Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Sunday, July 12, 2026

The Burnout — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

 

The Burnout — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


The Burnout is too depleted to start. His depletion is real, unlike the other types’ imagined dangers — the audit must separate the fact of depletion, prudently managed, from the false judgments riding on it.

Reception

The Burnout faces the task and finds nothing there. What arrives for audit is the depletion presenting as incapacity: not “I don’t want to” but “I can’t.”

Recognition

Two layers. Surface: “My depletion makes right action impossible.” Beneath it, offered as diagnostic hypothesis rather than entailment: “The results I’ve been chasing were the good” — the sustained assent that produced the depletion in the first place.

Pause

The pause costs no energy the depletion has taken — it is itself an act within present capacity.

Examination

The boundary test applied three times: the chased results are external; energy is a preferred indifferent, to be stewarded, never the measure of the agent; and what remains untouched by any level of depletion is the willing of appropriate acts within present capacity. “Can’t” is true of the wrong thing — the full former output is out of range; the scaled appropriate act is not.

Decision

The results chased are externals, never the good. Energy is to be restored deliberately and never again mistaken for the measure of the self. Right action was never the full output — it is the willing of appropriate acts within present capacity, which remains intact. The act may be small. It may be rest itself, chosen as stewardship rather than collapsed into as defeat.


Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

The Hedonist — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

 

The Hedonist — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


The Hedonist chases immediate pleasure over the task at hand. This is the general form of the Thrill Seeker’s error: immediate pleasure is judged good, discomfort judged evil — the false value judgment operating pre-reflectively, and therefore, being a judgment, corrigible.

Reception

The task waits while he scrolls, snacks, watches one more episode. What arrives for audit is the drift itself: a thousand small swerves toward comfort and away from friction.

Recognition

The belief, two-sided: “Immediate pleasure is a good; discomfort is an evil.” Both are feelings, both external. Naming it converts what feels like wiring into a proposition — and a claim that can be stated can be tested, and a claim that can be tested can be false.

Pause

No assent in the nine is more continuously renewed. The pause is difficult because the belief is so old it presents as perception rather than judgment.

Examination

Both poles of the policy sit outside the boundary of control. A life steered by pleasant-now versus unpleasant-now has handed the rudder to the immediate environment. Every swerve is this policy executing — not wiring expressing itself but a judgment cashing itself out, and judgments, unlike wiring, are in our control.

Decision

Pleasure and discomfort are externals, indifferent. The good is the right use of judgment and will; its discomfort cannot harm him. He does the task, discomfort and all — not by overpowering the appetite, but because its funding judgment has been withdrawn.


Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

The Rebel — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

 

The Rebel — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


The Rebel feels a lack of control over life, so delays as a way to assert autonomy and push back against resented authority figures. Another’s will is external and cannot touch the rational faculty; delay as revenge treats an indifferent — the authority’s expectation — as an evil, and treats harming his own interest as a good.

Reception

The task sits undone, and the Rebel knows why: someone else assigned it, expects it, presumes to dictate his time. What arrives for audit is resentment, with the delay as its expression.

Recognition

Two beliefs surface: “Their demand is an evil — it injures my autonomy,” and, riding on it, “Delaying is good — it repays the injury.” Another person’s demand is external; classing it an evil has the prohibited shape. Classing the delay a good inverts the same error.

Pause

The pause is hardest to perform here, because the resentment presents itself as self-respect. Examining a claim is not capitulating to the claimant.

Examination

Another person’s will is external and cannot touch the faculty of judgment and assent — so the alleged injury is impossible in principle, not merely tolerable. The delay-as-revenge further spends the Rebel’s own undone work as ammunition, harming his own sphere to inflict a frustration landing in someone else’s externals. The demand is already issued, so the assent presents as emotion — anger, resentment — rather than aversion toward something pending.

Decision

Real autonomy is the will’s freedom to judge rightly, already intact; the demand is indifferent. He acts for his own reasons, judged by his own examination, on his own authority — not because he submitted, but because compliance and defiance were both letting another’s will set his agenda.


Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

The Thrill Seeker — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

 

The Thrill Seeker — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


The Thrill Seeker enjoys the rush of an impending deadline and scrambles at the last minute. Pleasure is indifferent; judging it good makes it a desire that commands the schedule.

Reception

Weeks of calm avoidance, then the deadline looms and everything changes — focus sharpens, the work pours out, and it feels magnificent. What arrives for audit is the appetite for that rush, plus its cost: a schedule quietly reorganized around manufacturing emergencies.

Recognition

The belief: “The rush is a good.” The rush is a feeling produced by circumstance — an external. The belief has exactly the prohibited shape.

Pause

The assent renews itself with every surge, making this the most self-reinforcing assent of the nine. The pause declines to keep endorsing the claim that pleasant means good.

Examination

The rush is circumstance-dependent, which is why he must keep arranging the conditions for it — an external he cannot even directly produce has been placed in charge of when he works. His appetite for the rush exists because he judged the rush a good; since the appetite comes from a judgment, and judgments are in his control, directing it at an external is irrational. Each payout settles one instance and opens the next pending one, so the desire cycles.

Decision

The rush is a feeling, external and indifferent — pleasant when it comes, never the good. The good is the right use of judgment and will, available at any point on the calendar. He starts early — not renouncing enjoyment, but demoting it from governor to occurrence.


Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

The Zigzagger — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

 

The Zigzagger — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


The Zigzagger constantly shifts attention from one task to another, so nothing gets finished. He is the exception among the nine: no single false belief, but a habit of unexamined assent — the disease is upstream of content.

Reception

The Zigzagger’s day is motion without completion. What arrives for audit is not a single disturbance but a pattern: attention re-captured by whatever appears, serially.

Recognition

The audit tries to name the belief and finds no single target. The closest approximation is a policy: “whatever appears now is worth pursuing” — each arriving impression’s implicit claim, endorsed automatically. No single micro-assent is load-bearing; correct any one and the next arrival gets the same automatic yes.

Pause — the actual site of the failure

For the other eight types, the pause is a step performed within the audit. For the Zigzagger, the pause is the thing that is broken: no gap ever opens between an impression’s arrival and his assent to it.

Examination

He has ceded the direction of his will to the arrival order of externals. Each automatic assent spawns a micro-desire; the churn is this mechanism executing over and over, serially, rather than one sustained error.

Decision — issued prospectively

He has no located belief to replace. His decision is a standing rule about assent itself: no arriving impression’s claim to matter will be endorsed until it has been examined. This is discipline installed in advance, not a corrected judgment recalled after the fact — a repaired pause, not a replaced belief.


Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

The Dreamer — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

 

The Dreamer — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


The Dreamer spends time fantasizing about the future instead of doing what is needed in the present. He desires an external — the fantasized outcome — while withholding assent from the impression that action now is the appropriate act. The fantasy is pleasant precisely because it delivers the feeling of the good without the willing.

Reception

The Dreamer sits with the task undone, vividly elsewhere. What arrives for audit is not pain but pleasure — anticipatory pleasure consumed in place of action.

Recognition

The belief: “The imagined future is the good — and the present task, by comparison, is not.” The imagined future is an external outcome; the belief has exactly the prohibited shape. If the good is the external outcome, vividly picturing it yields a preview of the good, with none of the work that willing requires.

Pause

The pause withholds re-assent, declining to keep endorsing the value claim riding on the image while it stands under review.

Examination

The imagined future is external, doubly removed as an imagined outcome. What sits inside the boundary is exactly what the Dreamer is not doing: the willing of the appropriate act now. His desire for the imagined future exists because he judged it the good; since the fantasy previews that good, desire flows to the previewing rather than the producing. The entire structure lives in the not-yet, and nothing in the experience protests, which is why the fantasy is the most stable of the nine.

Decision

The imagined future is external and indifferent — pleasant to picture, incapable of being the good. The only good on offer is the willing of the appropriate act now. He turns to the task — not because he suppressed the dream, but because its funding was cut.


Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

The Perfectionist — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

 

The Perfectionist — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


The Perfectionist is fixated on getting everything exactly right before starting or finishing. His belief locates the good in a property of the product — its flawlessness — rather than in the agent’s exercise of judgment and will in producing it. The work’s imperfection is indifferent; the right use of the impression in producing it is the whole good.

Reception

The Perfectionist stalls, or cannot finish, because conditions are never quite right. What arrives for audit is anxiety that spikes whenever the work threatens to fall short of flawless.

Recognition

The belief: “This work is good only if flawless — and flawed work is an evil that reflects on me.” Virtue is the only genuine good; the product’s quality is a property of an external object, so the belief has exactly the prohibited shape.

Pause

The checking loop renews the assent with every reread. The pause withholds re-assent and interrupts the loop.

Examination

The doing of the work is in his control; the product and its reception are not. Flawlessness is a property of the external object, assessed against standards he does not command — a near-miss that mimics the Stoic position while inverting it. His desire for the flawless product exists because he judged flawlessness the good; since the desire comes from a judgment, and judgments are in his control, directing it at an uncontrollable standard is irrational. Because “flawless” is unreachable, the outcome is permanently pending, guaranteeing the anxiety never resolves.

Decision

The good in the work is the right use of judgment and will in producing it — complete in each moment he exercises it. The product’s imperfection is indifferent. He ships it — not because he lowered his standards, but because he relocated them to the one place a standard can actually be met.


Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

The Pessimist — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

 

The Pessimist — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


The Pessimist fears failure and concludes there is no point in even trying, tending to underestimate himself. Two false judgments operate together: that failure is an evil, and that success — an external result — is the good being pursued. The only success that is ever up to him is judging rightly and willing rightly, which cannot fail.

Reception

The Pessimist looks at the task and does not start, because there is no point. What arrives for audit is despair — a conviction so settled it forecloses action before it begins.

Recognition

Named flatly, the despair rests on two beliefs: that failure would be an evil, and that success is the good he is pursuing, now out of reach. Virtue is the only genuine good, vice the only genuine evil; therefore no external is ever good or evil. Both beliefs have exactly the prohibited shape — one locating the good out of reach, the other locating the evil as inevitable.

Pause

The beliefs renew themselves each time he glances at the task. The pause interrupts that renewal, withholding re-assent to both while they stand under review.

Examination

Failure is external. Success, as he has defined it, is equally external. Both poles of his despair sit outside the boundary of his control. His aversion to failure and his hopeless craving for success both exist because he has judged externals to be good or evil — and since these judgments are in his control, directing them at externals is irrational. Even his estimate of his own capacity concerns an external question; the internal question — can he judge and will rightly here — has an answer never in doubt. This is the settled-outcome branch: the verdict is treated as already returned, which is why the affect is despair rather than fear.

Decision

The only success that was ever up to him is judging rightly and willing rightly, and that cannot fail, because it depends on nothing outside his will. He begins — not because his self-estimate improved, but because the question it was answering turned out to be the wrong question.


Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

The Worrier — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

 

The Worrier — A Procrastination Type, Corrected

Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


The Worrier becomes so concerned something will go wrong that he is paralyzed and cannot act. The Stoic analysis names the operative false judgment: the bad outcome that might happen would be an evil. Since only vice is genuinely evil, no possible outcome of the task is evil; the paralysis dissolves with the judgment.

Reception

The Worrier sits before the undone task, paralyzed. What arrives for audit is not a fresh impression but the disturbance itself: the fear. The fear is not a mood that descended on him. It is the felt side of a belief he is holding — the belief that a bad outcome of the task would be genuinely bad for him.

Recognition

The belief is named: “If this fails, that would be an evil — a genuine harm to me.” Virtue — right judgment and right willing — is the only genuine good; vice the only genuine evil. Therefore no external is ever good or evil, and any impression asserting that one is, is false. The belief has exactly the prohibited shape.

Pause

The belief got in without inspection once. The pause is simply refusing to keep endorsing it while it stands under review.

Examination

Is the thing being called bad inside the Worrier’s control or outside it? The outcome is outside. Desires and aversions are caused by judgments about good and evil; his aversion exists because he judged the outcome an evil. Since aversions come from judgments, and judgments are in our control, directing this aversion at an external is irrational — the belief involves false judgment. The outcome is still pending, so the assent presents as aversion toward a future rather than as grief over something settled.

Decision

He assents instead to what is true: the task’s reception is not his to control and cannot harm what matters. Doing the work well is up to him; the good is in the doing. He acts — not because the fear was suppressed, but because the judgment that constituted it is no longer held.


Procrastination type: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

The Nine Types of Procrastinator — Series Index v1.0


The Nine Types of Procrastinator — Series Index v1.0

The nine-type taxonomy: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination: The Science of Why We Put Things Off and How to (Finally!) Stop (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


The One Error Beneath the Nine

Dr. Itamar Shatz identified nine types of procrastinator, each defined by a distinct pattern of delay. Applied through Sterling's framework, the nine types resolve into one error wearing nine faces: in every case, the delay rests on a value judgment that treats something outside the will as genuinely good or genuinely evil. The Worrier dreads an outcome; the Hedonist craves a pleasure; the Rebel resents another’s demand. Each has assented to a false impression that an external carries the weight of good or evil — and the delay is that assent, felt from inside.

This is why the nine are one. They are not nine disorders requiring nine remedies. They are nine presentations of a single error — the misplacement of the good — and they answer to a single correction: unfilter the impression, examine it against what is actually in our control, and withdraw assent from the judgment that an external can harm or complete us. Where the outcome, the pleasure, the product, the other’s will are seen for what they are — externals, indifferent to the only good there is — the desire that drove the delay is not managed but ungenerated. The passion does not have to be resisted, because it is no longer produced.

The contrast with the environmental approach is exact. Manage the surroundings — add friction, remove distraction, arrange accountability — and fewer tempting impressions arrive; but the false judgment stands, waiting for the next unarranged moment. The correction below enters where the error actually lives: at the act of assent, the one link that is always in our power. Eight of the nine are corrected by locating and replacing a false judgment; one, the Zigzagger, is corrected upstream, by installing the discipline of examination before assent. Each type is treated in its own document, running the same method to its distinct false judgment.


The Nine

  • The Worrier — “The bad outcome that might happen would be an evil.” Aversion toward a pending external, felt as paralysis.
  • The Pessimist — “My failure would be an evil, and my incapacity makes it certain.” A settled aversion that forecloses action before it begins.
  • The Perfectionist — “The work is good only if flawless.” The good misfiled into the quality of an external product.
  • The Dreamer — “The imagined future is good; the present task is not.” A fantasy that pays out the feeling of the good without the willing.
  • The Zigzagger — “Whatever appears now is worth pursuing.” Not a single false judgment but a habit of unexamined assent — the one type corrected upstream, at the Pause.
  • The Rebel — “Their demand is an evil and injures my autonomy.” Another’s will treated as an evil, delay pursued as revenge.
  • The Thrill Seeker — “The rush of the deadline is a good.” A pleasure judged good and left to command the schedule.
  • The Hedonist — “Immediate pleasure is good, discomfort is evil.” The general form of the error, operating pre-reflectively as a standing policy.
  • The Burnout — “My depletion makes right action impossible.” And beneath it, the results-as-good judgment that produced the depletion.

Four Ways of Not Doing the Thing — Procrastination in Three American Novels


The nine-type taxonomy: Itamar Shatz, Solving Procrastination: The Science of Why We Put Things Off and How to (Finally!) Stop (Tarcher/Penguin Random House, forthcoming 2026). Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Four Ways of Not Doing the Thing — Procrastination in Four American Novels

 

Four Ways of Not Doing the Thing — Procrastination in Three American Novels

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


Procrastination looks like one failure — the appropriate act, undone. Beneath the surface it is many failures, because the reason the act goes undone differs from person to person, and the reason is always a value judgment about something outside the will. Four American literary figures, read together, display four distinct such judgments so cleanly that they can stand as portraits of four types — and each maps to one of the three interpersonal solutions Karen Horney identified, with a fourth figure carrying the resignation solution past procrastination into something graver.

Two of them share an author, and that is not accidental. Arthur Mizener observed that Fitzgerald’s use of a narrator let him keep separate, for the first time, “the two sides of his nature, the middle-western Trimalchio and the spoiled priest who disapproved of but grudgingly admired him.” Fitzgerald split himself across Gatsby and Nick — and the split falls along a line the corpus recognizes. A third figure, Kerouac’s Sal Paradise, was likewise his author’s self-portrait, cast as satellite to another man’s energy. And Cather’s Godfrey St. Peter completes the set.


Jay Gatsby — The Will Misdirected Outward (Expansive Solution)

Gatsby is the least idle man in his novel. He builds a fortune, a mansion, a persona, a machinery of parties — enormous, sustained, genuine activity. Yet the appropriate acts of his actual life go undone, because the whole apparatus is aimed at a projected good: Daisy as she was five years ago, the past made recoverable, the ideal self confirmed by a world bending to match it. His conviction is stated nakedly — that of course one can repeat the past. The error is not weakness of will but misdirection of it: Gatsby holds one of the most powerful capacities for genuine origination in American fiction and points it entirely at an external not in his control and, as the novel proves, not recoverable.

His is the expansive solution — the good not merely imagined but performed outward into brick and light and display, the self magnified until the world must confirm it. What he defers is reality: Daisy as she is, the present as it stands, the self as it actually is rather than as the ideal demands. Nick’s verdict is the corpus verdict in Fitzgerald’s cadence — borne back ceaselessly into the past, beating against the current.


Sal Paradise — The Will Lent Out (Self-Effacing Solution)

Sal, too, is constantly in motion — thousands of miles, coast to coast and back — which is exactly why his procrastination hides so well. But the motion is not the appropriate act; it is a daydream given a steering wheel. Sal has located the good in another man: Dean Moriarty, the figure of apparently self-generating vitality, the intensity Sal feels he lacks and hopes to reach by proximity. His governing judgment is that the good lives in Dean and down the road — in the unnameable aliveness always one city further on — and his task is to stay in orbit.

This is the self-effacing solution: the good outsourced to a living external, the agent’s own standing point projected into a companion he can witness but never become. Every arrival disappoints because the good was never in any actual place; it was in the anticipation, and in Dean, who cannot supply it. Sal’s undone acts — the writing, the settling, the relationships he abandons to follow the anchor — are displaced not by his own imagined success but by the standing decision that success is someone else’s and his role is to accompany it. Where Gatsby performs the vitality he has manufactured, Sal orbits the vitality he believes another man possesses — the same projected good, the opposite relation to it.


Nick Carraway — The Will Withheld (Resignation Solution)

Nick presents himself as the one steady, judicious man in a novel of impulsives — inclined to reserve judgment, to watch from the edge, to stay above the moral disorder around him. This is the spoiled priest: the vocation for judgment and witness intact, the willingness to commit it withheld. His procrastination is on the appropriate acts of engagement and position-taking, and its distinguishing mark is that he has reframed the delay as a virtue — as breeding, as discernment, as being above the fray. This is the subtlest of the four, because the reframe conceals the failure even from the man committing it.

Here the corpus sees what ordinary reading cannot. Nick’s detachment is the resignation solution’s pride wearing the language of philosophical virtue. Horney named “stoicism” itself as a component of the resignation type’s idealized image — the man proud of his detachment, his self-sufficiency, his being above competition. Nick’s reserve is indistinguishable from genuine philosophical detachment and structurally its opposite: real detachment flows from seeing externals as indifferent; his flows from holding involvement as a thing that would compromise him and his aboveness as a thing worth keeping. He has taken the legitimate examining pause and made it a permanent residence, calling the arrested act wisdom. Mizener’s “grudgingly admired” catches the friction exactly: the pull toward Gatsby is real, but the priestly reserve will not act on it, and the unspent admiration is the tension between a vocation and its non-performance.


Godfrey St. Peter — The Will Discharged (Resignation Solution, Past Procrastination)

Cather’s professor has finished his life’s work and cannot take up his continuing life — the new house he will not inhabit, the family grown remote, the future he will not enter. On the surface this resembles depletion, but St. Peter has crossed a line the other three have not. A procrastinator still means to do the deferred act; the delay is a gap between intention and execution. St. Peter has withdrawn the intention. He has assented that there is no appropriate act remaining for him, retreating into the “original self,” the boy before ambition and family accreted — a self prior to all roles and therefore, he concludes, owing none.

His will is not misdirected like Gatsby’s, lent out like Sal’s, or withheld like Nick’s; it is discharged. He shares Nick’s resignation solution but has carried it past the withheld act into the abandoned one. He has even reached the first half of the Stoic insight — he correctly holds his achievements and reputation to be externals, not genuine goods. His error is downstream: from “these are not the good” he infers “therefore nothing is worth aiming at,” which does not follow, since externals lose genuine value yet remain appropriate objects of aim. St. Peter has collapsed that distinction, and his near-suffocation in the study shows where a discharged will drifts when nothing recharges it. He is not a procrastinator. He is the terminal case the whole category shades into.


The Pattern

Four men, four placements of the standing point from which a person acts, the three Horney’ solutions made visible in fiction. Gatsby, expansive, projects the standing point outward into a recoverable past and spends his will on an external that cannot be had. Sal, self-effacing, lends it to another man and orbits the vitality he thinks he lacks. Nick, resigned, holds it in permanent reserve and calls the hoarding virtue. St. Peter, resigned to the end, withdraws it into a self that generates nothing and stops willing altogether. Misdirected, lent out, withheld, discharged — the same rational faculty, aimed wrongly, outsourced, kept unspent, or abandoned.

And the corrective is one corrective in four fittings: the good was never in the recoverable past, never in another man’s aliveness, never in the clean distance of non-commitment, never absent because the work was finished — it was, in every case, in the right use of the will each man already had, and that no external past, no idealized companion, no protective reserve, and no completed achievement could ever have taken from him.


Source: Arthur Mizener, The Far Side of Paradise: A Biography of F. Scott Fitzgerald, rev. ed. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1965), p. 185.

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

Sterling on Kataleptic Impressions: The Primary-Source Record (v1.1)

 

Sterling on Kataleptic Impressions: The Primary-Source Record (v1.1)

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


Correction (v1.1)

The v1.0 text treated Sterling's kataleptic-impression avowals as if the category itself were coextensive with foundational moral principles — the case his 2019 avowals happen to invoke. This is imprecise. Kataleptic impression is the general epistemic category (an impression that could not have arisen from anything other than the object it represents); foundational moral principles are one instance that can fill it, not its definition. Section IV is revised accordingly, and a new Section V is added to state the scope explicitly. Nothing in Sections I–III changes; the quotations stand as verified.


Context

The corpus's general position — that impressions of particulars are claims about reality, not reality itself, while foundational moral truths are apprehended directly — is Dave Kelly's synthesis of Sterling's theorem architecture. This document sets that synthesis alongside Sterling's own dated words on the same question, drawn from the ISF/Gmail archive. The quotations below are exact, pulled from full message text rather than search snippets.

I. The Gap and Its Closure (2015)

In a thread titled "Kataleptic Impressions," Malcolm Schosha suggested that a kataleptic impression is one the agent grasps, rather than one that grasps the agent. Sterling replied by naming the classical problem of perception directly — the gap between impression and object — and identifying the kataleptic impression as the Stoic answer to it. Notably, this exchange concerned ordinary sense perception, not ethics:

“Malcolm: You have it backwards. A kataleptic impression is not one that grasps us, it is one through which we grasp the external object. The doctrine was developed in opposition to Skepticism. If there are no k.i.'s, then the skeptic will argue that knowledge (or perhaps even rational belief) is impossible. Since there is a gap between the impression in my mind and the object outside my mind, there is no way for me to ever know whether the impression is or is not accurate. This is a continuing problem in philosophy. Plato resolved it by affirming that the intellect could grasp (only) the eternal forms… Aristotle developed a theory according to which the forms enter our soul by means of a causal interaction with the external object, guaranteeing at least some access to the external world.”

“The Stoics, as 'dogmatists' who believed that knowledge was possible, affirmed the existence of k.i.'s, impressions which were the kind of impressions that could only come from the external object they appeared to represent, and hence could be the foundation of knowledge…”

“It is true that humans decide whether an impression is convincing or not. But if that's the whole story, then you're left with total skepticism, assuming that we agree that sometimes we assent to impressions that are false. The question is whether there are or are not ever impressions that 'couldn't be false', and, if so, what they're like.”

Sterling here states the veil-of-perception problem in his own terms and identifies the kataleptic impression as the specific device that closes it — not an impression that merely resembles its object closely, but one that could not have arisen from anything other than the object itself. The example under discussion elsewhere in this same thread was sense perception of physical objects, not moral principles.

II. Personal Avowal (2019)

In "Making correct use of impressions," George Richards pressed Sterling on how he could know his ethical judgments were correct. Sterling's reply was a direct, first-person epistemic claim:

“G: Because I have kataleptic impressions of the principles on which the judgments are based.”

A week later, pressed further on how he identifies the right action in a given situation, he repeated and extended the claim:

“G: I look at the likely effects of each action, and consider which are preferred and which are dispreferred indifferents. I also consider whether I have any role-duties that are relevant to the situation. Deciding the right thing to do is virtually always simple. (And my simplistic earlier answer plugs in here—I have kataleptic impressions of the truth of propositions about preferredness and duties.)”

These are not third-person descriptions of Stoic doctrine. Sterling states, of himself, that he possesses kataleptic impressions of foundational principles — direct grasp, not mediated claim — and that this grasp is what grounds his confidence in particular ethical judgments. This is an application of the kataleptic-impression category to the moral domain, not evidence that the category is defined by that domain.

III. The Greek Term and Its Locus

The term is phantasia kataleptike (φαντασια καταληπτικη). Its occurrence in Epictetus is Discourses 3.8.4, identified in the archive in a 2009 exchange with Jan Garrett, with the Greek quoted directly from the text.

IV. Corpus Significance

Set against the corpus's general claim — that the agent recognizes the impression as an impression, a claim about reality and not reality itself — Sterling's primary-source language shows that claim was never meant to be exceptionless. The gap he describes in 2015 is real and structural for impressions generally. But the kataleptic impression is his named exception: the one impression-type that is, by definition, not a claim that could fail to correspond, because it could not have arisen from anything but the object itself. His 2019 avowals show he takes this to be operative in his own case regarding foundational moral principles — but that is one instance of the category, not its boundary.

V. Scope: Kataleptic Impression Is Not Defined by Moral Content

Not every kataleptic impression is a fundamental moral principle. The category is structural — defined by the relation between impression and object, not by subject matter — and the corpus's own epistemology-restoration material states its scope explicitly: kataleptic impressions cover perceptual facts, logical relationships, and basic principles as three distinct instances of the same structure. The 2015 archive exchange bears this out directly: the worked example under dispute was ordinary sense perception (ripe apple versus wax replica, in the wider scholarly literature Sterling was drawing on), not ethics.

Three known instances, then, not one:

  • Ordinary sense perception under ideal conditions — the classical case, and the one Sterling and Malcolm were actually discussing in 2015.
  • Logical and mathematical relations — that a valid conclusion follows, that a proof holds.
  • Foundational moral principles — Sterling's 2019 usage, and the instance C3/ethical intuitionism specifically needs.

An open question, not resolved in the archive material reviewed so far: how far Sterling extends the category beyond perception into logical/rational content, and whether he treats all three instances as structurally identical or draws distinctions among them. This is flagged for further archive review rather than settled here.


Sources

  • International Stoic Forum (Yahoo Groups era), “Kataleptic Impressions,” message dated December 23, 2015. Author: Grant C. Sterling.
  • International Stoic Forum (Yahoo Groups era), “Making correct use of impressions,” messages dated August 19, 2019 and August 26, 2019. Author: Grant C. Sterling.
  • International Stoic Forum (Yahoo Groups era), “Epictetus' Kataleptike fantasia,” message dated March 31, 2009. Greek citation to Epictetus, Discourses 3.8.4.

Preserved by Dave Kelly, 2026.


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

The Map, Named — The Connective Map’s Closing Taxonomy, Explained in Detail

 

The Map, Named — The Connective Map’s Closing Taxonomy, Explained in Detail

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


The Text Under Explanation

The map, named. Four joints, not four sections: a fork within clause (a)’s correction (refusal / reframe), a hinge from clause (a)’s exit through an intervening chain into clause (b), a sibling channel with its own feedback loop back to the fork, and a convergence point where all three live channels combine to discharge the system’s opening promissory note. Clause (a) and clause (b) remain the two guards, each exercised as standing disposition or as recovery audit; everything else is either a parallel branch within that same correction, a direct continuation of their success, or a standing channel that needs no trigger at all.

This paragraph is the Connective Map’s summary sentence — the whole document compressed into a taxonomy. What follows unpacks it piece by piece.


“Four joints, not four sections”

The polemical core. Core Stoicism presents itself typographically as four sections in sequence — Preliminaries, Negative Happiness, Positive Happiness, Virtue — and the natural reading is linear: finish one, proceed to the next. The map’s claim is that the system’s real architecture is not the section boundaries but the four places where material crosses them. A section is a location in the text; a joint is a functional connection between parts. The count being the same — four and four — is coincidence: the joints do not correspond to the sections one-to-one; each joint spans at least two of them.


“A fork within clause (a)’s correction (refusal / reframe)”

Joint One. When the audit corrects the false judgment “this loss is evil,” the correction has two faces available, not one. Refusal: withdraw the false judgment and issue its negation — the loss is not evil, merely indifferent (licensed by Th10–12 alone). Reframe: go further and affirm “this is exactly as it should be” (requiring Th20–21, Section Three material).

The word “within” is precise: this is not a step after clause (a) finishes. Sterling’s own definition of rejection includes formulating the opposite of the impression and assenting to that, so the fork sits inside the correction itself. And per the ratified three-rung development, the fork properly has three rungs — refuse, negate, affirm — with the third detachable (deny Th20–21 and no guard falls) but indispensable for the “every waking second” claim.


“A hinge from clause (a)’s exit through an intervening chain into clause (b)”

Joint Two. Clause (a)’s exit is line 14 (Section Two). Clause (b)’s success condition is line 29 (Section Four). They are connected by a chain running through Section Three: 14 → 15 → Th16 → 17 → 29. “Truly judge” in line 15 is clause (a)’s success restated as a premise; line 15 is Th7 running in the legitimate direction — true belief producing the one safe desire, the desire for virtue; Th16 pays out any achieved desire in positive feeling; and line 29 imports 17’s result by name (“[by 17]”).

“Hinge” because it is the load-bearing connection between the two guards — this is the one channel that cannot be detached, since a guard’s own success condition cites it.


“A sibling channel with its own feedback loop back to the fork”

Joint Three. “Sibling” marks its independence: sensory pleasures (Th18–19) need nothing from either guard — no judgment behind them, so no jurisdiction over them. But line 19’s bracket is the trapdoor: desiring the pleasure to continue is a fresh false judgment (“this is good”), which routes straight back to Th10 — clause (a)’s entry point, where the fork sits.

“Feedback loop” is exact: the channel does not just run parallel; it continuously generates new cases for the guard it runs parallel to. The innocent channel and the case generator are the same channel.


“A convergence point where all three live channels combine to discharge the system’s opening promissory note”

Joint Four. The promissory note is 2* — “Complete happiness is possible. [To be proven below.]” — the only line in the system whose status changes as it runs. The discharge (line 23, together with 14 and 29) requires all three channels at once: the virtue channel (Joint Two) for appreciation of one’s own virtue; the sensory channel (Joint Three) for physical pleasures; the providential channel (Joint One’s third rung) for the continual appreciation of the world — the only channel that runs uninterrupted, and thus the only one that can meet Th2’s continual, uninterrupted standard.

“No single joint proves it alone” is the convergence claim — and per the Joint Four development, the discharge escapes circularity only because line 13 supplies an irrationality route that never touches 2*.


“Each exercised as standing disposition or as recovery audit”

The corrected two-mode model, holding the taxonomy to it. The guards are not interceptors — there is no window between impression and assent to intercept in. Standing disposition: the theorems held in advance as settled dogmata, so the false judgment never forms — immunization. Recovery audit: the same theorems worked backward from a pathos already underway — the corpus’s paradigm case. Two modes, one content.

Extension: this is now known to be complete for clause (a) but incomplete for clause (b). Per The One Available Stop — Clause (b) and the Pathos as Alarm, clause (b) alone admits a third mode — a prospective stop — because its case is announced in advance by the pathos that precedes it, rather than arriving unheralded the way clause (a)'s does. Sterling's own account (Excerpt Seven) is written from inside that window: “if I assent to this further idea then I will stalk angrily down the hall.” This doesn't reinstate the retired interception model; it identifies the one case where a genuine window exists.


“Everything else is either a parallel branch… a direct continuation… or a standing channel”

The exhaustiveness claim — every theorem outside the guards’ own clusters falls into exactly one of three classes. Parallel branch: Th20–22, the reframe available within the correction itself. Direct continuation: 15–17, running only from clause (a)’s success. Standing channel: Th18–19, needing no trigger from either guard.

Check the inventory: the guards’ clusters (Th3–14, Th24–29), the fork branch (Th20–22), the continuation (15–17), the standing channel (Th18–19), the convergence (23), and the motivation prior to all of it (Th1, Th2, 2*). Twenty-nine lines, none left over, none merely next in sequence. That is the paragraph’s final force: it is not a summary of themes but a complete classification — the demonstration, in one sentence, that the system’s parts relate by function rather than by position.


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

Saturday, July 11, 2026

The Systematic View for the Practitioner — Core Stoicism in Functional Order v1.2

 

The Systematic View for the Practitioner — Core Stoicism in Functional Order v1.2

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


Purpose

This document assembles the functional-order treatment of Core Stoicism — the order in which the practitioner's rational faculty actually works through the theorems when auditing a pathos already underway, rather than the order in which Sterling proves them — across the full span the two clauses govern: the motivational background, clause (a)'s value guard, and clause (b)'s action guard. It also does something the two prior documents did separately but not together: it catalogs every place the functional walk-through forces a citation to material not yet in view, and distinguishes the two different things that can mean.


Correction (v1.1)

The v1.0 text below described both clauses as intercepting an impression “at the point of contact,” before assent is given. Per the Tullia Case corrected run and the Pathos Already Occurred verdict — already applied to the two companion documents this one draws on — no such interception window exists. The language below is revised to match: clause (a) as the audit run on a belief already assented to, not a gate an impression passes through.


Prior to Both Clauses — Motivation

Th 1) Everyone wants happiness.

Th 2) If you want happiness, it would be irrational to accept incomplete or imperfect happiness if you could get complete [continual, uninterrupted] happiness.

2*) Complete happiness is possible. [To be proven below.]

These sit outside both clauses. They explain why operating either clause's content — whether as settled dogmata held in advance, or as the recovery audit — is worth the practitioner's effort at all.


Clause (a) — The Value Guard, Functional Order

Th 10) The only thing actually good is virtue, the only thing actually evil is vice.

11) Ergo, since virtue and vice are types of acts of will, they are in our control.

12) Ergo, things that are not in our control [externals] are never good or evil.

Th 6) The only things in our control are our beliefs and will, and anything entailed by our beliefs and will.

Th 7) Desires are caused by beliefs (judgments) about good and evil. [You desire what you judge to be good, and desire to avoid what you judge to be evil.]

8) Ergo, Desires are in our control.

9) By 5 and 8, desiring things out of our control is irrational.

13) [cf 9, above] Desiring things out of our control is irrational, since it involves false judgment.

Th 3) All human unhappiness is caused by having a desire or emotional commitment [I will henceforth say “desire” for simplicity] to some outcome, and then that outcome does not result.

4) Ergo, if you desire something which is out of your control, you will be subject to possible unhappiness. If you desire many things out of your control, the possibility of complete happiness approaches zero.

5) By 4, 2*, and Th2, desiring things out of your control is irrational [if it is possible to control your desires].

14) Ergo, if we value only virtue, we will both judge truly and be immune to all unhappiness.

Clause (a)'s content audits any belief that asserts some external is good or evil. The practitioner traces back to Th10 first because that is where the audit lands; the cluster then works outward through the guard's direct content, the definition its key term requires, the causal stake of the assent already given, and finally the motivational weight of that stake — the reverse of the order in which Sterling proves the same material.


Clause (b) — The Action Guard, Functional Order

28) Ergo, any act that aims at an [external] object of desire is not virtuous, since all desires [for externals] are irrational.

Th 27) Virtue consists of rational acts of will, vice of irrational acts of will.

Th 24) In order to perform an act of will, the act of will must have some content. The content is composed of the result at which one aims.

Th 25) Some things are appropriate objects at which to aim, although they are not genuinely good.

Th 26) Some such objects are things like life [our own, or others'], health, pleasure, knowledge, justice, truth-telling, etc.

29) Ergo, virtue consists of the pursuit of appropriate objects of aim, not the pursuit of the [external] objects of our desires. Such virtuous acts will give us good feelings [by 17], and since we have no desires regarding the actual outcome, they will never produce unhappiness for us.

Clause (b) operates only once clause (a) has failed: the desire is already present, and a further impulse names some response to it as appropriate. Unlike clause (a), whose case arrives unannounced, clause (b)'s trigger — the felt pathos — is loud and precedes the impulse, so a prospective stop is available here in addition to the standing-disposition and recovery-audit modes both clauses share; see The One Available Stop (Extension, filed separately). The practitioner meets line 28 first — the direct verdict against such acts — then works outward through what “virtuous” and “aims at” require, then the positive content of appropriate aim, and closes on line 29's success condition.


The Seams — Where Functional Order Shows the System's Joints

Walking the theorems in the order the practitioner meets them surfaces three places where a line cites material the walk-through has not yet reached. These are not the same kind of seam, and the difference is load-bearing for the system claim.

Seam One — internal to clause (a). Line 9 cites “5 and 8,” but in functional order line 5 has not yet appeared — it surfaces three entries later, in the Th3–5 block. This is an artifact of the exposition choice, not a fact about the text. Sterling's own numbering has 5 before 9; functional order reverses the motivational cluster to the end of the sequence, and 9's citation is caught mid-reversal. It reflects only how this document chose to walk through a single cluster.

Seam Two — clause (b) into clause (a). Line 28's clause “since all desires [for externals] are irrational” does not re-derive anything. It imports the entire clause (a) result — Th7 through 8, 9, 13 — wholesale, by citation rather than by proof. This is not an artifact of exposition order; it is a fact about the text itself, present regardless of which order anyone reads the theorems in. Clause (b) is built to presuppose that clause (a)'s work is already done.

Seam Three — clause (b) into Section Three. Line 29's “[by 17]” does the same across a section boundary neither clause has expounded here: it borrows Section Three's finding that achieving a desired outcome yields a positive feeling, without unpacking it. Also a textual fact, not an exposition artifact.

Seam One is a property of this document's choices and should not be read as evidence of anything about Core Stoicism itself. Seams Two and Three are properties of Core Stoicism’s own numbering — independent of exposition order — and are exactly the kind of evidence the closure-and-cross-citation property of the theorem-level system claim needs: the sections are not four independent lists, they are stitched together by named, numbered citation across section boundaries.


Standing Question

Line 17 — the referent of Seam Three — belongs to Section Three, which has not yet received the same functional-order treatment given here to Sections Two and Four. Whether that treatment is built next, and whether Seam One should be resolved (by reordering) or left visible (as an honest record of this document's own construction), are open for your instruction.


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

The Clause (b) Cluster, Explained Sentence by Sentence v1.1

 

The Clause (b) Cluster, Explained Sentence by Sentence v1.1

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


The Text Under Development

Clause (b) operates only once clause (a) has failed: the desire is already present, and a further impulse names some response to it as appropriate. The practitioner meets the direct verdict against such acts first, then works outward through what “virtuous” and “aims at” require, then the positive content of appropriate aim, and closes on the success condition.

28) Ergo, any act that aims at an [external] object of desire is not virtuous, since all desires [for externals] are irrational.

Th 27) Virtue consists of rational acts of will, vice of irrational acts of will.

Th 24) In order to perform an act of will, the act of will must have some content. The content is composed of the result at which one aims.

Th 25) Some things are appropriate objects at which to aim, although they are not genuinely good.

Th 26) Some such objects are things like life [our own, or others'], health, pleasure, knowledge, justice, truth-telling, etc.

29) Ergo, virtue consists of the pursuit of appropriate objects of aim, not the pursuit of the [external] objects of our desires. Such virtuous acts will give us good feelings [by 17], and since we have no desires regarding the actual outcome, they will never produce unhappiness for us.

This is Part IV of the consolidated functional-order document (v1.1). What follows develops it moment by moment, as the companion to The Clause (a) Cluster, Explained Sentence by Sentence.


“Clause (b) operates only once clause (a) has failed: the desire is already present, and a further impulse names some response to it as appropriate.”

Two structural facts sit in this sentence. First, conditionality: clause (b) has no independent existence — its trigger condition is clause (a)’s failure, so a practitioner for whom clause (a) never failed would never exercise clause (b) at all. Second, the two-stage failure mechanism from Sterling’s own account: the first false assent produced the desire (or emotion); now a further impulse arrives — “it would be appropriate for me to do X about this” — and this second candidate for assent is what clause (b) tests. His example runs exactly this shape: the anger already exists, then comes the further thought that it would be worthwhile to go find out who has been in the office, and assenting to that is what sends him stalking down the hall. Clause (b) is the test on that second proposition. Note also the corrected model’s fingerprint: an impulse names some response as appropriate — not an impression arriving to be caught. Like clause (a), this operates as settled dogmata or as recovery audit — and, per Extension (v1.1) below, clause (b) alone additionally admits a prospective stop, since its case is announced in advance by the pathos that precedes it.


Extension (v1.1)

Per The One Available Stop — Clause (b) and the Pathos as Alarm: clause (a) admits only standing disposition and recovery audit, since nothing announces its case in time — assent is typically implicit, and the pathos is the assent’s own affective face. Clause (b) is structurally different. Its trigger, a felt pathos, is loud and precedes the action-impression, and the resulting act of will unfolds in duration rather than arriving instantaneously. Sterling’s own conditional in Excerpt Seven — “if I assent to this further idea then I will stalk angrily down the hall” — is written from inside that window, presupposing the withholding is available there. This does not reinstate the retired interception model: the notice comes from the preceding pathos, not from an unannounced impression.


“The practitioner meets the direct verdict against such acts first” — Line 28

Functional order again puts the collision point first. Line 28 is to clause (b) what Th10 through 12 is to clause (a): the truth the candidate proposition contradicts. The impulse says “acting for this desired object would be appropriate”; line 28 says any act aiming at an external object of desire is not virtuous. But notice what kind of line 28 is: an Ergo, not a Th. Its whole force is imported — “since all desires [for externals] are irrational” carries the entire clause (a) cluster (Th7, then 8 and 9, then 13) as its premise. This is Joint Two territory from the Connective Map: clause (b)’s verdict line does not stand on its own ground; it stands on ground clause (a) already secured. Which is fitting, since clause (b) only ever runs when that ground has been established and the agent has slipped on it anyway.


“Then works outward through what ‘virtuous’ requires” — Th27

Line 28 uses “virtuous” as if defined; Th27 is the reach-back that defines it, exactly parallel to how clause (a)’s line 12 uses “external” and Th6 supplies the definition. Virtue consists of rational acts of will, vice of irrational — the whole moral question relocated from outcomes to the will’s own operation. This is what makes line 28’s verdict intelligible: the act aiming at the desired external is non-virtuous not because it fails or causes harm, but because it is an act of will proceeding from an irrational source. The verdict is about the act’s pedigree, not its results.


“And what ‘aims at’ requires” — Th24

The second reach-back. Th24 states that every act of will must have content — the result at which one aims. Two consequences. First, it makes line 28’s category coherent: acts can be sorted by their aim because every act necessarily has one; there is no aimless act of will to escape the classification. Second, and more important for what follows: it means the practitioner cannot comply with clause (b) by simply not acting. Refusing the vicious act still leaves the question “then what do I aim at instead?” open — an act of will needs content, and clause (b) so far has only removed a candidate. This is the hinge into Th25.


“Then the positive content of appropriate aim” — Th25 and Th26

Th25 is the doctrine that saves clause (b) from being a counsel of paralysis: some things are appropriate objects at which to aim although they are not genuinely good. This is the preferred-indifferents doctrine in propositional form, and it threads the needle that the whole system requires: Th10 stripped externals of genuine value; Th25 restores them as legitimate targets without restoring them as goods. The distinction is between what an act aims at and what the agent stakes his happiness on — aim is the content of the will’s act (Th24); value is a judgment about good and evil (Th7’s domain). Clause (b) polices the second while licensing the first.

Th26 then supplies the actual inventory — life, health, pleasure, knowledge, justice, truth-telling — and its “etc.” matters: this is an illustrative list, not a closed set. Per the Atomic Foundation’s standing classification, Th26 is the corpus’s one illustrative-rather-than-load-bearing basic line — nothing downstream derives from the specific contents of the list.


“And closes on the success condition” — Line 29

Line 29 mirrors line 14 exactly, one section over: as line 14 closes clause (a) with a double payoff (judge truly and be immune), line 29 closes clause (b) with its own double payoff (positive feelings from the virtuous act and no possible unhappiness from the outcome).

The mechanics of the second half deserve unpacking, because it looks paradoxical: how can the agent aim at recovering the stolen property, care enough to act, and yet be untouched when the recovery fails? The answer is the aim/desire distinction from Th25 running at full operation. The agent aims at the appropriate object — his act of will has that content — but holds no desire regarding the actual outcome, because desire would require the judgment that the outcome is good (Th7), and that judgment was never made. So Th3’s unhappiness mechanism, which needs a desire paired with a failed outcome, finds no desire to pair.

The “[by 17]” citation is Joint Two’s other end: the positive feeling comes from the one desire the agent legitimately has — the desire for virtue itself (line 15) — satisfied in the very performance of the act, regardless of how the world receives it. The act cannot fail as an act of virtue even when it fails as an intervention in the world.


The Asymmetry with Clause (a)

Clause (a) is purely corrective — it removes a false judgment and puts a true one in its place. Clause (b) is corrective and constructive: it removes the vicious response and, through Th25–26, supplies what to do instead. This is why clause (b)’s cluster contains an inventory (Th26) and clause (a)’s contains none — refusing a false valuation needs no replacement object, but refusing a vicious act does, because Th24 guarantees the will must aim at something. Clause (b) is where the system stops being a discipline of judgment alone and becomes a discipline of action.


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

The Connective Map — How Core Stoicism's Sections Actually Integrate v1.2

 

The Connective Map — How Core Stoicism's Sections Actually Integrate v1.2

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


Correction to the Prior Model

The Systematic View for the Practitioner v1.1 presented Core Stoicism as three pieces in a row: motivation, then clause (a), then clause (b), with two seams noted where clause (b) cited outside itself. That model was incomplete. It is not four sections in a row, and it is not two guards plus an appendix. It is a small number of pieces meeting at specific, named joints — some sequential, some parallel, one a fork, one a feedback loop — and this document replaces the linear walk-through with the map of those joints.



Correction (v1.1)

The v1.0 text below named clause (a) and clause (b) “purely reactive... triggered only by an arriving impression, never run proactively,” and described their operation at a “moment of contact” before assent. Per the Tullia Case corrected run and the Pathos Already Occurred verdict, this has it backward. No interception window exists between an impression’s arrival and assent. The guards’ actual operation is prospective — correct dogmata held in advance, Sterling’s own “immunization, not cure” — and what looks reactive is properly the recovery audit: correcting a pathos already underway, not catching one in flight. The joints below are unchanged as a map of logical dependency; what is corrected is the claim that either guard operates by real-time interception.


Extension (v1.2)

Per The One Available Stop — Clause (b) and the Pathos as Alarm, the two-mode model below is correct but incomplete for clause (b). Clause (a) admits only standing disposition and recovery audit; clause (b) admits those same two modes plus a genuine prospective stop, since its trigger — a felt pathos — is loud and precedes the action-impression, and the resulting act of will unfolds in duration. Sterling’s own account (Excerpt Seven) is written from inside that window: “if I assent to this further idea then I will stalk angrily down the hall.” This does not reinstate the retired interception model — the notice comes from the preceding pathos, not from an unannounced impression.


The Reactive Core: Two Guards at Two Moments of Contact

Clause (a) and clause (b) are not real-time interceptors — no window exists between an impression’s arrival and assent narrow enough to catch and screen a specific impression as it passes through. Their content operates in two other ways instead. Prospectively, as settled dogmata: a practitioner who already holds Th10 through 14 as his actual judgment needs no catch mechanism, because the impression that arrives simply meets a rational faculty that already judges truly. Retrospectively, as the recovery audit: when a pathos is already underway — the corpus’s own paradigm case — the same theorems are worked through backward, from the disturbance to the belief that caused it. Clause (b) alone admits a third mode: a prospective stop, since its case — unlike clause (a)’s — is announced in advance by the pathos that precedes it. Their internal order for the recovery case is fully expounded in Clause (a) in the Recovery Audit v1.1 and the clause (b) treatment in The Systematic View v1.1; this document takes their entry and exit points as given and maps what connects to them.

Clause (a)'s audit: a held belief asserts some external is good or evil. Entry point: Th10, the truth it contradicts. Exit point, on correction: line 14.

Clause (b)'s audit: once clause (a) has failed, a further impulse names some response to the resulting desire as appropriate. Entry point: line 28. Exit point: line 29.


Joint One — The Fork at Clause (a)'s Entry

Clause (a) is standardly described as purely negative: it corrects a false value-judgment about an external. That description is only half the picture. For the identical external — the same loss, the same event — a second, positive judgment is available, one clause (a) does not exclude because it is not a value claim about the external at all:

Th 20) The universe is, or is governed by, Nature, Providence, God or the gods.

Th 21) That which is Natural, or is governed by Providence, God, or the gods is exactly as it should be.

Th 22) If you regard any aspect [or, better, all aspects] of the world as being exactly as it should be, you will receive appropriate positive feelings.

This is not something the practitioner reaches only after clause (a)'s correction is otherwise complete. It is the other face of the same correction. The belief says "this loss is evil" — corrected by Th10 through 12. But the practitioner is not left merely having refused a false judgment, with nothing to replace it. The same correction offers "this is exactly as it should be" as a judgment that is both available and true. Refusal and reframe are two faces of one correction, not two separate steps.


Joint Two — The Hinge Between Clause (a) and Clause (b)

Clause (a)'s success condition is line 14: true judgment and immunity to unhappiness. The next line does not belong to clause (a) at all — it opens Branch One of Section Three, and it opens by naming clause (a)'s own success as its premise:

15) Ergo, if we truly judge that virtue is good, we will desire it.

Th 16) If you desire something, and achieve it, you will get a positive feeling.

17) Ergo, if we correctly judge and correctly will, we will have appropriate positive feelings as a result.

"Truly judge" in line 15 is clause (a) having succeeded, restated as a premise. Branch One is therefore not parallel to clause (a); it is clause (a)'s direct continuation. And its own exit, line 17, is exactly what clause (b)'s line 29 cites — "such virtuous acts will give us good feelings [by 17]." So the hinge runs: clause (a) succeeds → Branch One executes → its output is the premise clause (b) needs for its own success condition. What looked like two separate seams in the prior document (clause (a)'s exit and clause (b)'s import "by 17") are the two ends of one continuous chain.


Joint Three — Branch Two as Sibling, With a Feedback Loop Back to Joint Zero

Not every positive feeling runs through Branch One. Some require nothing from either clause:

Th 18) Some positive feelings do not result from desires, and hence do not result from judgments about value. [E.g., the taste of a good meal, the sight of a beautiful sunset, etc.]

19) Ergo, such positive feelings are not irrational or inappropriate. [Though if we desire to achieve them or desire for them to continue beyond the present, then that would involve the judgment that they are good, and hence that would be irrational.]

The base case is a true sibling to clause (a) and Branch One — it does not wait on either. But the bracketed clause in line 19 is a trapdoor: wanting the feeling to continue is a fresh value-impression, and assenting to it does not stay inside Section Three. It routes straight back to Th10 — clause (a)'s own entry point. Branch Two is therefore not purely independent; it is a channel that can, at any moment, generate a brand-new instance of the exact case clause (a) exists to guard.


Joint Four — Convergence at the Discharge of 2*

Section One opens with a deferred claim: "2*) Complete happiness is possible. [To be proven below.]" The closing paragraph of Core Stoicism discharges it — and it does so by drawing on all four joints at once, not on any single guard or channel alone:

23) Ergo, the Stoic will be positively happy, will have positive feelings, in at least three ways: appreciation of his own virtue, physical and sensory pleasures, and the appreciation of the world as it is. The last of those three is something that the Stoic could experience continually, every waking second, since at every waking second one can perceive something as being what it is, and hence what it should be.

Line 23's three ways are the map's three live channels at closing: appreciation of virtue is Branch One's fruit (the hinge from clause (a)); physical and sensory pleasures are Branch Two's base case; appreciation of the world as it is is Joint One's reframe, run continually rather than only at moments of loss. The proof of 2* needs clause (a)'s immunity (14), clause (b)'s guarantee that virtuous action never produces unhappiness (29), and the continual positive feeling of line 23 — together. No single joint proves it alone; the promissory note from Section One is discharged only by the map as a whole operating at once.


The Map, Named

Four joints, not four sections: a fork within clause (a)'s correction (refusal / reframe), a hinge from clause (a)'s exit into Branch One and onward into clause (b), a sibling channel with its own feedback loop back to the fork, and a convergence point where all three live channels combine to discharge the system's opening promissory note. Clause (a) and clause (b) remain the two guards, each exercised as standing disposition or as recovery audit — and clause (b) alone, additionally, as a prospective stop, per Extension (v1.2); everything else is either a parallel branch within that same correction, a direct continuation of their success, or a standing channel that needs no trigger at all.


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

Correct Use of Impressions in Functional Order — Clauses, Guards, and the Connective Map v1.2

 

Correct Use of Impressions in Functional Order — Clauses, Guards, and the Connective Map v1.2

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


Correction (v1.1)

The v1.0 text throughout this document described clause (a) and clause (b) as real-time interceptors — catching an arriving impression at a “moment of contact” or “point of contact,” before assent is given. Per the Tullia Case corrected run and the Pathos Already Occurred verdict, no such interception window exists: “The pathos is not downstream of the false assent as a separate event. It is the false assent, or its affective face. There is no intermediate stage.” One cannot extirpate a passion already underway (Seddon §40) any more than one can prevent sugar from tasting sweet once the cake is already in the mouth. The guards’ actual operation is prospective — correct dogmata held in advance, Sterling’s own “immunization, not cure” — and what looks reactive is properly the recovery audit: working backward from a pathos already present to the belief that caused it, per the corpus’s own paradigm case (the Smith example, which likewise begins after the anger already exists). Every part below is revised accordingly. The theorem sequences and their dependency structure are unchanged; what changes throughout is the trigger and the direction of travel.


Part I — The Two Clauses

Sterling covers correct use of impressions with two clauses:

a) Don’t assent to impressions that depict externals as either good or evil.

b) If we fail ‘a’, don’t assent to subsequent impressions that depict immoral responses to the good or bad thing as being appropriate.

What follows expounds both clauses in functional order — the order in which the rational faculty works through the relevant theorems when auditing a pathos already underway, rather than the order in which Core Stoicism proves them — and then maps how the guards these clauses describe actually connect to the rest of Core Stoicism's theorems.


Part II — Why Functional Order

Derivational order is the order of justification — the sequence in which the theorems are proved. A theorem appears only after the premises it depends on. In Core Stoicism: Th3–5 establish that unhappiness is frustrated desire; Th6 establishes what is in our control; Th7 establishes that desires come from value judgments; only then can Th10–14 do their work, because “desiring externals is irrational” (13) presupposes all three prior layers. Derivational order answers: what must already be established for this theorem to be proved? It runs from foundations upward. This is the order of the Atomic Foundation document — the dependency chain itself.

Functional order is the order of operation — the sequence in which the theorems are engaged when the practitioner actually works through them. Clause (a)'s content is engaged when a pathos is already present and its causing belief is being traced: the practitioner recognizes the disturbance, then works backward to what he must have believed to feel it. The first theorem touched is Th10–12, because those state the truth the held belief contradicts — that is where the audit lands. Th6 is consulted next, to classify the object as external. Th7 and its dependents explain what the belief, now located, is doing — sustaining the pathos by the same causal route that produced it. Th3–5, though derivationally first, are functionally last — they are the background motivation, not the first thing the audit reaches. Functional order answers: in what sequence does the practitioner’s rational faculty work through these truths when performing this audit?

The two orders are near-inverses here because justification builds from the ground up, while the audit works from symptom to cause — the pathos is already present before the premises are consulted. An analogy: a building’s derivational order is foundation, frame, walls, door. Its functional order begins at the door.

Both orders are corpus-legitimate; they serve different documents. A dependency map must use derivational order — that is the office of the Atomic Foundation. An operational exposition of the guards uses functional order, and that is the order used throughout the parts that follow: when a pathos is recognized, begin at the truth it contradicts, work back to the belief that caused it, and let the foundations stand behind rather than in front.


Extension (v1.2)

Per The One Available Stop — Clause (b) and the Pathos as Alarm, the two-mode model below is correct but incomplete for clause (b). Clause (a) admits only standing disposition and recovery audit — nothing announces its case in time, since assent is typically implicit and the pathos is the assent’s own affective face. Clause (b) admits those same two modes plus a genuine prospective stop: its trigger, a felt pathos, is loud and precedes the action-impression, and the resulting act of will unfolds in duration rather than arriving instantaneously. Sterling’s own account (Excerpt Seven) is written from inside that window — “if I assent to this further idea then I will stalk angrily down the hall” — presupposing the withholding is available there. This does not reinstate the retired interception model: the notice comes from the preceding pathos, not from the impression itself, and the time comes from felt duration, not from a gap between an unannounced impression and assent. Part IV and the “guards’ two modes” passage in Part V are extended accordingly.

Clause (a)'s content exists to correct a belief with a specific, recognizable shape: one that asserts some external — health, reputation, another person’s death, a loss of wealth — is good or is evil. The audit does not operate on beliefs in general. It operates on this shape of belief, once a pathos reveals that assent has already been given to one.

The exposition that follows does not begin with motivation or with the definition of control, though both are presupposed. It begins where the practitioner begins: with the disturbance itself, tracing back to the belief beneath it, and the first truth that belief runs into.

First Contact — the truth the belief contradicts. The located belief claims an external is good or evil. The first thing the rational faculty meets, tracing backward, is the foundational truth that makes the claim false on its face:

Th 10) The only thing actually good is virtue, the only thing actually evil is vice.

Nothing about externals is mentioned yet. Th10 simply fixes the entire extension of “good” and “evil” to two things: virtue and vice. Whatever the belief is about, if it is not virtue or vice, Th10 has already excluded it from the good/evil axis.

The guard’s direct content — reaching the external. Th10 alone does not yet mention externals. The next two lines carry the verdict from virtue and vice outward to everything else:

11) Ergo, since virtue and vice are types of acts of will, they are in our control.

12) Ergo, things that are not in our control [externals] are never good or evil.

Line 11 identifies virtue and vice as acts of will — the only things in our control. Line 12 is the direct restatement of clause (a)’s content: anything outside that boundary — any external — is never good or evil. This is the exact proposition the located belief denies.

The definition beneath “external.” Line 12 uses the word “external” as though its meaning were already settled. It is settled — by a theorem the practitioner must reach back for, because the guard’s key term depends on it:

Th 6) The only things in our control are our beliefs and will, and anything entailed by our beliefs and will.

“External” has no content except as the complement of this boundary: everything that is not belief, not will, not entailed by either.

The causal stake — what the assent did. So far the audit has established that the belief is false. It has not yet established why giving assent to it mattered practically, rather than merely as an error of classification. That is supplied by the theorem naming what the assent caused:

Th 7) Desires are caused by beliefs (judgments) about good and evil. [You desire what you judge to be good, and desire to avoid what you judge to be evil.]

Th7 is the hinge of the entire clause. Assent was not an inert filing of a proposition. Because the practitioner assented to “this external is good,” a desire for it was thereby produced — automatically, as a causal consequence of the assent itself.

The desire, traced forward. Two further lines follow directly from Th7:

8) Ergo, Desires are in our control.

9) By 5 and 8, desiring things out of our control is irrational.

Line 8 follows from Th7 together with Th6: since desires are caused by beliefs, and beliefs are in our control, desires are in our control. Line 9 then applies this: desiring something outside our control (an external) is irrational, because the desire need not have arisen at all.

The failure, named.

13) [cf 9, above] Desiring things out of our control is irrational, since it involves false judgment.

This line closes the loop back to where the audit began. It does not introduce new content; it names what has happened — a false judgment, the very judgment clause (a) exists to correct.

Why the stake matters — exposure to unhappiness. The theorems so far establish that the desire is irrational and false. They do not yet say what is lost by having it. That is supplied by returning to the motivational cluster — derivationally first, but functionally last, because it answers a question that only arises once the desire is already in view: so what?

Th 3) All human unhappiness is caused by having a desire or emotional commitment [I will henceforth say “desire” for simplicity] to some outcome, and then that outcome does not result.

4) Ergo, if you desire something which is out of your control, you will be subject to possible unhappiness. If you desire many things out of your control, the possibility of complete happiness approaches zero.

5) By 4, 2*, and Th2, desiring things out of your control is irrational [if it is possible to control your desires].

Th3 states the mechanism of unhappiness directly. Line 4 applies this to exactly the desire clause (a) has been tracking. Line 5 folds in the earlier irrationality finding to conclude that desiring externals is irrational on these motivational grounds as well — a second, independent route to the same verdict line 9 reached causally.

The success condition.

14) Ergo, if we value only virtue, we will both judge truly and be immune to all unhappiness.

This is what the correction restores: true judgment, because Th10 is now respected rather than contradicted, and immunity to unhappiness, because no desire for an uncontrolled outcome continues to be sustained.

The two outcomes of failure. Sterling’s own gloss on what happens when clause (a) fails matches this cluster exactly, and adds the one distinction the theorems above do not make explicit — timing: assent to a value impression yields a desire, if the outcome was still pending at the time of assent, or an emotion, if the outcome had already occurred. Th7’s causal claim is single, but its consequence branches on tense. The audit traces back through whichever branch actually resulted — the theorems above do not depend on which one, only on locating the belief that produced it.

The cluster in summary: Th10 (the target truth) → 11–12 (the guard’s direct content) → Th6 (the definition “external” requires) → Th7 (the causal stake) → 8, 9 (the desire traced forward) → 13 (the failure named) → Th3–5 (why it matters) → 14 (the success condition). Eight moments, one guard, met in the order the audit forces them into view, working backward from an already-present pathos to the belief that caused it.


Part IV — Clause (b) in Functional Order

Clause (b) operates only once clause (a) has failed: the desire is already present, and a further impulse names some response to it as appropriate. Unlike clause (a), clause (b)’s case is announced in advance: the felt pathos is the alarm, so a prospective stop is available here in addition to the standing-disposition and recovery-audit modes both clauses share — see Extension (v1.2) above. The practitioner meets the direct verdict against such acts first, then works outward through what “virtuous” and “aims at” require, then the positive content of appropriate aim, and closes on the success condition.

28) Ergo, any act that aims at an [external] object of desire is not virtuous, since all desires [for externals] are irrational.

Th 27) Virtue consists of rational acts of will, vice of irrational acts of will.

Th 24) In order to perform an act of will, the act of will must have some content. The content is composed of the result at which one aims.

Th 25) Some things are appropriate objects at which to aim, although they are not genuinely good.

Th 26) Some such objects are things like life [our own, or others'], health, pleasure, knowledge, justice, truth-telling, etc.

29) Ergo, virtue consists of the pursuit of appropriate objects of aim, not the pursuit of the [external] objects of our desires. Such virtuous acts will give us good feelings [by 17], and since we have no desires regarding the actual outcome, they will never produce unhappiness for us.


Part V — The Connective Map

Parts III and IV, read on their own, suggest a simple linear model: motivation, then clause (a), then clause (b), with two loose threads where clause (b) cites outside itself. That model is incomplete. It is not four sections in a row, and it is not two guards plus an appendix. It is a small number of pieces meeting at specific, named joints — some sequential, some parallel, one a fork, one a feedback loop.

The guards' two modes — and clause (b)'s third. Clause (a) and clause (b), as expounded above, are not real-time interceptors — no window exists between an impression’s arrival and assent narrow enough to catch and screen a specific impression as it passes through. Their content operates in two other ways instead. Prospectively, as settled dogmata: a practitioner who already holds the relevant theorems as his actual judgment needs no catch mechanism, because whatever arrives simply meets a rational faculty that already judges truly. Retrospectively, as the recovery audit expounded in Parts III and IV: when a pathos is already underway — the corpus’s own paradigm case — the same theorems are worked through backward, from the disturbance to the belief that caused it. Clause (a)’s audit: a held belief asserts some external is good or evil. Entry point Th10, the truth it contradicts; exit point, on correction, line 14. Clause (b)’s audit: once clause (a) has failed, a further impulse names some response to the resulting desire as appropriate. Entry point line 28; exit point line 29. Clause (b) alone admits a third mode: a prospective stop, available because its case is announced by the preceding pathos rather than arriving unheralded — per Extension (v1.2) above.

Joint One — the fork within clause (a)’s correction. Clause (a) is standardly described as purely negative: it corrects a false value-judgment about an external. That description is only half the picture. For the identical external — the same loss, the same event — a second, positive judgment is available, one clause (a) does not exclude because it is not a value claim about the external at all:

Th 20) The universe is, or is governed by, Nature, Providence, God or the gods.

Th 21) That which is Natural, or is governed by Providence, God, or the gods is exactly as it should be.

Th 22) If you regard any aspect [or, better, all aspects] of the world as being exactly as it should be, you will receive appropriate positive feelings.

This is not something the practitioner reaches only after clause (a)’s correction is otherwise complete. It is the other face of the same correction. The belief says “this loss is evil” — corrected by Th10 through 12. But the practitioner is not left merely having refused a false judgment, with nothing to replace it. The same correction offers “this is exactly as it should be” as a judgment that is both available and true. Refusal and reframe are two faces of one correction, not two separate steps.

Joint Two — the hinge between clause (a) and clause (b). Clause (a)’s success condition is line 14: true judgment and immunity to unhappiness. The next line does not belong to clause (a) at all — it opens a further chain, and it opens by naming clause (a)’s own success as its premise:

15) Ergo, if we truly judge that virtue is good, we will desire it.

Th 16) If you desire something, and achieve it, you will get a positive feeling.

17) Ergo, if we correctly judge and correctly will, we will have appropriate positive feelings as a result.

“Truly judge” in line 15 is clause (a) having succeeded, restated as a premise. This chain is therefore not parallel to clause (a); it is clause (a)’s direct continuation. And its own exit, line 17, is exactly what clause (b)’s line 29 cites — “such virtuous acts will give us good feelings [by 17].” So the hinge runs: clause (a) succeeds → this chain executes → its output is the premise clause (b) needs for its own success condition. The two loose threads noted above — clause (a)’s exit and clause (b)’s import “by 17” — are the two ends of one continuous chain, not two separate gaps.

Joint Three — a sibling channel, with a feedback loop back to Joint One. Not every positive feeling runs through the Joint Two chain. Some require nothing from either clause:

Th 18) Some positive feelings do not result from desires, and hence do not result from judgments about value. [E.g., the taste of a good meal, the sight of a beautiful sunset, etc.]

19) Ergo, such positive feelings are not irrational or inappropriate. [Though if we desire to achieve them or desire for them to continue beyond the present, then that would involve the judgment that they are good, and hence that would be irrational.]

The base case is a true sibling to clause (a) and the Joint Two chain — it does not wait on either. But the bracketed clause in line 19 is a trapdoor: wanting the feeling to continue is a fresh value-impression, and assenting to it routes straight back to Th10 — clause (a)’s own entry point. This channel is therefore not purely independent; it can, at any time, generate a brand-new instance of the exact case clause (a) exists to correct.

Joint Four — convergence at the discharge of 2*. The system opens with a deferred claim: “2*) Complete happiness is possible. [To be proven below.]” The closing paragraph of Core Stoicism discharges it — and it does so by drawing on all three prior joints at once, not on any single guard or channel alone:

23) Ergo, the Stoic will be positively happy, will have positive feelings, in at least three ways: appreciation of his own virtue, physical and sensory pleasures, and the appreciation of the world as it is. The last of those three is something that the Stoic could experience continually, every waking second, since at every waking second one can perceive something as being what it is, and hence what it should be.

Line 23’s three ways are the map’s three live channels at closing: appreciation of virtue is the Joint Two chain’s fruit; physical and sensory pleasures are Joint Three’s base case; appreciation of the world as it is is Joint One’s reframe, run continually rather than only at moments of loss. The proof of 2* needs clause (a)’s immunity (14), clause (b)’s guarantee that virtuous action never produces unhappiness (29), and the continual positive feeling of line 23 — together. No single joint proves it alone.

The map, named. Four joints, not four sections: a fork within clause (a)’s correction (refusal / reframe), a hinge from clause (a)’s exit through an intervening chain into clause (b), a sibling channel with its own feedback loop back to the fork, and a convergence point where all three live channels combine to discharge the system’s opening promissory note. Clause (a) and clause (b) remain the two guards, each exercised as standing disposition or as recovery audit — and clause (b) alone, additionally, as a prospective stop, per Extension (v1.2); everything else is either a parallel branch within that same correction, a direct continuation of their success, or a standing channel that needs no trigger at all.


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