursuing. It means they are preferred indifferents: appropriate objects of rational aim, rationally worth pursuing, but not genuine goods whose non-satisfaction constitutes a genuine evil or a genuine harm to what is most essentially the agent’s own.

The clinical implication of Foundation Two is precise: every instance of sustained suffering involves a false value judgment. The agent who is suffering has assigned genuine-good status to a preferred indifferent. He has staked his identity, his equanimity, or his sense of flourishing on the presence or absence of something that is not genuinely good. The suffering is real; the false value judgment is the cause of it, not the external condition that the judgment has falsely elevated.

Glasser’s Quality World occupies exactly the philosophical space that Foundation Two addresses. The Quality World is each person’s internal picture album of the specific people, things, activities, and beliefs that best satisfy his five basic needs. It is the concrete instantiation of what he most wants. The gap between the Quality World and the perceived real world is the mechanism through which suffering is generated: when what the person wants is not what his perceived world contains, his behavioral system generates behavior aimed at closing that gap, and the emotional component of that behavior — the feeling of deprivation, frustration, loss, or anxiety — is the suffering the clinical work addresses.

What Glasser’s framework does with the Quality World is ask: is what you are doing getting you what you want? This is the right first question. It is also not the final question. The final question — the question Foundation Two forces — is: is what you want correctly valued? Is the Quality World image you are pursuing held as a preferred indifferent, appropriate to aim at and appropriate to prefer, or is it held as a genuine good whose non-achievement is a genuine evil?

Glasser cannot ask this question because his framework takes the five basic needs as genetically encoded facts about human nature that are not subject to rational revision. The needs are given; the therapeutic work addresses how effectively the patient is pursuing them. Foundation Two does not dispute that the needs are real and that their pursuit is rational. It asks whether the patient is holding the specific Quality World images through which he pursues those needs as preferred indifferents or as genuine goods. This is a question about the patient’s relationship to his own wants — about the value structure within which the wanting is occurring — not a question about whether the wants are legitimate.

The two frameworks are therefore not in competition on this point; they are consecutive. The Glasser question comes first in the order of clinical work: identify what you want, assess whether your current behavior is getting it, plan different behavior if it is not. The Sterling question comes next, and its answer determines whether the clinical work, however effective, addresses the source of the suffering or merely its expression: are you holding what you want as a preferred indifferent, or as something your flourishing genuinely depends on?

A person who has learned through the WDEP procedure to pursue his Quality World images more effectively but who is still holding them as genuine goods will find that effective pursuit produces temporary relief but not genuine equanimity. He will always be one loss, one disappointment, one relationship failure away from renewed suffering, because his equanimity is hostage to the external conditions his Quality World images require. Foundation Two addresses this structural vulnerability directly: the reserve clause applied to the Quality World. He pursues what he wants with full rational effort and holds the outcome with reservation — aiming at the preferred indifferent if the conditions allow, not making his flourishing dependent on whether it arrives.


III. Foundation Three and Total Behavior: Right Assent and the Guarantee of Flourishing

Sterling’s third foundation is the most philosophically remarkable of the three: right assent guarantees eudaimonia. This is a strong claim. It does not say that right assent makes flourishing more likely, or that it produces the conditions for flourishing, or that it is a necessary component of flourishing. It says that right assent is sufficient for flourishing — that the agent who consistently governs his own judgments correctly has guaranteed his own eudaimonia regardless of what externals his life contains.

The guarantee rests on Foundation Two: if only virtue is genuinely good and only vice is genuinely evil, and if virtue is constituted by the correct governance of one’s own judgments, then the agent who governs his judgments correctly has secured the only thing that is genuinely good. No external condition can take it from him. No loss, no failure, no frustration of his preferred indifferents touches what is genuinely his. His flourishing is not contingent on the world going well; it is contingent only on his own rational engagement with the world as it actually is.

Glasser’s Total Behavior concept approaches Foundation Three from the clinical direction. The four components of every behavior — acting, thinking, feeling, physiology — are simultaneously inseparable. Acting and thinking are directly chosen; feeling and physiology follow from those choices. The agent cannot directly choose to feel better. He can choose to act and think differently, and the feeling follows. This is the clinical operationalization of the same claim Foundation Three makes philosophically: the agent’s inner state is the consequence of the quality of his own cognitive and behavioral engagement, not of external conditions.

The Glasser formulation and the Stoic formulation converge on the same practical instruction: do not wait for external conditions to change before your inner state changes. Change the acting and thinking — change the assent — and the inner state follows. Both frameworks hold that this sequence is reliable, not merely hopeful. Glasser holds it as a clinical observation confirmed by decades of therapeutic work. Sterling holds it as a philosophical derivation from the structure of rational agency. The convergence is not coincidental; it is the recognition of the same fact about the relationship between the agent’s cognitive engagement and his emotional life.

The difference is once again one of depth. Glasser identifies the governing act at the behavioral level: change what you are doing and thinking. Sterling identifies the governing act at the level of assent: examine the impression before you assent to it, and the behavior and feeling both follow from that prior act of judgment. The Stoic framework traces the guarantee to a more fundamental cognitive event. But both frameworks produce the same practical confidence: the agent who does his part — who governs what is genuinely his to govern — has done what is sufficient. The result follows from the act.

For the person working with both frameworks in a counseling context, Foundation Three provides the philosophical ground for the therapeutic confidence the WDEP procedure requires. The procedure asks the patient to plan different behavior and then to act on the plan. This requires a prior belief that acting differently will actually produce a different inner state — that the effort is worth making, that the change is real rather than performed. Foundation Three supplies the philosophical warrant for that belief: the relationship between correct engagement and flourishing is not contingent. It is guaranteed by the structure of what human agency is.


IV. What the Combined Framework Makes Available

The correspondence between the two frameworks is not merely intellectually interesting. It is practically productive. What the combined framework makes available is greater than what either provides alone.

Glasser’s framework provides the clinical procedure: the systematic identification of what the patient wants, the honest assessment of whether his current behavior is getting it, and the practical planning of different behavior. This is effective clinical work and its effectiveness does not depend on the patient holding any particular philosophical position. The WDEP procedure works with the patient’s needs as he presents them and helps him pursue them more effectively.

The Sterling framework provides the philosophical examination that the clinical procedure cannot perform on itself: the assessment of whether the patient’s relationship to his own wants is producing the structural vulnerability that guarantees renewed suffering regardless of how effective his behavioral pursuit becomes. Foundation Two asks the question the WDEP procedure cannot ask; Foundation One and Foundation Three provide the philosophical grounding for why the answer matters and what a correct relationship to one’s preferred indifferents actually consists in.

The combined framework is organized around a sequence of three questions that correspond to the three foundations in their natural clinical order. First, from Foundation One: what is actually mine to determine here, and what is not? Second, from Foundation Two: am I holding what I want as a preferred indifferent or as a genuine good? Third, from Foundation Three: am I engaging correctly with what is mine to govern, and do I trust that correct engagement is sufficient?

These are not abstract philosophical questions. They are the questions the counseling conversation generates in practical form whenever a person is genuinely working rather than merely managing his symptoms. Glasser’s framework brings a person reliably to the first question and provides the clinical tools to work with it. The Sterling framework extends the work into the second and third questions — the questions that address not merely whether the patient is pursuing his needs effectively, but whether he is holding those needs in the way that makes genuine flourishing rather than merely more effective suffering-management available to him.

That is the rapprochement. Not the claim that Glasser is a Stoic — he is not. Not the claim that the Stoic framework is a form of psychotherapy — Sterling insisted it is not. The claim is more precise and more interesting than either of those: both frameworks are working on the same problem, from different levels of the same structure, and the combination of both — in a counseling conversation that holds both in view simultaneously — makes available to the person who is working within it something that neither framework alone can provide.


Essay architecture and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling, including Core Stoicism and the Sterling Logic Engine v4.0. Primary interlocutor: William Glasser, Choice Theory: A New Psychology of Personal Freedom (1998). Prose rendering: Claude.

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Classical Presupposition Audit: Richard Rorty

 

Classical Presupposition Audit: Richard Rorty

Source: Published works including Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature (1979), Consequences of Pragmatism (1982), Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity (1989), Objectivity, Relativism, and Truth (1991), and Truth and Progress (1998).

Corpus in use: CPA v1.0. The audit operates exclusively from Rorty’s own published argumentative record. Rorty (1931–2007) was Professor of Comparative Literature at Stanford University and University Professor of Humanities at the University of Virginia. He is the philosopher who most carefully and self-consciously embraced as a positive philosophical program what MacIntyre diagnosed as the emotivist condition. This run investigates whether any figure in the CPA series produces a presupposition pattern approaching the full emotivist profile — six Contrary findings.


Preliminary Note: Rorty as the Emotivist Candidate

Richard Rorty is the ideal candidate for the emotivist CPA because he is the only major philosopher in the twentieth century who explicitly embraced what MacIntyre identified as the emotivist condition and developed it as a positive philosophical program. Where MacIntyre diagnosed the dissolution of the moral tradition and called for its recovery through Thomistic Aristotelianism, Rorty diagnosed the same dissolution and concluded that the tradition deserved to be dissolved — that philosophy’s ambition to provide objective foundations for anything, including morality, was a project that had failed and should be abandoned without regret.

Rorty did not call himself an emotivist. He called himself a pragmatist, a liberal ironist, and a neo-pragmatist. But the presuppositions his framework requires are precisely the presuppositions that constitute emotivism as MacIntyre analyzed it: the denial of mind-independent moral facts, the denial of the substantial self, the denial of correspondence theory, the denial of foundationalism, and the treatment of moral discourse as a form of conversation regulated by social practice rather than by access to truth.

He is the most philosophically self-aware figure the CPA series has audited. He knew exactly what he was denying and had argued extensively for each denial. The findings of this audit will be the closest to the full emotivist profile of any individual figure in the series.


Step 1 — Presupposition Profile

P1 — The self is a contingent, historically produced web of beliefs and desires with no essential nature behind it; selfhood is a matter of redescription rather than discovery. Rorty’s Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity argues that the self has no essential nature to be discovered — no soul, no rational faculty, no Archimedean core that stands behind one’s contingent beliefs and desires as their author and owner. The self is whatever web of beliefs, desires, and descriptions one happens to have inherited and modified through the accidents of birth, culture, and experience. The project of self-creation — which Rorty’s liberal ironist pursues — is not the discovery of a pre-existing self but the invention of new self-descriptions that he finds more interesting or enabling than the inherited ones.

P2 — There is no faculty of reason that stands outside all vocabularies and evaluates them from a tradition-independent standpoint; all reasoning is conducted within vocabularies that cannot themselves be justified by appeal to something outside them. Rorty’s critique of epistemology in Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature argues that the idea of the mind as a mirror of nature — as a faculty that represents reality accurately or inaccurately — is a picture that has held philosophy captive without justification. There is no God’s-eye view from which to assess whether our beliefs correspond to reality. All reasoning is conducted within vocabularies, and the choice between vocabularies is ultimately a matter of what proves more useful for our purposes, not a matter of which vocabulary more accurately represents a mind-independent reality.

P3 — Moral claims are not truth-apt in any robust sense; they are expressions of solidarity, proposals for how to extend our sympathies, and instruments for social coordination — not descriptions of mind-independent moral facts. Rorty argues that the question “but is it true that cruelty is wrong?” adds nothing to the claim that cruelty is wrong. Moral discourse is not in the business of describing a moral reality. It is in the business of extending the range of those we consider “one of us” — widening the circle of human solidarity. Moral progress is not progress toward moral truth; it is the expansion of sympathetic identification with those previously excluded from our community of concern.

P4 — Truth is not correspondence to mind-independent reality; it is what is useful for us to believe, what survives inquiry within our community, what proves enabling for our purposes. Rorty’s pragmatist account of truth holds that the concept of truth as correspondence to a mind-independent reality is a philosophical confusion that should be abandoned. There are no facts that our beliefs must correspond to independently of our practices of inquiry. What we call truth is the outcome of successful inquiry within a community — what beliefs prove durable, useful, and coherent with our other beliefs. To say a belief is true adds nothing beyond saying that it is justified by the best available standards of inquiry.

P5 — There are no self-evident moral intuitions that deliver direct access to moral truth; our moral responses are culturally conditioned sympathies and historically contingent sensibilities that have no epistemic authority beyond their role in our social practices. Rorty holds that what appears to be moral intuition — the direct perception that cruelty is wrong, that humiliation is bad, that solidarity is valuable — is not the rational faculty apprehending moral truth. It is the expression of conditioned sympathies produced by the particular cultural and historical formation one has undergone. These sympathies are not worthless — Rorty values them highly, particularly the liberal sentiments of tolerance, anti-cruelty, and solidarity. But they have no epistemic authority as direct apprehensions of moral fact. They are the products of education, literature, and experience, not of rational apprehension.

P6 — There are no foundational truths — philosophical, moral, or epistemological — that serve as the architecturally prior basis for all other justified beliefs; philosophy should abandon the foundationalist project and replace it with edifying conversation. Rorty’s Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature argues that the entire tradition of epistemology since Descartes has been organized around the misguided project of finding certain foundations for knowledge. That project has failed and should be abandoned. Philosophy’s legitimate role is not foundational but therapeutic — freeing us from the pictures that have held us captive — and edifying — keeping the conversation going rather than arriving at final answers. There are no final answers. There are only more or less useful vocabularies for dealing with our current situation.

P7 — The liberal ironist — the figure who holds his final vocabulary with appropriate humility, knowing it is contingent but committed to extending solidarity to those who suffer — is the appropriate model for the person who has fully absorbed these presuppositions without self-deception. Rorty’s positive account in Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity proposes the liberal ironist as the ideal human type for the post-metaphysical age: someone who recognizes the contingency of his own deepest commitments, does not pretend they are grounded in anything more than the historical accident of his formation, and is committed nonetheless to reducing cruelty and extending solidarity — not because these are moral facts but because they are what he cares about most deeply.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

Commitment 1 — Substance Dualism: Contrary

Rorty’s P1 directly and explicitly contradicts substance dualism. The self has no essential nature — no soul, no rational faculty, no prohairesis that stands behind the web of beliefs and desires as their author and owner. The self is the web. There is nothing behind it that could be identified as a distinct substance with categorical priority over external conditions. Rorty has argued this at length and with philosophical precision: the Cartesian self, the Kantian transcendental ego, the Stoic prohairesis — all are philosophical constructions that have misled us into thinking there is something more to the person than the contingent historical formation he happens to have undergone.

His account of self-creation confirms the Contrary finding. The liberal ironist does not discover his self; he invents new descriptions of himself. This presupposes that there is no prior self to be discovered — no essential nature that correct self-knowledge would reveal. Discovery is replaced by invention. The prohairesis as the genuine self that can examine its impressions and govern its assents from a position of categorical independence has no place in Rorty’s account.

Finding: Contrary. Rorty explicitly and at length denies that the self has an essential nature, a substantial soul, or a rational faculty standing behind its contingent beliefs and desires. The denial is the organizing premise of his account of the liberal ironist.

Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free Will: Contrary

Libertarian free will requires that the moment of assent be a genuine first cause — that the agent is the real originator of his judgments independently of prior causes. Rorty’s P2 eliminates this. All reasoning is conducted within vocabularies that are themselves the products of historical contingency. The agent who reasons within a vocabulary is not originating his judgments from a position outside all prior conditions; he is working out the implications of a vocabulary he has inherited and modified through historical accident. There is no position outside all vocabularies from which genuine origination could occur.

Rorty has also argued explicitly against the compatibilist and libertarian accounts of free will as philosophical confusions produced by the misleading picture of the mind as a mirror of nature. The question of whether beliefs are “really” free or determined is, on his account, a question that should be dissolved rather than answered — it is generated by a picture that should be abandoned. This is not libertarian free will; it is the pragmatist dissolution of the question of free will.

Finding: Contrary. Rorty’s account of the self as a contingent historical formation and his dissolution of epistemological questions about the origin of belief together eliminate genuine originating agency as the governing account of the agent’s relationship to his judgments.

Commitment 3 — Moral Realism: Contrary

Rorty’s P3 is the explicit denial of moral realism. Moral claims are not truth-apt in any robust sense. There are no mind-independent moral facts that moral statements could correspond to. Moral discourse is a form of solidarity-building, sympathy-extending conversation — not a form of description of a moral reality that exists independently of that conversation. He has argued this directly against Nagel, Parfit, and other moral realists, holding that the question “but is cruelty really wrong?” is a question to which pragmatism gives no answer and should give no answer.

Unlike Singer, whose Inconsistent finding on C3 reflected a tension between his naturalist moral realism and his anti-intuitionist epistemology, Rorty produces a clean Contrary finding. He has no residual moral realism to create tension. He has argued against moral realism explicitly, consistently, and without qualification across his entire career.

Finding: Contrary. Rorty explicitly and at length denies that moral claims are truth-apt or that there are mind-independent moral facts. The denial is a central and consistently maintained commitment of his entire philosophical record.

Commitment 4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: Contrary

Rorty’s P4 is the explicit denial of correspondence theory for all domains, not merely for moral claims. His critique of epistemology in Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature is organized around the rejection of the idea that truth consists in correspondence to mind-independent reality. He has argued against correspondence theory at length, against Davidson, Putnam, and the entire tradition of epistemological realism, holding that the concept of correspondence to reality is a concept we would be better off without. Truth is warranted assertability within a community of inquiry — not correspondence to a mind-independent fact.

This is the Contrary finding on C4 that no other figure in the series has produced. Harris produced an Aligned finding on C4 because he holds scientific realism and correspondence theory for factual claims. Rawls produced a Partially Aligned finding because correspondence theory operates for his empirical claims. Rorty produces a Contrary finding because he has explicitly and at length argued against correspondence theory for all domains — empirical as well as moral.

Finding: Contrary. Rorty has argued explicitly against correspondence theory of truth for all domains, holding that the concept of truth as correspondence to mind-independent reality is a philosophical confusion to be dissolved. This is the only Contrary finding on C4 in the CPA series.

Commitment 5 — Ethical Intuitionism: Contrary

Rorty’s P5 denies ethical intuitionism directly. What appears to be moral intuition is conditioned sympathy — the product of historical formation, cultural inheritance, and the particular literature and experiences one has been exposed to. These sympathies carry no epistemic authority as direct apprehensions of moral truth because there is no moral truth to be directly apprehended. Rorty’s positive account of moral progress — through the expansion of sympathetic identification rather than through the discovery of moral facts — is the explicit alternative to intuitionism.

He has also argued directly against the idea that literature and art function as means of moral knowledge in the intuitionist sense. They function, on his account, as means of extending sympathy by making the suffering of others vivid and real to us. This is not the rational faculty apprehending moral truth; it is the emotional and imaginative faculty being trained to feel more widely. The mechanism of moral progress is sentiment, not insight.

Finding: Contrary. Rorty explicitly denies that moral intuitions deliver direct access to moral truth, replaces the epistemology of moral insight with an account of conditioned sympathy, and proposes sentiment education rather than rational apprehension as the mechanism of moral progress.

Commitment 6 — Foundationalism: Contrary

Rorty’s P6 is the explicit and comprehensive denial of foundationalism. His entire philosophical project is organized around the abandonment of the foundationalist project — the project of finding certain, architecturally prior foundations for knowledge, morality, and philosophical discourse. He has argued that this project has failed, that it should be abandoned without regret, and that philosophy’s legitimate role is therapeutic and edifying rather than foundational. There are no self-evident first principles. There are no non-negotiable foundations. There are only more or less useful vocabularies for our current purposes, all of which are subject to revision and replacement.

The Contrary finding here is the most thoroughgoing in the series. Rawls produced a Contrary finding on C6 because his political liberalism requires freestanding principles not dependent on any comprehensive foundational doctrine. MacIntyre produced a Partially Aligned finding because his foundationalism is tradition-relative rather than universally accessible. Rorty produces a Contrary finding because he has argued against foundationalism as such — against the very idea that any claim could be architecturally prior to all others in the way foundationalism requires.

Finding: Contrary. Rorty has argued explicitly and at length against foundationalism as a philosophical project, holding that the search for certain foundations for knowledge and morality is a confusion to be abandoned. His entire philosophical career has been organized around this denial.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

Commitment 1: Contrary. Commitment 2: Contrary.

Finding: Full Dissolution.

Rorty’s dissolution of the prohairesis is the most thoroughgoing in the CPA series. It is not the incidental result of political commitments or the structural consequence of a commercial framework. It is the explicit, carefully argued, philosophically self-aware conclusion of a career-long project to demonstrate that the self, the rational faculty, and the foundational moral order are philosophical fictions that we would be better off without.

The dissolution is complete because it is argued at every level simultaneously. The self has no essential nature (C1 Contrary). Reasoning is vocabulary-relative rather than first-causal (C2 Contrary). Moral claims are solidarity-building rather than truth-apt (C3 Contrary). Truth is warranted assertability rather than correspondence (C4 Contrary). Moral intuitions are conditioned sympathies rather than direct apprehensions (C5 Contrary). There are no foundational first principles (C6 Contrary). Each commitment is denied, each denial is argued, and together they constitute the most complete philosophical dissolution of the prohairesis that any individual figure in the series has produced.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Commitment Pattern

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

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

Dissolution: Full.

The Rorty Pattern: The Individual Emotivist CPA

Rorty is the only figure in the CPA series to produce six Contrary findings — matching the CIA run on emotivism itself. Every figure in the series who produced Full Dissolution did so through a combination of Contrary and Partially Aligned or Inconsistent findings. Becker produced five Contrary and one Partially Aligned. Singer produced four Contrary, one Inconsistent, and one Partially Aligned. Harris produced four Contrary and two Aligned. Rorty produces six Contrary with no residual affinity on any commitment.

This is not an accident. It is the result of Rorty’s unique philosophical project: the deliberate, comprehensive, and philosophically self-aware endorsement of every presupposition that the classical commitments require denying. Where other figures in the series produce Contrary findings through incidental philosophical commitments or domain-specific positions, Rorty produces Contrary findings through explicit argument directed at exactly the questions the classical commitments address. He has read the tradition he is denying. He understands what is at stake. He denies it anyway — and argues for the denial as a positive philosophical program rather than merely as a critical position.

The Rorty-MacIntyre Relationship

Rorty and MacIntyre are the two most philosophically sophisticated figures in the series, and their relationship to each other is the most instructive comparison the series generates. Both have diagnosed the condition of modern moral discourse with precision. MacIntyre calls it emotivism and regards it as a catastrophe requiring recovery of the Thomistic Aristotelian tradition. Rorty calls it the post-metaphysical condition and regards it as an opportunity for a more honest and less self-deceived form of liberal culture.

MacIntyre produces one Aligned finding (C3 — moral realism) and five Partially Aligned findings. No Dissolution. He disagrees with the classical commitments on the conditions of access to moral truth, but he holds that moral truth exists and is accessible through the right tradition. Rorty produces six Contrary findings. Full Dissolution. He holds that moral truth does not exist in the sense the classical commitments require, that the self has no essential nature that stands behind its contingent formation, and that the entire project of grounding morality in something more than social solidarity and historical sympathy is a confusion to be abandoned.

The CPA finding identifies the precise philosophical difference that separates the two: MacIntyre holds moral realism (C3 Aligned); Rorty does not (C3 Contrary). Everything else in the series of findings follows from that difference. MacIntyre’s tradition-constituted practical reason, his hylomorphic account of the self, and his formation-dependent practical wisdom all produce Partially Aligned findings rather than Contrary findings because they are organized around a real moral order that the tradition enables one to access. Rorty’s account produces Contrary findings on every commitment because it is organized around the denial that there is any such order to access.

The Rorty-Emotivism Correspondence

The CIA run on emotivism produced six Contrary findings as a framework audit. The CPA run on Rorty produces six Contrary findings as an individual audit. The correspondence is precise and philosophically significant: Rorty is the individual human expression of the emotivist framework MacIntyre diagnosed. He has made the framework explicit, argued for it at length, and proposed a positive account of how to live within it — the liberal ironist who holds his final vocabulary with appropriate humility while committed to reducing cruelty and extending solidarity.

The liberal ironist is the emotivist Aesthete under a different description. He has made his life and his vocabulary into an aesthetic project — the project of self-creation through redescription. He holds his deepest commitments without metaphysical backing, knowing they are contingent, finding them interesting and enabling rather than grounded and necessary. He is the Aesthete who has read enough philosophy to know that his aesthetic project has no foundation and has decided that this knowledge is liberating rather than devastating.

The Stoic response to the liberal ironist is the same as the Stoic response to the Aesthete: the project of self-creation through redescription cannot succeed, because the self that is doing the redescribing has no stable identity from which to evaluate its own descriptions. What Rorty calls the liberal ironist’s appropriate humility about his final vocabulary is, from the Stoic framework’s perspective, the absence of the one thing that would make his vocabulary genuinely his own: the prohairesis that stands behind all vocabularies and can examine them against a standard that is not itself a vocabulary.

Rorty knows this objection. He has answered it by denying that there is any such standard. The prohairesis is, on his account, one more philosophical fiction produced by the picture of the mind as a mirror of nature — a picture that philosophy would be better off without. The CPA finding is that this denial requires all six classical commitments to be false simultaneously. Six Contrary findings. Full Dissolution. The most complete philosophical expression of the emotivist condition the series has encountered.


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

On Malcolm’s Suggestion

 

On Malcolm’s Suggestion


Malcolm has suggested, in the Facebook group Stoicism for Monotheists, that I upload selected posts by Grant Sterling from the International Stoic Forum — those giving comprehensive explanations of his thinking — to the group’s file folder, as a point of reference and basis for discussion.

The suggestion sounds collegial, and I take it as sincerely meant. But I want to think through what it would actually involve before acting on it.

The ISF Posts Were Written for a Different Context

Sterling’s ISF posts were written for a philosophical forum — a community of people already engaged with Stoic theory at a serious level, many of them trained philosophers or advanced students. The posts are dense, often highly technical, and frequently written in the heat of philosophical exchange. They presuppose familiarity with Stoic vocabulary, with the standard objections, and with the prior turns of the thread. Reproduced without that scaffolding, they are easy to misread.

More importantly: Sterling is not present to respond. The ISF is closed. Whatever discussion his posts generate in a Facebook group will be discussion he cannot participate in, correct, or govern. Uploading his posts as a “basis for discussion” means inviting challenges to his positions in a venue where he has no voice.

What “A Basis for Discussion” Actually Means

Malcolm is one of the most substantive participants in the group. He is also a thinker whose presuppositions diverge from Sterling’s in identifiable ways. Sterling’s foundationalist position — that ethics cannot be grounded in theology, that the Euthyphro problem rules out divine command as a foundation for moral knowledge — is precisely the position Malcolm has challenged in other contexts. Sterling writes explicitly: “I do not ground my ethics in my theology, and I do not see any need for me to do so.”

A file folder of Sterling’s ISF posts would become a target for exactly this kind of challenge — point by point, post by post — in a thread Sterling cannot join.

That is not discussion in any philosophically productive sense. It is a debate conducted in absentia, with one side unable to speak.

What I Am Doing Instead

The work of this project is not to reproduce Sterling’s ISF posts wholesale, but to synthesize his theoretical framework into instruments that are both faithful to the corpus and accessible to readers who are not already philosophers. That work — the Sterling Logic Engine, the Decision Framework, the individual analytical essays — is the appropriate vehicle for introducing Sterling’s thinking to a general audience.

Those documents have been built to stand on their own. They do not require Sterling to be present to defend them, because the derivation is explicit and the governing propositions are stated before any conclusion is drawn. A reader who disputes a conclusion can follow the argument back to its source. That is what a properly constructed philosophical instrument makes possible.

If members of the group want to engage with Sterling’s thinking, the instruments are the right entry point. The ISF archive is a closed primary corpus, not a discussion document.


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

Monday, April 20, 2026

CPA Candidate Register — Contemporary Figures Holding the Six Replacements

 

CPA Candidate Register — Contemporary Figures Holding the Six Replacements

Instrument context: Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. This register identifies prominent contemporary figures whose public argumentative records hold one or more of the six modern replacements for Sterling’s classical commitments, and assesses each candidate’s suitability for a full CPA run. Candidates are organized by the replacement position they primarily exemplify. Completed runs are noted where relevant. Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.


Replacement 1 — Psychophysical Holism / Naturalist Psychology

(replaces C1, Substance Dualism)

Daniel Dennett (1942–2024)
Record: Consciousness Explained (1991); Darwin’s Dangerous Idea (1995); Freedom Evolves (2003); Breaking the Spell (2006); interviews and lectures extensively documented.
Assessment: The strongest single candidate in the entire register for a C1 and C2 finding. Dennett is the most systematic and explicit philosophical defender of the naturalist account of consciousness and compatibilist free will in the contemporary English-language tradition. He argues at length, with philosophical precision, that the self is a natural phenomenon, that consciousness is a product of physical processes, and that libertarian free will is incoherent. His record directly and load-bearingly contradicts C1 and C2 across his entire output. C3 will be Contrary (moral naturalism); C5 will be Inconsistent (scientific realism in tension with pragmatist accounts of mental content). Anticipated dissolution: Full. Priority: High. The Dennett CPA would be the cleanest and most philosophically explicit Full Dissolution run in the series.

Antonio Damasio
Record: Descartes’ Error (1994); The Feeling of What Happens (1999); Self Comes to Mind (2010); lectures and interviews.
Assessment: Damasio’s central thesis is that the Cartesian separation of mind and body is a philosophical error with neurological consequences — the self is constituted through the body’s representations of its own states. His C1 finding will be Contrary throughout. His position on C2 requires more careful audit: he preserves a meaningful sense of rational decision-making while grounding it in somatic processes. C3 will be Non-Operative (he does not argue moral epistemology directly). Dissolution: likely Partial. Priority: Medium. Valuable because his record reaches a popular audience and his C1 argument is structurally influential on how consciousness is understood outside academic philosophy.


Replacement 2 — Compatibilism

(replaces C2, Libertarian Free Will)

Daniel Kahneman
Record: Thinking, Fast and Slow (2011); Noise (with Olivier Sibony and Cass Sunstein, 2021); numerous papers and interviews.
Assessment: Kahneman is not a philosopher but his two-systems model of cognition is arguably the most influential contemporary account of how judgment works — and it is a direct assault on the presuppositions of C2. His System 1/System 2 framework presents human judgment as a natural process dominated by fast automatic heuristics, with deliberate reason as a late and often ineffective corrective. The prohairesis as genuine first-cause of assent is not available in this picture. His C1 and C2 findings will both be Contrary. C6 is likely Non-Operative (his work is descriptive rather than normative). Dissolution: Full. Priority: High. The Kahneman CPA would be the most practically significant run in the series for a general audience: his framework is more widely adopted than any philosopher’s, and its implications for the classical account of agency have never been made explicit.

Cass Sunstein
Record: Nudge (with Richard Thaler, 2008); Republic.com (2001); How Change Happens (2019); extensive public writing.
Assessment: Sunstein’s nudge theory treats human agents as predictably irrational natural systems whose behavior can be steered by environmental design. His C2 is Contrary: genuine rational origination of choice is not his operative model. His C5 is likely Inconsistent: he appeals to welfare outcomes (pragmatist) and to rights-based constraints (correspondence). His C6 requires audit: his welfarism may be Partially Aligned (objective welfare) or Contrary (preference satisfaction). Dissolution: Full or Partial depending on C1 profile. Priority: Medium.


Replacement 3 — Ethical Naturalism (Philosophical Form)

(replaces C3, Ethical Intuitionism)

Rosalind Hursthouse
Record: On Virtue Ethics (1999); Ethics, Humans and Other Animals (2000); numerous papers on virtue ethics and naturalism.
Assessment: Hursthouse is the primary living systematic advocate of Aristotelian ethical naturalism and is explicitly referenced in Gill’s record. Her On Virtue Ethics is the most complete contemporary statement of the position that grounded virtue in natural facts about what it is to be a member of a biological kind. Her C3 will be Contrary and load-bearing. Her C1 profile is more nuanced than Gill’s: she does not develop a psychophysical holism thesis, and her account of agency may be Partially Aligned on C1. Her C6 will be Partially Aligned (naturalistic realism). Anticipated dissolution: depends on C1 profile; likely Partial. Priority: High. The Hursthouse CPA would establish the philosophical benchmark for Aristotelian naturalism, which is the most philosophically serious of the three C3 replacement forms.

Julia Annas
Record: The Morality of Happiness (1993); Intelligent Virtue (2011); Platonic Ethics, Old and New (1999); extensive work on ancient ethics.
Assessment: Annas argues for a naturalist reading of ancient virtue ethics in which happiness is grounded in the development of skills or excellences natural to human beings. Her Intelligent Virtue is particularly relevant: it treats virtue as a skill, acquired through practice, whose grounding is naturalistic. Her C3 will be Contrary. Her C1 profile differs from Gill’s: she does not hold a psychophysical holism thesis and her account of the agent is less holistically physical. C2 requires careful audit. Anticipated dissolution: Partial or Qualified. Priority: High. The Annas CPA alongside the Hursthouse CPA would map the full range of philosophical naturalism as a C3 replacement.

Ryan Holiday
Record: The Obstacle Is the Way (2014); Ego Is the Enemy (2016); Stillness Is the Key (2019); Discipline Is Destiny (2022); extensive interviews and newsletters.
Assessment: Holiday is the most widely read contemporary Stoic figure not yet audited. His therapeutic-functional naturalism is less philosophically explicit than Robertson’s, but his record is large, coherent, and philosophically revealing. His argument is consistently efficacy-based: Stoic practices are commended because they work, produce resilience, and support success. His C3 will be Non-Operative to Partially Aligned (he affirms Stoic moral claims but does not argue moral epistemology). His C5 profile is the most interesting: his validation criterion is success-in-the-world (pragmatist), but his commendation of virtue is presented as simply correct (correspondence). His C6 will be Partially Aligned. Anticipated dissolution: depends on C1 and C2 profiles, which require audit. Priority: High for audience reach; medium for philosophical depth.

Massimo Pigliucci
Record: How to Be a Stoic (2017); A Field Guide to a Happy Life (2020); Nonsense on Stilts (2010); extensive academic and public writing; his podcast and Substack.
Assessment: Pigliucci is the most philosophically trained of the contemporary Stoic popularizers who have not been audited. He holds explicit positions on which ancient doctrines are retainable and which must be dropped in light of modern science. He discards Stoic theology (providence) and the ancient materialist physics as scientifically indefensible, but argues that the ethics can be reconstructed on naturalist grounds. His C3 will require careful audit: he is more philosophically careful than Robertson about the grounds of moral claims. His C1 and C2 profiles depend on how he handles the question of rational agency after discarding the ancient physics. Priority: High. The most analytically interesting of the remaining Stoic figures because his selective reconstruction explicitly raises the question the six commitments address.

William Irvine
Record: A Guide to the Good Life: The Ancient Art of Stoic Joy (2008); On Desire: Why We Want What We Want (2006); interviews and articles.
Assessment: Irvine presents Stoicism primarily as a technique for managing desire and maximizing tranquility. His C3 profile is distinctive: he does not affirm the Stoic value hierarchy in its radical form (virtue as the only genuine good), but rather offers a tranquility-management reading in which externals are treated as indifferent primarily because treating them as important causes distress. His C6 will likely be Contrary: moral facts are implicitly indexed to tranquility outcomes rather than treated as objectively independent. His dissolution profile may be unusual: his C6 Contrary may make the agent-level implication more practically significant than the standard naturalist profiles. Priority: Medium.


Replacement 3 — Emotivism / Constructivism (Cultural Form)

(replaces C3, Ethical Intuitionism, via the cultural route)

Christine Korsgaard
Record: Creating the Kingdom of Ends (1996); Self-Constitution: Agency, Identity, and Integrity (2009); Fellow Creatures: Our Obligations to the Other Animals (2018); numerous papers.
Assessment: Korsgaard is the most philosophically significant candidate in the constructivist category. She argues that moral obligations are constituted by the structure of rational agency itself — agents who reflectively endorse principles by which they act thereby constitute those principles as normative. Her C3 will be Contrary: moral knowledge is not direct apprehension but the output of a reflective procedure. Her C1 and C2 profiles are the most philosophically interesting: her account of rational self-constitution gives her a stronger claim to C1 and C2 alignment than any of the naturalists. She argues explicitly for the causal efficacy of rational reflection and the priority of the practical standpoint over the theoretical standpoint. Her C1 may be Partially Aligned (the rational self is treated as genuinely prior, not simply a natural system). Her C2 may be Partially Aligned (reflective endorsement preserves something like origination). Anticipated dissolution: No Dissolution or Partial. Priority: High. The Korsgaard CPA would be the most philosophically complex run in the series and would establish whether Kantian constructivism is more compatible with the classical commitments than naturalism.

Charles Taylor
Record: Sources of the Self (1989); A Secular Age (2007); The Malaise of Modernity (1991); Human Agency and Language (1985).
Assessment: Taylor argues that moral frameworks are constitutive of identity — the moral horizon within which one understands oneself is not discovered but inhabits. His C3 will be Contrary: moral knowledge is not direct apprehension but hermeneutic engagement with a moral tradition. His C1 profile is philosophically nuanced: he argues strongly against reductive naturalism and defends the irreducibility of human agency, which may produce Partial Alignment on C1. His C2 requires careful audit. Priority: Medium-High.


Replacement 4 — Pragmatist Revisability / Anti-Foundationalism

(replaces C4, Foundationalism)

Richard Rorty (1931–2007)
Record: Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature (1979); Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity (1989); Achieving Our Country (1998); extensive essays.
Assessment: Rorty is the most systematic and explicit anti-foundationalist in the recent tradition. He argues that the philosophical project of grounding knowledge in indubitable first principles is a mistake, that truth is what is good for us to believe, and that solidarity rather than objective moral reality is the appropriate ground for ethical commitment. His C4 will be Contrary (anti-foundationalism explicitly held). His C5 will be Contrary (pragmatist account of truth). His C3 will be Contrary (no direct apprehension of moral facts). His C6 will be Contrary (solidarity rather than objective moral reality). His C1 and C2 profiles are less clear from his major works and require audit. Anticipated dissolution: likely Full. Priority: Medium (deceased, but foundational for understanding the C4 replacement).


Replacement 5 — Therapeutic Validation / Pragmatism Applied to Ethics

(replaces C5, Correspondence Theory of Truth)

Martin Seligman
Record: Learned Optimism (1991); Authentic Happiness (2002); Flourishing (2011); numerous papers on positive psychology; public lectures and interviews.
Assessment: Seligman is the founder of positive psychology and the figure whose work most directly competes with Robertson’s in the overlap between ancient virtue ethics and modern psychological practice. His PERMA model (Positive emotions, Engagement, Relationships, Meaning, Accomplishment) is an empirical account of flourishing. His C5 will be Inconsistent in a structure similar to Robertson’s: he affirms virtue-adjacent claims as simply correct while validating practices on empirical grounds. His C6 will be Partially Aligned (flourishing is treated as objective) to Contrary (indexed to measurable psychological outcomes). Priority: Medium-High. The Seligman CPA would establish the positive psychology alternative to the therapeutic-Stoic framework and clarify the boundary between Stoic practice and scientific positive psychology.

Albert Ellis (1913–2007)
Record: Reason and Emotion in Psychotherapy (1962); A New Guide to Rational Living (1975); The Practice of Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy (1997); extensive publications.
Assessment: Ellis is the founder of REBT, the direct precursor to CBT that Robertson traces his Stoic lineage through. Ellis explicitly acknowledged Epictetus as a foundational source. His C5 profile will be Inconsistent: his philosophical argument invokes rational apprehension of the irrationality of false beliefs (correspondence) while his therapeutic validation is empiricist. His C3 will be Contrary (he grounds values in rational preference rather than direct apprehension). Priority: Medium (deceased, but foundational for understanding Robertson’s intellectual lineage).


Replacement 6 — Naturalistic Realism / Constructivism / Relativism

(replaces C6, Moral Realism)

Philippa Foot (1920–2010)
Record: Natural Goodness (2001); Virtues and Vices (1978); Moral Dilemmas (2002); papers throughout her career.
Assessment: Foot is the founding figure of naturalistic realism in the contemporary virtue ethics tradition, and Gill’s closest academic predecessor. Natural Goodness argues that human goodness is grounded in the same naturalistic framework that grounds the goodness of plants and animals: functioning well as the kind of being one is. Her C3 will be Contrary (naturalist derivation of moral knowledge). Her C6 will be Partially Aligned (genuine moral realism, naturalistic form). Her C1 profile will be distinctive: she argues against reductive naturalism in moral philosophy but does not develop a metaphysics of the self. Her C2 requires careful audit. Priority: High. The Foot CPA is the logical predecessor to the Hursthouse and Gill runs and would complete the naturalist virtue ethics trilogy.

Derek Parfit (1942–2017)
Record: Reasons and Persons (1984); On What Matters (2011, three volumes); papers.
Assessment: Parfit’s On What Matters argues that Kantian ethics, consequentialism, and contractualism converge on the same basic moral truths. He holds a form of non-naturalist moral realism — moral facts are objective and independent of natural facts — which places him closer to the corpus’s C6 than any other major contemporary figure outside the explicitly Stoic tradition. His C6 may be Partially Aligned to Aligned. His C3 will require careful audit: he argues for a form of rational apprehension of moral truths that may be closer to intuitionism than naturalism. His C1 and C2 profiles are philosophically complex (his famous views on personal identity dissolve the self in ways that may contradict C1 while his account of rational agency preserves something like origination). Priority: High. The Parfit CPA would be the most surprising run in the series and the most likely to produce a non-standard finding profile.


Priority Ranking for the Next Runs

Tier One — Highest philosophical yield and audience reach:

  • Kahneman — widest cultural reach; Full Dissolution anticipated; directly relevant to the CPA’s practical significance
  • Dennett — most explicit philosophical record on C1 and C2; Full Dissolution anticipated; establishes the philosophical benchmark for the naturalist account of mind
  • Korsgaard — most philosophically complex; possible No Dissolution; would establish whether Kantian constructivism is more compatible with the corpus than naturalism
  • Pigliucci — most philosophically trained remaining Stoic figure; his selective reconstruction directly raises the six-commitments question

Tier Two — High yield, strong records:

  • Hursthouse — completes the naturalist virtue ethics mapping
  • Foot — foundational for the entire naturalist virtue ethics tradition
  • Parfit — potentially the closest approach to corpus alignment in the contemporary non-Stoic philosophical tradition
  • Holiday — widest popular Stoic audience; practically significant for the series’s reach

Tier Three — Useful for specific replacement analysis:

  • Annas — completes the ancient ethics naturalism mapping alongside Gill
  • Seligman — positive psychology alternative to Robertson
  • Taylor — hermeneutic alternative to both naturalism and intuitionism
  • Irvine — tranquility-management Stoicism; distinctive C6 profile
  • Damasio — somatic self; relevant to the C1 replacement analysis

Note: Figures already audited in the CPA series (Gill, Robertson, Sellars, Peterson, Mamdani, Singer, MacIntyre, Rawls, Harris, Ocasio-Cortez, Schosha) are excluded from this register. The Political Application Constraint applies: Sterling’s name must not appear in association with any run on political figures.


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

Classical Ideological Audit — Ethical Naturalism

 

Classical Ideological Audit — Ethical Naturalism

Instrument: Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v2.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Test criteria derived from Sterling’s six philosophical commitments and the 58 Unified Stoic Propositions of Grant C. Sterling. Corpus in use: Core Stoicism, Nine Excerpts, Sterling Logic Engine v4.0, Free Will and Causation, 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, A Brief Reply Re: Dualism, Stoic Dualism and Nature, Two and One-Half Ethical Systems. Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Ideology under examination: Ethical naturalism. The ideology will be stated in propositional form in Step 1. The instrument does not audit a label; it audits the identified presuppositions.

Corpus in view: Yes. Specific documents will be cited by name and section when referenced.

Prior conclusion: None. The findings are produced by the analysis, not confirmed by it.

Note on scope: The CIA audits an ideology as a system of ideas, not as a characterization of any person. Ethical naturalism is here audited in its own right as a philosophical position with identifiable load-bearing presuppositions. Christopher Gill is the most serious contemporary advocate of applying ethical naturalism to the reconstruction of Stoic ethics, and his work provides the most developed instance of the position under audit. The philosophical relationship between his naturalist Stoicism and the Sterling framework is examined at length in the companion essay “Virtue, Assent, and the Locus of the Good: Sterling’s Stoicism and the Limits of Gill’s Naturalism.” The present instrument run addresses the ideology itself.

Self-Audit — Step 0:

  • Is the corpus in view? Yes.
  • Has the ideology been stated in propositional form before the audit begins? It will be at Step 1.
  • Is the instrument operating under a prior conclusion? No.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 1.


Step 1 — Ideology Statement and Variant Identification

Core Statement

Ethical naturalism is the philosophical position that moral facts are a species of natural facts, that moral knowledge is continuous with natural knowledge, and that the normative force of moral claims derives from facts about the natural world — specifically from facts about the nature, constitution, characteristic functions, or flourishing conditions of the kinds of beings to whom those claims apply. The position is defined by its grounding move: whatever is genuinely good for a being is so because of what kind of being it is and what that kind of being requires in order to live well as such.

Ethical naturalism is unified by four core presuppositions that any version must hold in order to be recognizable as the position:

P1 — Moral grounding in natural facts. Moral claims derive their truth conditions from facts about the natural world. What is genuinely good is determined by facts about what natural kinds are, what they require, and what constitutes their characteristic flourishing. There are no moral facts that exist independently of any natural facts. If the natural facts were radically different, the moral facts would be different too.

P2 — Continuity of moral and natural knowledge. Moral knowledge is arrived at through investigation that is, in principle, continuous with natural investigation. There is no separate, non-empirical, non-inferential faculty by which moral truths are directly apprehended prior to any investigation. Moral knowledge may be more holistic, more interpretive, or more embedded in practical experience than paradigmatic scientific knowledge, but it is not categorically different from it in its epistemic foundations.

P3 — The self as natural organism. The moral subject — the agent for whom the good is being specified — is a natural organism, a member of a natural kind, whose inner life is the inner life of a complex natural being. There is no categorical ontological gulf between the moral subject and the natural world. The agent is not a distinct substance standing prior to and independent of the natural order; he is embedded in it, constituted by it, and evaluated by standards derivable from it.

P4 — Objective moral facts grounded in natural structure. The position is realist in the sense that it holds moral claims to be objectively true or false, not merely expressions of preference or cultural consensus. However, their objectivity is grounded in the objectivity of the natural facts that support them — facts about species-characteristic flourishing, natural function, or the requirements of a kind-member’s life. Moral facts are objective because natural facts are objective, not because moral facts constitute a freestanding realm of their own.

Variant Identification

Three major variants of ethical naturalism are philosophically significant for this audit.

Variant A — Aristotelian eudaimonist naturalism (represented most fully in the work of Philippa Foot, Rosalind Hursthouse, and, in the Stoic context, Christopher Gill). This variant grounds virtue in the natural function of the human kind: living virtuously is living in a way that is characteristically excellent for a creature of this kind, as determined by an investigation of what human beings are and what they need to flourish. It is robustly realist about objective natural facts about human nature and holds that these facts have direct normative import. It is the most philosophically developed and the most hospitable to the kind of moral seriousness that Stoic ethics requires.

Variant B — Cornell realism / synthetic naturalism (Brink, Sturgeon). This variant holds that moral properties are identical to natural properties but not by conceptual analysis — the identity is synthetic and a posteriori. It holds moral realism firmly and treats moral facts as genuinely objective features of the natural world. It does not commit to any specific account of which natural properties moral properties are identical to, which gives it a more open-ended relationship to specific moral claims.

Variant C — Evolutionary or social-functional naturalism. This variant grounds moral facts in evolutionary fitness, social cooperation, or the functional requirements of stable social life. It tends toward a more deflationary account of moral objectivity — moral facts may be objective in the sense that they are determined by facts about social function or evolutionary history, but they are not objective in the stronger sense that the other variants intend. This is the variant most vulnerable to the charge that it reduces moral claims to sociological or biological claims.

Self-Audit — Step 1:

  • Have I stated the ideology’s presuppositions or merely its surface claims? I have stated four load-bearing presuppositions, not the label.
  • Have I identified core presuppositions shared across all variants? Yes. P1–P4 are held by Variants A, B, and C, though with different emphases.
  • Have I identified the variants for Stage Two? Yes. Three variants identified.
  • Have I stated any prior conclusion? No.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 2.


Step 2 — Stage One Core Audit

Commitment 1 — Substance Dualism

Test question: Does the ideology treat the inner life of the individual as categorically distinct from and prior to all external material conditions? Or does it reduce the agent to a product of natural forces?

Finding: Divergent.

Presupposition P3 is the governing presupposition here. Ethical naturalism holds that the moral subject is a natural organism, embedded in and constituted by the natural order. The agent’s inner life — his rational capacities, his evaluative responses, his characteristic mode of knowing — is the inner life of a complex natural being, not the inner life of a categorically distinct substance standing prior to and independent of the natural world. The agent is not ontologically separate from nature; he is one of nature’s products, assessed by standards derivable from facts about what natural kinds of his type require.

This presupposition directly contradicts Commitment 1. The governing proposition of the corpus (Nine Excerpts, Section 4) is: “I am my soul/prohairesis/inner self. Everything else, including my body, is an external.” The corpus requires the rational faculty to be categorically distinct from and prior to all external conditions, including the body. This distinction is not merely a useful heuristic; it is an ontological claim grounded in substance dualism. Sterling’s corpus (A Brief Reply Re: Dualism) argues that the certainty of qualitative mental experience — the feeling of pain, the operation of modus ponens — cannot be accounted for by any physical science, and that dualism is the philosophically defensible response to that explanatory gap. Ethical naturalism requires the opposite: the inner life is in principle explicable within natural terms, and the agent is embedded in rather than categorically prior to the natural order.

The contradiction is load-bearing. Ethical naturalism cannot abandon P3 without ceasing to be naturalism. The claim that the agent is a natural organism evaluated by natural standards is not a peripheral addition; it is the defining move of the position. Remove it and the naturalist grounding of moral claims dissolves.

Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free Will

Test question: Does the ideology ground its moral claims in the genuine causal power of individual rational agents to originate their own assents independently of prior determining causes?

Finding: Divergent.

Ethical naturalism is committed, by P3, to understanding the agent as a natural organism whose inner life is continuous with the natural causal order. This commits the position, at the level of embedded presupposition, to some form of compatibilism: the agent’s choices and assents are physical events within a causally ordered natural world. The most the position can offer is that those events flow through the agent’s own rational character rather than being externally compelled — a compatibilist account of freedom, not a libertarian one. Ethical naturalism cannot coherently hold that the agent is a natural organism embedded in the natural causal order and simultaneously that his assents are genuine first causes originating independently of that causal order. The two claims are structurally incompatible.

This contradicts Commitment 2. The governing proposition of the corpus (Nine Excerpts, Section 7) is: “Choosing whether or not to assent to impressions is the only thing in our control — and yet, everything critical to leading the best possible life is contained in that one act.” The corpus (Free Will and Causation, Sterling) specifies that “in our control” means genuine causal origination, not merely flowing from one’s own character without external compulsion. The dichotomy of control is not a useful distinction between different kinds of physical causation; it is an ontological boundary between what is genuinely originated by the rational faculty and what is determined by forces external to it. Ethical naturalism, by embedding the agent in the natural causal order, dissolves this boundary. What looks like an act of originating assent is, on the naturalist account, a physical event determined by the agent’s prior physical constitution and history.

The contradiction is load-bearing. An ethical naturalism that held libertarian free will would have to posit a rational faculty that stands outside the natural causal order, which is precisely what P3 denies.

Commitment 3 — Ethical Intuitionism

Test question: Does the ideology hold that there are moral facts that rational agents can know non-empirically and non-inferentially, prior to any investigation of nature?

Finding: Divergent.

Presupposition P2 is decisive here. Ethical naturalism holds that moral knowledge is continuous with natural knowledge and arrived at through a process of investigation that has empirical and inferential dimensions. Even in Variant A, the most philosophically refined version, moral knowledge is acquired through understanding what human nature is and what it requires — a process that involves natural investigation, not direct non-empirical apprehension. Moral truths are not grasped prior to any investigation of nature; they are derived from, or at minimum strongly constrained by, what that investigation yields. The naturalist moral epistemology is, in Sterling’s terms, empirical and inferential rather than intuitional and foundational.

This contradicts Commitment 3. The governing corpus (Stoicism, Moral Facts, and Ethical Intuitionism, Sterling, ISF February 24 and March 13, 2020) argues that the alternatives are intuitionism or nihilism, with no defensible third option. Moral terms cannot be heard, smelt, tasted, seen, or felt; they cannot be established by empirical investigation of any kind. The same rational faculty that gives direct knowledge of mathematical truths gives direct knowledge of moral truths. Ethical naturalism’s program of deriving moral claims from natural investigation attempts precisely the third option Sterling rules out: arriving at moral truths through empirical routes. The resulting moral knowledge, whatever its merits, is not moral knowledge in the sense the corpus requires. It is natural knowledge with moral implications, which is a different epistemic structure.

The contradiction is load-bearing. An ethical naturalism that abandoned P2 and held that moral knowledge is non-empirical and non-inferential would have no basis for calling itself naturalism, since it would have conceded that there is a categorically distinct mode of moral apprehension that operates independently of natural investigation.

Commitment 4 — Foundationalism

Test question: Does the ideology rest on first principles it treats as non-negotiable, necessary, self-evident truths not derived from empirical observation?

Finding: Partial Convergence.

Ethical naturalism, particularly in Variants A and B, is not anti-foundationalist in the strong coherentist sense. It holds that there are objective natural facts about human nature and flourishing, and that these facts function as a grounding structure for moral claims rather than being themselves derived from moral reasoning. The position is not one in which all moral and natural claims are equally revisable by any consideration that bears on them. There is a structural hierarchy: facts about natural kinds and their requirements are foundational relative to specific moral claims that are derived from them. This is Partially Convergent with Commitment 4.

The residual preventing full Convergence: the foundational principles that ethical naturalism identifies — facts about what human beings are and what they require to flourish — are themselves derived from empirical investigation of human nature. They are not self-evident first principles grasped by rational apprehension independently of any empirical inquiry. The corpus (Stoicism, Foundationalism, and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge, Sterling, January 19, 2015) specifies: “The fundamental truths of ethics are necessary, self-evident truths. They are necessary, self-evident truths that any rational faculty can apprehend directly.” Ethical naturalism’s foundational principles are not necessary or self-evident in this sense; they are empirically warranted and in principle revisable if the relevant natural investigation yields different results. The structure is foundationalist in form but empiricist in content.

Commitment 5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth

Test question: Does the ideology treat its moral claims as true or false independently of who holds them, what consequences follow, or what consensus ratifies them?

Finding: Partial Convergence.

Ethical naturalism, in its dominant forms (Variants A and B), is a realist position. It holds that moral claims are objectively true or false, determined by facts that hold independently of what anyone believes or prefers. Foot, Hursthouse, Gill, and Cornell realists all hold that there is a fact of the matter about human flourishing and virtue that is not constructed by social consensus or individual preference. In this respect the position converges with Commitment 5’s requirement that moral claims correspond to mind-independent reality.

The residual preventing full Convergence: the “mind-independent reality” to which moral claims are held to correspond is, on the naturalist account, the natural world. The governing corpus (Stoicism, Correspondence Theory of Truth, and Objective Moral Facts, Sterling) specifies that moral facts are objective facts about the structure of value that hold independently of any natural facts about human beings or the cosmos. On the naturalist account, if human beings were constituted differently, the moral facts bearing on them would be different too. On the corpus’s account, the moral fact that externals are not genuinely good or evil is not contingent on facts about human constitution; it is a necessary truth about the structure of value that any rational faculty can apprehend directly. The naturalist account grounds moral objectivity in natural objectivity; the corpus grounds moral objectivity in a freestanding moral realism. Correspondence theory is operative in both, but what the moral claims correspond to differs fundamentally.

Commitment 6 — Moral Realism

Test question: Does the ideology treat good and evil as objective properties — real features of the world that reason can discover independently of preference or cultural formation?

Finding: Partial Convergence.

Ethical naturalism in its dominant variants is robustly realist. Variant A holds that what is genuinely good for a human being is determined by objective facts about human nature and is not reducible to what any individual or community prefers. Virtue is genuinely excellent, not merely preferred or socially stipulated as excellent. This is Partially Convergent with Commitment 6.

The residual: the objectivity of moral facts on the naturalist account is derivative from the objectivity of natural facts. The governing corpus (Stoicism, Moral Realism, and the Necessity of Objective Moral Facts, Sterling) holds that moral facts “have no source, just as 2+2=4 has no source” — they are fundamental, necessary, and unalterable facts about the universe, not derived from any more basic class of facts. Sterling’s specific moral realism is non-naturalist: “only virtue is good” is not a truth derivable from facts about human nature or the natural order. It is a necessary truth about the structure of value apprehensible by the rational faculty directly. Ethical naturalism’s moral realism is real but naturalist; Sterling’s is real and non-naturalist. The difference is philosophically significant: on the naturalist account, if the natural facts about human beings were different, what counts as genuinely good for them would be different. On Sterling’s account, the good is what it is necessarily, independently of any facts about human constitution.

Variant C (evolutionary or social-functional naturalism) is further from Convergence: it grounds moral objectivity in evolutionary history or social function, which makes moral facts contingent on facts that are not only natural but specifically historical and local. For Variant C, the finding approaches Divergent on this commitment.

Self-Audit — Step 2:

  • Have I audited all core presuppositions, or selectively addressed the easier ones? All four core presuppositions have been addressed against all six commitments where they bear.
  • Have I used Orthogonal to avoid a Divergent finding? No. No Orthogonal finding appears; all commitments are operative in ethical naturalism’s domain.
  • Have I distributed findings to achieve apparent balance? No. The findings track the analysis: two Divergent (C1, C2, C3), three Partial Convergence (C4, C5, C6).
  • Have I issued findings on questions outside the corpus’s domain? No.
  • Would I issue the same findings for an ideology I find politically sympathetic? Yes.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 3.


Step 3 — Stage Two Variant Differential

Governing question: Do any variant-specific presuppositions shift the commitment-level findings from Stage One?

Variant A — Aristotelian Eudaimonist Naturalism (Foot, Hursthouse, Gill)

Variant A strengthens the objectivity and realist character of the moral claims relative to the core position. By grounding virtue in the objective natural function of the human kind, it produces a moral realism that is more robust than Variant C’s and more clearly hospitable to objective moral claims. This produces a modest upward movement on C5 (Correspondence Theory) and C6 (Moral Realism): the finding remains Partial Convergence in both cases, but the gap from Convergence is narrower in Variant A than in the core position.

On C1 (Substance Dualism) and C2 (Libertarian Free Will), Variant A does not shift the findings. Eudaimonist naturalism does not posit a categorically distinct rational substance; the agent remains a natural organism assessed by natural standards. On C3 (Ethical Intuitionism), Variant A does not shift the finding. Foot and Hursthouse ground moral knowledge in natural investigation of human function, not in non-empirical direct apprehension. Gill’s developmental account of moral knowledge — in which the agent arrives at moral understanding through the process of ethical maturation — is explicitly empirical and inferential in structure. The C3 finding remains Divergent.

Net differential for Variant A: No finding changes category. C5 and C6 move modestly upward within Partial Convergence. C1, C2, C3 remain Divergent. The baseline audit governs.

Variant B — Cornell Realism / Synthetic Naturalism

Variant B holds moral properties to be identical to natural properties by synthetic a posteriori identification, not by conceptual analysis. This produces no shift on C1 or C2: the agent is still a natural organism embedded in the natural causal order. It produces no shift on C3: moral knowledge is still arrived at through investigation rather than direct apprehension, even if the investigation is philosophical rather than straightforwardly empirical. On C5 and C6, Variant B is comparably placed to Variant A — robustly realist but grounding objectivity in natural rather than freestanding moral facts.

Net differential for Variant B: No finding changes category. The baseline audit governs throughout.

Variant C — Evolutionary or Social-Functional Naturalism

Variant C grounds moral facts in evolutionary fitness, adaptive advantage, or the functional requirements of stable social life. This produces downward pressure on C6 (Moral Realism): if moral facts are determined by evolutionary history or local social function, their objectivity is contingent in a way that the corpus’s moral realism cannot accommodate. The finding on C6 moves from Partial Convergence toward Divergent for Variant C. Variant C also produces downward pressure on C5 (Correspondence Theory): if moral claims correspond to evolutionarily or socially determined facts rather than to a mind-independent moral reality, the correspondence relation is of a different and weaker kind than the corpus requires.

On C1, C2, and C3, Variant C does not shift the findings; in fact, its more thoroughgoing naturalism deepens the divergence on C1 and C3.

Net differential for Variant C: C6 moves from Partial Convergence toward Divergent. C5 weakens within Partial Convergence. The baseline audit’s Divergent findings on C1, C2, and C3 are reinforced rather than softened. Variant C represents the most philosophically divergent form of ethical naturalism from the corpus’s standpoint.

Significance of the Variant Differential: The differential shows that the ideology’s internal variation is philosophically significant primarily on C5 and C6, where Variant A represents the most favorable form for an agent who holds the six commitments. However, no variant shifts any of the three Divergent findings (C1, C2, C3). The core divergences are invariant across all forms of ethical naturalism. An agent who adopts any form of the position must accept the C1, C2, and C3 presuppositions as load-bearing elements of the ideology, regardless of which variant he favors.

Self-Audit — Step 3:

  • Have I examined variant-specific presuppositions rather than surface differences? Yes. The differentials identified are grounded in load-bearing presuppositions specific to each variant.
  • Have I identified differentials where none exist in order to soften the baseline finding? No. The baseline Divergent findings on C1, C2, and C3 are confirmed as invariant.
  • Have I stated clearly which variant-specific presuppositions are load-bearing? Yes.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 4.


Step 4 — Dissolution Finding

Governing question: Does ethical naturalism’s architecture require the agent to dissolve himself into an external system?

C1: Divergent.
C2: Divergent.

Both Commitment 1 and Commitment 2 are Divergent. The dissolution rule applies without qualification.

Dissolution Finding: Full Dissolution.

Ethical naturalism structurally requires the agent to understand himself as a natural organism embedded in and constituted by the natural order, whose inner life is continuous with natural processes and whose assents are events within a causally ordered natural system. No residue of a categorically distinct rational faculty standing prior to and independent of those conditions remains within the ideology’s architecture. The self-governing rational faculty the corpus identifies as the agent’s true identity — the prohairesis that is categorical prior to all externals, including the body — has no place in a framework in which the agent is a natural kind member assessed by natural standards.

An agent who adopts ethical naturalism as his governing self-description must understand himself as constituted by forces external to what the corpus calls his prohairesis, and his assents as events within the causal order rather than genuine originations. This is the structure the corpus identifies as the root of pathos: the implicit placement of the agent’s identity and wellbeing in conditions external to his genuine self-governing capacity.

Variant differential applied to dissolution: No variant shifts the dissolution finding. All three variants of ethical naturalism hold P3 (the agent as natural organism) and the compatibilist account of agency that follows from it. Variant A, the most philosophically developed and most hospitable to moral seriousness, does not posit a categorically distinct rational substance. The Full Dissolution finding is invariant across all variants.

This is a philosophical finding, not a political verdict. Ethical naturalism is not thereby condemned as institutionally unjust, strategically misguided, or historically failed. The finding is narrower: it identifies what the ideology requires of an agent who adopts it as a governing self-description, specifically what it requires him to accept about the nature of his own rational faculty and its relationship to the natural world.

Self-Audit — Step 4:

  • Does the dissolution finding follow mechanically from the commitment-level findings? Yes. Both C1 and C2 are Divergent. Full Dissolution follows without adjustment.
  • Is the dissolution finding stated as a philosophical finding, not a political verdict? Yes.
  • Has the variant differential been applied correctly to the dissolution finding? Yes. No variant shifts it.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 5.


Step 5 — Summary Finding

Part A — Commitment Pattern

Commitment 1 — Substance DualismDivergent
Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free WillDivergent
Commitment 3 — Ethical IntuitionismDivergent
Commitment 4 — FoundationalismPartial Convergence
Commitment 5 — Correspondence Theory of TruthPartial Convergence
Commitment 6 — Moral RealismPartial Convergence

Pattern summary: Three Divergent (C1, C2, C3); three Partial Convergence (C4, C5, C6). No Convergent findings. No Orthogonal findings.

Deepest point of divergence: C1, C2, and C3 together constitute a structural cluster of divergences that are not independent. They are entangled: the denial of substance dualism (C1) forces the compatibilist account of agency (C2), which in turn closes off the non-empirical rational apprehension required by ethical intuitionism (C3). A faculty embedded in the natural causal order cannot be the genuine originator of its own assents (C2) and cannot have the categorically distinct mode of access to moral truth that intuitionism requires (C3). The three Divergent findings are not three separate problems; they are three expressions of the same underlying commitment to naturalizing the moral subject and moral knowledge.

Strongest point of convergence: C5 and C6 in Variant A. Aristotelian eudaimonist naturalism holds moral claims to be genuinely objectively true, determined by mind-independent facts about human nature and flourishing. This is a genuine point of convergence with the corpus’s realism and correspondence theory, even though the grounding of that objectivity differs fundamentally. An agent who holds Variant A is not a moral relativist or a constructivist; he holds a position in which moral claims have real truth conditions. This is worth acknowledging as a philosophical strength, even as the audit identifies the three structural divergences that prevent compatibility.

Part B — Dissolution Finding

Full Dissolution. Invariant across all variants.

Ethical naturalism’s architecture requires the agent to understand himself as a natural organism whose inner life is continuous with the natural causal order, whose assents are events within that order rather than genuine originations, and whose moral knowledge is derived from investigation of nature rather than directly apprehended by a categorically distinct rational faculty. No version of the position preserves the ontological boundary that the corpus requires for the dichotomy of control to be real.

Part C — Agent-Level Implication

An agent who adopts ethical naturalism as his governing philosophical self-description faces the following set of implicit commitments.

On self-description: he must understand himself as a natural organism, a member of a natural kind, whose identity is constituted by his natural capacities and their exercise in relation to others and to his natural environment. He does not have a categorically distinct rational faculty standing prior to his body and social conditions. His “inner life” is the inner life of a complex natural being, not the inner life of a self-governing soul that is genuinely external to the material world. He has, at the level of self-description, accepted what the corpus identifies as the foundational false dogma: the identification of himself with something that belongs to the external order.

On agency: he must understand his assents and choices as events within the natural causal order, flowing through his rational character but determined by the prior conditions that produced that character. His choices are genuinely his in the compatibilist sense — they flow from who he is — but they are not genuinely his in the libertarian sense the corpus requires. The guarantee of eudaimonia that the corpus places in correct assent depends on assent being a genuine origination, not a determined output. An agent who has accepted the naturalist account of agency cannot coherently claim that guarantee, because the causal story his own framework tells about his assents is one in which the assent’s character was settled before the moment of apparent choice.

On moral knowledge: he must understand moral knowledge as arrived at through a process of investigation and development, not through direct non-empirical apprehension of self-evident truths. The claim that externals are not genuinely good or evil — the foundational corrective proposition of Sterling’s Stoicism — is not available to him as a directly apprehensible moral fact. It must be derived, developed, earned through the process of ethical maturation. This means the corrective criterion by which false dogmata are identified and refused is not immediately available to his rational faculty; it is a conclusion he is working toward, which means it cannot function as the instrument of correction at the points in his development where he most needs it.

The most practically significant implication is what follows from the Full Dissolution finding for the practice of Stoicism. The practical mechanisms of Stoic self-examination — prosochē, the discipline of assent, the evening review examined in “The Relationship Between Stoicism and Personal Examination” — are practices addressed to the prohairesis as a categorically distinct self-governing faculty. They are practices of guarding and correcting assent understood as genuine origination. An agent who has accepted the naturalist account of the self is practicing techniques whose rationale requires a kind of self that his philosophical self-description has denied. He is, at the level of philosophical presupposition, using an instrument designed for a different kind of agent than the one he takes himself to be.

This does not mean that an agent who holds ethical naturalism cannot benefit from Stoic practice. The practical benefits of prosochē and the discipline of assent may accrue to him regardless of his philosophical self-description. But it does mean that his philosophical account of those practices is incoherent: he cannot provide, within his own framework, a consistent explanation of why those practices are addressed to the right thing, why the faculty they target is what they take it to be, or why the guarantee they are supposed to secure — that correct assent guarantees eudaimonia — holds for an agent whose assents are events in a causally determined natural order. The practices are borrowed from a framework whose philosophical foundations the naturalist has declined to accept.

The relationship between Gill’s naturalist Stoicism and the Sterling framework, including the precise points at which the naturalist account fails to sustain the practical requirements of Stoic ethics, is examined in detail in “Virtue, Assent, and the Locus of the Good: Sterling’s Stoicism and the Limits of Gill’s Naturalism.”

Corpus Boundary Declaration: The CIA issues no findings on whether ethical naturalism is a correct account of moral epistemology, whether the Aristotelian eudaimonist version offers the best available secular account of virtue, whether it provides a superior foundation for environmental ethics or political philosophy, or whether any of its substantive moral claims are correct. Those are questions outside the corpus’s domain and outside the CIA’s reach. The findings are restricted to the philosophical presuppositions of the ideology and their entailments for an agent who adopts it as a governing self-description.

Self-Audit — Step 5:

  • Does the summary follow from the preceding steps, or has new material been introduced? The summary follows from Steps 1–4. No new analytical finding appears at the synthesis stage.
  • Has the agent-level implication been stated without converting it into a political verdict? Yes.
  • Has the corpus boundary declaration been issued accurately? Yes.
  • Is the summary self-contained? Yes.

Self-Audit Complete. CIA run complete.


Instrument: Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v2.0. Framework: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.