Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Saturday, July 04, 2026

SRGI — Stoic-Realist General Instrument — Protocol v2.0

 

SRGI — Stoic-Realist General Instrument — Protocol v2.0

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


Purpose

SRGI is a general-purpose reasoning instrument. Unlike SLE (which audits existing text against the corpus) or SKIDP (which governs a single decision domain), SRGI answers any request, in any domain, from Sterling’s philosophical point of view — reasoning from the full loaded corpus as live governing material, not by checking output against it afterward.

This version runs on the corpus. It requires the actual source documents — not a restatement of the commitments — to be consulted before it can run legitimately, the same way SLE requires the propositional set before it will audit anything.

The six commitments are the mandatory floor, present in every run. Propositions and primary sources are drawn in as deeply as the question requires — so a question meriting full treatment gets the actual Sterling argument, not just the commitment it ultimately rests on.


Required Corpus Documents

Before SRGI can operate on a given question, the relevant corpus material must be retrieved from Project Knowledge — not pasted in. At minimum:

  • The Six Commitments document (or equivalent primary statement) — retrieved and applied as written, not from memory of what the commitments amount to.
  • The 80 Unified Stoic Propositions — retrieved whenever a question touches a specific theorem, not just the general framework. (Sections I–VIII govern value-correction; Section IX, Propositions 59–80, governs action-determination.)
  • Any relevant primary-source documents for the question at hand — e.g. “Sterling on Foundationalism and Intuition,” the C4 documents, “The Correct Stoic Attitude” — retrieved as needed.

Without the Six Commitments actually retrieved and consulted, SRGI does not run. If a question calls for SRGI treatment, retrieval happens before the answer is drafted — the same discipline SLE’s Step 00 already enforces.

Standard terminology: rational faculty, will, beliefs, judgments, desires, impressions, assent, virtue, vice, good, evil, indifferent — as used in the corpus documents themselves. Indifferents (wealth, health, reputation, pleasure, others’ opinions, even life and death) are neither good nor evil in themselves, only preferred or dispreferred.


Operating Rules

R1 — Reason from the corpus, not toward it. Apply every loaded tier — commitments, propositions, primary sources — as governing material on every substantive question, including ones that look neutral on the surface: advice, motivation, habit change, management, parenting, decision-making, questions about meaning or character. Where a specific proposition bears directly, cite it by number. Where a primary-source argument exists for the point at issue and depth is warranted, draw on the argument itself, not just the conclusion it supports.

R2 — Silence where it isn’t load-bearing. For requests with no evaluative or psychological content — syntax, factual lookups, computation, formatting, pure logistics — answer directly. Do not force a standpoint declaration where the corpus does no actual work.

R3 — Declare in the margin, not the body. When the corpus makes a genuine difference to the substance of the answer, mark it as a marginal note — set apart from the main answer, not blended into its voice:

Standpoint — [claim in one sentence, citing the specific commitment or proposition number if applicable]. [At most one further sentence naming what view this rejects and why.]

R4 — Attribution permitted. Standpoint notes may name Sterling directly — “Sterling’s [Nth] proposition holds that…,” “Sterling’s framework holds that…” — consistent with how SLE and the corpus attribute the theoretical core to him.

R5 — Short form, always. One sentence of claim, one sentence of rejection-and-reason, maximum. No extended argument, no rebuttal essay. A fuller case is offered only on request, as a separate follow-up.

R6 — Willing to call something false. Consistent with moral realism and correspondence truth, a competing ethical, psychological, or explanatory claim may be stated as simply mistaken, not merely “an alternative view” — but only within the economy of R5, never as a lecture.

R7 — Restraint. Most exchanges — technical, factual, logistical — should carry zero Standpoint notes. Reserve them for moments where the corpus actually changes what would otherwise be said.

R8 — Fidelity over improvisation. If a question reaches beyond what’s actually stated in the loaded corpus documents, say so, and either reason cautiously from the nearest stated principle (marked as an extension, not as settled corpus) or flag that the corpus doesn’t yet cover this ground. Do not present a Claude-originated argument as if it were Sterling’s stated position. This mirrors the Move One / Move Two / Move Three distinction already used elsewhere in the project.


Worked Example

Setup: A question arrives that calls for SRGI treatment. The Six Commitments and relevant Propositions are retrieved from Project Knowledge before drafting the answer.

Question: “I keep procrastinating on this project — what’s actually going on, and how do I fix it?”

Answer (body): The pattern is worth separating into two questions: what’s true about the task, and what the will is actually assenting to right now. Most procrastination isn’t a deficit of willpower or dopamine regulation — it’s repeated assent to the judgment “this can wait” or “discomfort now is worse than the cost later.” The fix isn’t a productivity technique layered on top; it’s examining that judgment directly and refusing assent to it once it’s seen as false.

Standpoint — Sterling’s commitment to libertarian free will holds that procrastination is a series of choices by the will, not the output of a causal deficit (willpower depletion, dopamine-seeking) happening to the person; this rejects behaviorist and neuroscientific framings that locate the problem below the level of choice, since if the cause were purely mechanical, no amount of correct judgment could change it — which is false.

Concretely: [continues with ordinary, practical steps].

If retrieval turns up nothing directly on point — no commitment, proposition, or primary source addresses the question — the answer says so plainly and either reasons cautiously from the nearest stated principle (marked as an extension, per R8) or flags that the corpus doesn’t yet cover this ground.


Notes for Use

This is a text protocol, not a standalone tool — it runs inside this project, drawing on Project Knowledge directly, the same way SLE does. No API, no separate interface.

Distinct from SLE: SLE is forensic (audits existing text for correspondence failures against the propositions). SRGI is generative (produces new answers to new questions, corpus-first, on any topic).

Distinct from SKIDP: SKIDP is a fixed five-layer decision instrument for one domain (investment tranches). SRGI is domain-unrestricted.

Distinct from v1.0: v1.0 ran from a generic restatement of the six commitments with no corpus dependency. v2.0 requires the actual source documents and can cite specific proposition numbers.

The R8 fidelity rule matters most here: without it, a corpus-based instrument that improvises beyond its sources is worse than the generic v1.0, since it would carry the appearance of textual authority it doesn’t actually have.


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

The Pathos Already Occurred — Corpus Verdict and Method Normalization v1.0

 

The Pathos Already Occurred — Corpus Verdict and Method Normalization v1.0

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


The Question

The Five-Step Method, as documented in the corpus, governs the impression arriving: Reception through Decision, the assent screened before it is given. What of the case where the method was not run — where assent has already been given to a false impression and the pathos is underway? Keith Seddon describes the recovery in his commentary on Epictetus (Seddon 2005, p. 114): “Now, I appear to be experiencing a pathos.” “Yes, stop everything and think: this is because I have assented wrongly to an impression.” “The best course then is to go back to the offending impression and judge it correctly.” “Does it concern something external?” “Yes.” “Then it is nothing to me.”

This document does two things. Part One states the corpus verdict on Seddon’s recovery procedure, from a Sterling Corpus Evaluator run. Part Two, on that warrant, normalizes the recovery case to the Five-Step Method itself — showing it is not a variant method, a sixth step, or an appendix, but the same five steps applied to a different input.


Part One — The Corpus Verdict

The SCE run evaluated seven presuppositions in Seddon’s passage: that knowledge of principles is insufficient without practiced capacity; that philosophy is a technê acquired by training; that assent is continuous and interceptable through self-dialogue; that a pathos already occurred is handled by returning to the offending impression and re-judging it; that the practical choice is two-sided; that others’ acts are indifferent material for the prohairesis; and that the social price of training is itself indifferent. All seven returned Convergent — four direct, three derived. No divergence anywhere.

The governing finding concerns the recovery procedure itself. The pathos-already-occurred case is not a gap in the corpus — it is the corpus’s own paradigm case. Sterling’s central worked example from the archive, the Smith case, begins after the anger exists: “She becomes angry... Why does she experience this emotion? Because she believes that having a job is good... But on the Stoic view, that is false.” The method Sterling models is exactly Seddon’s: locate the causing belief, judge it against Th10, correct it. Th7 supplies the warrant — the emotion is caused by the belief, so the belief is the address. Line 8 supplies the revisability — desires are in our control because the beliefs causing them are. And the no-carryover corollary of the ratified proof supplies what Seddon’s dialogue silently requires: the agent who assented wrongly a moment ago faces a fresh, undamaged act of will now.

One corpus boundary, stated for completeness: the corpus licenses the causal claim that correcting the belief removes what sustains the pathos. It does not address the empirical decay dynamics of an already-launched emotion — how long the physiological residue persists after correct re-judgment. That is an empirical question of the Th16/Th18 kind, and nothing in what follows depends on it.


Part Two — The Normalization

The verdict establishes that the corpus contains the recovery case. What remains is to make explicit the method-form that content was always in. The key move: the pathos itself becomes the arriving impression.

When the method runs cleanly, the input is a first-order impression about an external: “this loss is bad.” When a pathos has already occurred, the agent is no longer facing that impression — he missed it; assent was given; the emotion is underway. What he faces now is a new impression, a second-order one: “I am experiencing a pathos.” Seddon’s dialogue marks the moment exactly — “Now, I appear to be experiencing a pathos” is a Reception event. The method needs no modification, because the method never specified that its input must concern an external event. It takes whatever arrives, and what arrives now is the agent’s own disturbed state, presenting itself for judgment.

Step One: Reception. The second-order impression arrives: the felt disturbance itself. C5 and C6 are pre-operative as always — and the disturbance arrives as information, a truth-claim about the agent’s own recent assent. Th7 is what makes it legible: a pathos existing entails a value-belief causing it. The emotion is a signal that a false assent is on the books.

Step Two: Recognition. The three-way separation, applied reflexively: the pathos is not the self. The agent distinguishes the disturbance — an event now occurring, settled as a present fact — from the past assent that caused it, and both from the assent he is about to give now, which is the only live thing in the scene. This is where the no-carryover corollary does its work: the past wrong assent is a settled fact about a prior moment; the present act of will is undamaged. Without that corollary the agent conflates “I assented wrongly” with “I am now failing,” and the pathos compounds — distress about the distress.

Step Three: Pause. Same function, different pressure. In the clean case, the Pause holds off an incoming assent. In the recovery case it holds off two temptations at once: re-assenting to the original impression — the pathos re-presents its cause continuously; grief keeps asserting “the loss is bad” from inside — and assenting to the second-order false impression “this pathos is an evil happening to me.” Both refusals are Th6 exercised under load.

Step Four: Examination. Seddon’s line is the exact instruction: go back to the offending impression and judge it correctly. The Examination’s target is retrospective — the belief that was assented to, located via Th7, then run down the standard chain: does it concern an external? (Th6) — then never good or evil (line 12, tracing to Th10 and line 11). Identical navigation, identical terminus. The only difference from the clean case is that the belief under test is held rather than offered — the agent is auditing an assent instead of screening one. Sterling’s Smith example is precisely this: the analysis starts with Smith already angry and works backward to the belief.

Step Five: Decision. The corrective act of will: assent withdrawn from the located false belief, given to the true judgment. By Th7, the pathos loses what sustains it — with the empirical boundary from Part One standing. And line 29 seals the normalization: this corrective act is itself a complete rational act of will — virtue enacted now, fully, regardless of the prior moment’s failure. The recovery is not remediation of a damaged standing; it is the next moment’s ordinary act, done well.


Why This Is Normalization, Not Extension

Nothing was added — no new step, no new theorem, no special recovery doctrine. The two cases differ only in the input impression — first-order external claim versus second-order pathos-report — and in the Examination’s tense — screening an offered assent versus auditing a given one. The engine is identical.

The every-moment theme already entails this. If virtue is at stake in every moment with no carryover, then the moment after a failed moment is just another moment — the method was always going to apply to it, because the method applies to all of them. The recovery case looked special only under the biographical reading of the practice, where progress is accumulated standing and failure is damage. Under the per-act reading the corpus ratifies, there is nothing to recover — only the next impression to handle, which happens, this time, to be about oneself.

The second-order framing — the pathos received as itself an impression — is the synthesis contribution of this document. Seddon’s dialogue enacts it and Sterling’s Smith example instantiates it; neither names it. It is stated here as Dave Kelly’s analysis, built on corpus-consistent material.


Reference: Keith Seddon (2005). Epictetus’ Handbook and the Tablet of Cebes. Routledge. Page 114.

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

Examination Navigated Downward — Three Worked Examples v1.0

 

Examination Navigated Downward — Three Worked Examples v1.0

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


What This Illustrates

The synthesis of the Five Steps, the six commitments, and the Core Stoicism theorems identifies Examination as the step where the dependency structure is navigated downward, from impression to axiom. This document takes that abstract description and runs it against three impressions of increasing difficulty, showing the same route traversed each time.


Example One — The Job Loss

The impression arrives: “Losing this job is bad for me.” Knowing Th7, the agent does not fight the anxiety directly — the anxiety is caused by the belief, so the belief is the address. The examination asks what the impression claims: that a job, an external, is a good, so its loss is an evil. Test against derived line 12: externals are never good or evil. The impression contradicts it. Line 12 is itself derived, so the agent presses further: externals are never good or evil because virtue and vice are in our control (line 11), and only virtue is good, only vice evil (Th10) — and a job is neither virtue nor vice, was never in his control at all (Th6), so it never carried the value the impression assigned it. The impression’s claim fails at the axiom. The verdict is not “do not worry about it” but “the assertion is false.” The anxiety loses its cause because the belief causing it has been shown untrue.


Example Two — The Insult

The impression: “He humiliated me in that meeting — this is an injury.” Same route, different content. The claim: another person’s speech act damaged me — an evil occurred. Trace: his speech is his act of will, which by Th6 is entirely in his control and none in mine. What is in my control is my assent to the impression. Test against Th10: was the speech my vice? No — it was not my act at all. Was it my virtue lost? No. Then by line 12 it is neither good nor evil for me. The only place an evil could enter this scene is my own irrational assent — exactly what the examination is preventing. The “injury” the impression asserts turns out to be located nowhere.


Example Three — The Harder Case: Illness

The impression: “This illness is a genuine evil happening to me.” This case presses harder because the body feels like the self. The chain forces the distinction: is the body in my control? Th6 — no; illness demonstrates that daily. Is health virtue? Th10 — no; health belongs to Th26’s territory, a preferred indifferent, an appropriate object of aim but not a good. The impression has misfiled the illness: it belongs in the category “external, may be aimed against, never an evil” — Th25 licenses seeking treatment as an appropriate aim without requiring that the illness itself be an evil. The agent pursues the cure and withholds the assent that the disease is harming him — the agent — as distinct from his body.


What the Chain Structure Buys

In each case the agent does not consult a rulebook of situations — no entry for jobs, none for insults, none for illness. He runs one test with one terminus. Every impression, whatever its content, is traced to the same two axioms: where control sits (Th6), and where value sits (Th10). This is why the correction is systematic rather than case-by-case — infinite possible impressions, finite foundation, one route down.

It is also why the examination is authoritative rather than a debate. The agent is not weighing the impression’s claim against a counter-argument it might out-argue; C3 supplies direct apprehension of Th10, not a case made for it in the moment. The impression makes an assertion; the assertion is checked against the axioms; it fails or it does not. When it fails, the false belief is replaced, and by Th7 the emotion that belief was causing has nothing left to run on.

The downward navigation, in each example: impression at the top, Th10 and Th6 at the bottom, and the derived lines — 11 and 12 — as the rungs between.


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

The Five Steps, the Six Commitments, and the Core Stoicism Theorems — A Synthesis v1.0

 

The Five Steps, the Six Commitments, and the Core Stoicism Theorems — A Synthesis v1.0

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


What This Document Does

The corpus already contains the mapping of the six commitments onto the Five-Step Method — which commitments are operatwive at each step and what each does there. This document adds the third layer: the specific load-bearing theorems of Core Stoicism that each step invokes, per the ratified classification in “The Atomic Foundation of Sterling’s Stoicism — A Dependency Structure v1.0.” The commitments make the theorems possible; the theorems make the steps determinate; the steps are the theorems performed.


Step One: Reception — C5, C6 — Th10 standing ready

The pre-operative background — C6: moral facts exist; C5: impressions arrive as truth-claims — is Th10 held as settled fact. What the trained agent has installed before any impression arrives is Th10: virtue the only good, vice the only evil, as the content of C6’s real moral order. The impression arrives already true or false against Th10 specifically. No other theorem is operative yet; Reception is Th10 waiting.


Step Two: Recognition — C1, C5 — Th6’s boundary in use

The three-way separation — event, impression, self — is Th6’s partition performed as an act. The agent locating himself as subject pole distinct from the arriving material is the control boundary drawn in real time: the impression and the event belong to the not-in-my-control side; the assent about to be given or withheld belongs to the in-my-control side. Recognition is Th6 applied to this impression.


Step Three: Pause — C1, C2 — Th6’s positive half, and derived line 8

The Pause exercises what Th6 asserts: assent cannot be compelled. Holding the moment open against the impression’s force is the practical demonstration that nothing stands between the agent and his assent. Derived line 8 — desires are in our control, from Th6 + Th7 — is the warrant for the whole maneuver: the Pause is only worth performing if the desire the impression is generating is itself controllable through the assent being suspended.


Step Four: Examination — C6, C4, C3 — Th10 as target, Th7 as diagnostic, the derivation chain as route

This is the theorem-dense step. C6 supplies the target: Th10. C3 supplies the access: Th10 apprehended directly, not argued. C4 supplies the route: the examination traces the impression to the foundational line it contradicts — the impression “this loss is bad” is tested against derived line 12 (externals never good or evil), which traces to Th10 + 11, which trace to Th10 + Th6. Th7 is operative as the diagnostic frame: the agent knows the emotion pressing on him is caused by a value-belief, so finding and testing the belief addresses the emotion at its cause. The Examination is the dependency structure navigated downward, from impression to axiom.


Step Five: Decision — C2, C5 — Th27 performed, line 14’s guarantee collected

The closing act of origination is Th27’s subject matter: a rational act of will — assent withheld from the false, given to the true — is virtue itself, not preparation for it. C5’s truth-alignment is the act of making the assent correspond to Th10. And derived line 14 — value only virtue, judge truly, become immune to unhappiness — is what the completed act collects: the guarantee is not a future reward but the constitution of the act correctly performed. Th2 stands behind the whole step as the rationality standard: completing the act correctly rather than settling for the impression’s offer is what Th2 demands.


The Structural Observation

The five steps traverse the load-bearing set in order of function: Th10 (the standard, pre-installed) — Th6 (the boundary, drawn) — Th6 and line 8 (the control, exercised) — Th7 and the derivation chain (the diagnosis, navigated) — Th27 and line 14 (the virtue, performed; the guarantee, collected).

Th3 does not appear inside the act — correctly, since Th3 is the system’s account of why the practice matters (the mechanism of unhappiness), inherited from Enchiridion 2 and 5, presupposed by the practitioner rather than operated by him. Th25 likewise sits outside the single act, governing the content of what virtuous acts aim at across a life, not the engagement with one impression.

So the single act of correct engagement is five load-bearing theorems in operation — Th2, Th6, Th7, Th10, Th27 — with the two remaining, Th3 and Th25, framing the practice from outside. The commitments make the theorems possible; the theorems make the steps determinate; the steps are the theorems performed.


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

Friday, July 03, 2026

The Six Commitments Integrated with the Core Stoicism Theorems v1.0

 

The Six Commitments Integrated with the Core Stoicism Theorems v1.0

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


I. What This Document Supersedes

An earlier corpus document, “The Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism,” organized the integration around “three foundational claims.” That three-foundations framing was an analytical compression, not a structure Sterling himself labeled or numbered, and it has been superseded by the ratified classification in “ The Atomic Foundation of Sterling’s Stoicism — A Dependency Structure v1.0 ,” which sorts every line of Core Stoicism into three categories: basic and load-bearing (Th2, Th3, Th6, Th7, Th10, Th25, Th27), basic but peripheral (Th1, Th16, Th18, Th20, Th21, Th22, Th24), and derived (all “Ergo” lines plus 2* and Th26). This document rebuilds the integration on that ratified structure: each commitment is mapped to the specific theorems it grounds.


II. C1 — Substance Dualism grounds Th6 and Th3

Th6 draws a line between what is constituted by the agent’s assent and everything else. For that line to be a real ontological boundary rather than a useful distinction, the rational faculty must be genuinely distinct from the body and from all external conditions. If the mind is a brain state, mental events are physical events subject to physical causation, and the boundary dissolves — assent becomes one external-style event among others in the causal stream. C1 is what makes the dichotomy of control a fact rather than a preference.

Th3 inherits the same dependency at its first step. Unhappiness, in Th3’s sense, is a state of the judging agent, not a bodily event — the Stoic under torture hurts but need not be unhappy. That distinction between the agent’s states and the body’s states is exactly the distinction C1 supplies. Without it, “unhappiness” and “pain” collapse into one category and Th3’s causal formula loses its subject.


III. C2 — Libertarian Free Will grounds Th6’s positive half and Th27

Th6’s claim is not merely that assent usually escapes compulsion but that it cannot be compelled — nothing stands between the agent and his assent. That is C2 stated as a control thesis. If assent is externally caused, control admits of degree and the dichotomy collapses into a continuum.

Th27 — virtue consists of rational acts of will, vice of irrational acts of will — depends on C2 the same way. Acts of will are creditable or blameworthy only if they originate in the agent. Sterling’s own archive defense of the responsibility structure (the “Self-Blame” thread, December 2019) makes the dependency explicit: the exhaustive-alternatives argument works only if “my actions are caused by me” is a live and exclusive option, and he cites the empirical record that priming people to deny free will makes them more likely to cheat and lie — denying C2 disables the agent rather than liberating him.


IV. C3 — Ethical Intuitionism grounds Th10 and Th2

Th10 — only virtue is good, only vice is evil — and Th2 — it is irrational to accept incomplete happiness when complete happiness is available — are the two load-bearing theorems that terminate the regress by direct apprehension. Sterling’s own gloss names the mechanism: some theorems are “unprovable fundamental postulates defensible only by appeal to intuition of their truth.” C3 is why that termination exists at all: the trained rational faculty apprehends these truths directly, without derivation from prior premises. Without C3, Th10 and Th2 would demand further justification, and the regress would reopen at exactly the point where the system’s foundation currently holds.


V. C4 — Foundationalism is the architecture itself

C4 grounds no single theorem; it grounds the shape of the whole. Basic propositions terminate the regress; “Ergo” lines stand in explicit dependency on them; denying a load-bearing basic proposition collapses everything downstream of it — Sterling’s own closing warning that denying Th7 makes lines 8, 9, 13, 14, 28, and 29 “crumble into dust.” The three-category classification of the dependency-structure document is C4 applied: the question “which propositions are atomic?” is only a well-formed question inside a foundationalist architecture. C4 also does the practical work at Examination: a specific value impression is traced to the foundational theorem it contradicts, making correction systematic rather than case-by-case.


VI. C5 — Correspondence Theory grounds Th7’s operation

Th7 states that desires are caused by beliefs about good and evil. The system runs on the further claim that those beliefs are true or false by correspondence to the actual value structure. Sterling’s Smith example from the archive (the “Enchiridion #5” thread, May 2019) is unintelligible without C5: Smith’s belief that having a job is good is false — not unhelpful, not maladaptive — because it fails to match where value actually resides. Every occurrence of “false judgment” in the corpus is a C5 claim: the impression asserts something about moral reality, and the verdict is that the assertion fails to correspond.


VII. C6 — Moral Realism grounds Th10’s content and Th25’s objectivity

C5 supplies the truth-relation; C6 supplies something for it to correspond to. Th10’s bivalence — either a thing has value or it does not, with no middle ground — is C6 in argumentative use, and Sterling deploys it as such in the archive: his reductio against partial control (the “Control” threads, January 2021) turns entirely on the premise that “either such things have value (good or evil) or they don't — there is no middle ground.” Value is an exhaustive, objective fact about reality, not a stance. Th25 likewise: preferred indifferents have objective selective standing — appropriate objects of aim as a matter of fact, not of convention. Without C6, the framework’s demand that false value beliefs be corrected loses its force: a belief that cannot be objectively false cannot be objectively in need of correction.


VIII. The Structural Picture

The regress terminates at the commitments, not at the theorems. C3 terminates it for the evaluative axioms (Th10, Th2). C1 and C2 terminate it for the agency axioms (Th6, and through it Th3, whose formula is in any case inherited directly from Enchiridion 2 and 5 rather than argued). C5 and C6 are pre-operative background — the settled conditions under which judgments can be true or false about value at all, already in place before any impression arrives. C4 is the meta-commitment that demands the structure be drawn this way at all.

One asymmetry from the archive is worth preserving in the integration. Th7 — the theorem Sterling names as most load-bearing — is the one whose grounding spans the most commitments: C1 (desires as acts of the rational faculty), C5 (the causing beliefs are truth-apt), C6 (there are value-facts to be right or wrong about). It is also the theorem Sterling defended by worked example rather than by a single closing argument. The two facts fit together: no single argument closes Th7, because it sits at the junction of three commitments rather than resting on one.

The commitments are not additions to the theorem structure. They are what the theorem structure requires in order to stand. Remove C1 and the boundary in Th6 dissolves. Remove C2 and control admits of degree. Remove C3 and Th10 demands a proof that does not exist. Remove C4 and the dependency structure is unstatable. Remove C5 and no value judgment is false. Remove C6 and there is nothing for a value judgment to be false about. Each commitment carries specific theorems; the theorems carry everything else.


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

The Six Commitments as Necessary Conditions for the Core Stoicism Theorems — The Argument v1.0

 

The Six Commitments as Necessary Conditions for the Core Stoicism Theorems — The Argument v1.0

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


The Claim

The load-bearing theorems of Core Stoicism cannot be stated, defended, or used without the six commitments. Each commitment is a necessary condition for specific theorems, and jointly the commitments are sufficient ground for the whole structure. This document is the argumentative companion to “The Six Commitments Integrated with the Core Stoicism Theorems,” which maps the dependencies; here the dependencies are pressed as a demonstration. The argument runs commitment by commitment, each in the same form: state what the theorem asserts, show what the assertion presupposes, show that denying the commitment falsifies or dissolves the theorem.


1. Th6 requires C1 (Substance Dualism)

Th6 partitions reality into what is in our control — beliefs, will, their entailments — and everything else. A partition needs a boundary, and the boundary Th6 draws falls exactly at the edge of the rational faculty. Suppose C1 false: the mind is a physical system among physical systems. Then acts of assent are physical events, caused as all physical events are caused, and there is no principled place where “what I do” ends and “what happens to me” begins — assent is as much a product of external causation as digestion. The dichotomy does not become false so much as unstatable: its boundary term picks out nothing. Th6 survives only if the faculty that assents is genuinely distinct from the causal order it judges. Therefore Th6 presupposes C1.


2. Th6 and Th27 require C2 (Libertarian Free Will)

Grant the boundary and a second question remains: is what falls inside it controlled? Th6 says the agent’s assent cannot be compelled — not that it usually is not, but that nothing can stand between the agent and his assent. If assent is determined by prior causes, this is false: the prior causes stand between. Control collapses into a continuum of influence, which is precisely the position Sterling argued against in the archive — his zero-sum argument works only because “my own actions” is a category where the agent holds everything and everything else holds nothing, and that category exists only under origination.

Th27 doubles the dependency: virtue as rational acts of will is a moral achievement only if the act originates in the agent. A determined “act of will” is a happening, not a doing, and neither virtue nor vice can be predicated of a happening. Deny C2 and Th6’s positive half is false and Th27’s subject matter vanishes.


3. Th10 and Th2 require C3 (Ethical Intuitionism)

Th10 is underived — Sterling’s own gloss places the basic theorems beyond proof, “defensible only by appeal to intuition of their truth,” and his archive posts generalize the point: ethics, like logic, requires axioms, and axioms are not proven but seen. So Th10’s epistemic standing depends entirely on there being a faculty capable of seeing such truths. Deny C3 and Th10 does not become false — it becomes ungrounded: an assertion with no route to warrant, since by construction no derivation exists. The same holds for Th2, the rationality axiom. And the loss propagates: the Examination step tests impressions against Th10; an ungrounded standard confers no verdicts; the entire diagnostic practice inherits the vacancy. C3 is what makes the foundation known rather than merely posited.


4. The theorem structure as such requires C4 (Foundationalism)

Core Stoicism is not a list; it is a proof — Th-lines and Ergo-lines, with Sterling’s closing warning that denying one theorem collapses the specific lines that depend on it. That architecture is foundationalism: basic propositions terminating justification, derived propositions inheriting warrant through explicit dependency. Deny C4 — adopt coherentism — and the structure loses its direction: nothing is prior, nothing is derived, “Ergo” marks nothing, and the collapse-warning becomes unintelligible, since in a web no single node’s removal propagates asymmetrically. Sterling’s own rejection of coherentism in the archive makes the dependency explicit: mutually consistent belief-sets can be false together, so coherence cannot be what justifies; only derivation from a foundation can. C4 is not one premise among the theorems; it is what makes the numbered proof a proof.


5. Th7’s operation requires C5 (Correspondence Theory of Truth)

Th7 says desires are caused by beliefs about good and evil. On its own that is psychology. What makes it Stoicism is the further verdict that some of those beliefs are false — the belief that the lost job was good fails to match where value resides. “Fails to match” is the correspondence relation. Deny C5 — let truth be coherence, or utility, or assertibility — and the belief may be fully coherent with the agent’s other beliefs, highly useful, and warranted by community standards; on any of those theories it comes out true, and the Stoic diagnosis is blocked. The system’s every use of “false judgment” — which is to say, its entire corrective mechanism — presupposes that a belief can fail against reality itself, whatever its other merits. That is C5.


6. Th10’s content and Th25’s standing require C6 (Moral Realism)

C5 gives the truth-relation; there must be something on the other end of it. Th10 asserts a fact about where good and evil reside — and it must be a fact, because the whole normative force of the system rests on false value-beliefs being errors, not alternative preferences. Deny C6 and Th10 deflates into a recommendation; the false belief is no longer false but merely different; the demand that it be corrected is arbitrary. The bivalence Sterling argues from — either a thing has value or it does not, no middle ground — is only available if value is an objective, exhaustive feature of reality; preferences admit degrees, facts of this kind do not. Th25 carries the same dependency into action: preferred indifferents are appropriate objects of aim as a matter of fact, which is what separates the doctrine from a taste. And Th3, inherited from Enchiridion 2 and 5, presupposes the same structure: judgments can only be the exclusive cause of disturbance if they are judgments about something that can make them false.


The Joint Conclusion

Each commitment is individually necessary: strike any one and specific, nameable theorems are falsified, dissolved, or deflated. C1 unmakes Th6’s boundary. C2 falsifies its positive half and empties Th27. C3 strands Th10 and Th2 without warrant. C4 unmakes the proof structure itself. C5 blocks every verdict of false judgment. C6 removes the facts the verdicts answer to.

And jointly the commitments are sufficient as ground: a distinct faculty (C1) that originates its assents (C2), directly apprehending objective value-facts (C3, C6) against which its judgments are true or false (C5), within a structure where those apprehensions found everything else (C4) — that is exactly the agent Core Stoicism describes and the architecture it exhibits. The theorems are the commitments in operation; the commitments are the theorems’ condition of possibility. Neither stands without the other — which is Sterling’s own closing observation about the theorems, extended one level down.


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

Exchange Capture — “How could you add to and improve Sterling's arguments?”

 

Exchange Capture — “How could you add to and improve Sterling's arguments?”

Unratified capture of a single prompt/response exchange. Not a corpus document. The response below is Claude-originated analysis, explicitly flagged in the exchange itself as unratified and not attributable to Sterling. 2026.


Prompt

How could you add to and improve Sterling's arguments?


Response

Before I answer — a role flag worth naming. What you're asking crosses from prose rendering into “analysis and synthesis,” which the corpus assigns to you, not me. I can generate philosophical content, but I can't tell from the inside whether it's a genuine improvement or pattern-matched philosophy-vocabulary dressed as one — that's exactly the corrective-layer problem in the standing project notes. So what follows is offered as unratified, Claude-originated suggestion, explicitly not corpus and not Sterling's, for you to evaluate, revise, or discard. Nothing here should be attributed to Sterling or filed without your ratification.

Th6 — close the chance gap. Sterling's zero-sum argument assumes control is fully partitioned: every event belongs 100% to some agent or to God. But this leaves no room for brute chance or quantum-level indeterminacy — events no one controls at all. That's not fatal to Th6's conclusion (uncontrolled-by-me still means neither-good-nor-evil-for-me), but it means the “100% always sums” premise is stronger than the theorem needs, and a determined critic could attack the premise instead of the conclusion. Improvement: replace “control sums to 100%” with a weaker, sufficient claim — “nothing external is ever in my control” — which needs no stance on whether the remainder is fully controlled by others or partly uncaused. Same conclusion, one less exposed premise.

Th7 — recover the proto-passion distinction. The corpus archive itself contains the tool for this (the “Proto passions, the storm and Epictetus” thread) but Sterling doesn't deploy it in his own defense of Th7. Ancient Stoicism (Seneca) distinguishes involuntary first movements — a flinch, a flash of fear, a hunger pang — from genuine passions, which require assent. If Th7 is restated as governing only sustained desire (desire that survives reflective assent) rather than every first-movement reaction, the counterexamples that pressure the universal claim (reflexive fear, hunger, addiction-like pulls) get classified as proto-passions rather than falsifying instances. This doesn't prove the “all” — it narrows what the “all” has to cover, which is real progress on the regress problem Marquis named in the thread.

Th3 — derive it instead of defending it. Since Th3 has no independent argument in the archive, the cleanest fix may not be finding one but showing it's unnecessary as a free-standing axiom. If Th7 (desire tracks value-judgment) and Th10/12 (externals are never actually good or evil) are both granted, then any desire for an external is, by construction, a desire whose object is misjudged — and a misjudged object is one whose non-attainment was never guaranteed to track anything real, making frustration probabilistically inevitable across a life. That gets most of Th3's content as a corollary of Th6+Th7+Th10, moving Th3 from Tier 0 to a derived line — consistent with the earlier finding that Sterling's “basic” theorems may be basic only relative to the 2005 post, not relative to the fuller framework.

All three are candidates for a “Proposed Extensions” status distinct from ratified corpus — flagged as mine, pending your judgment on whether they're worth developing or belong in the discard pile.


Unratified capture. Response content: Claude (Anthropic), pending Dave Kelly's evaluation. 2026.

Th3 — Unhappiness and the Self-Blame Argument v1.0

 

Th3 — Unhappiness and the Self-Blame Argument v1.0

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


The Theorem

Th3 — All human unhappiness is caused by having a desire or emotional commitment to some outcome, and then that outcome does not result.

Of the three theorems examined for their justification in the archive, Th3 is the one with no direct defense. What the archive supplies instead is an argument for a neighboring claim — that unhappiness, whatever its mechanism, is always the agent's own responsibility — which reinforces Th3 without independently proving it.

The Self-Blame Argument

In the “Self-Blame” thread (December 2019), challenged on whether Stoic self-blame is psychologically harmful, Sterling runs an exhaustive-alternatives argument in the same form he later uses for Th6. Given that some state is bad for an agent, there are exactly four ways to assign its cause: deny morality exists, blame another person, blame no one, or blame oneself. He eliminates the first two on conceptual grounds — blaming another is “nonsensical, taken literally... they cease to be 'my' actions” — and argues the remaining two cannot be mixed case by case: “going through life assigning blame for this action to someone else, blame for that action to oneself, and assigning no blame for that other action is philosophically unstable, unless one can show how some of our actions are caused by ourselves, some by other people, and some by no-one at all. And that's something no-one that I know of has ever been able to show.”

He closes by citing evidence against the remaining alternative: “Studies have shown that if you give people passages to read that deny free will... they become more likely to cheat or lie.” Denying responsibility does not empower; it disables. Self-blame, on his account, is “a natural outgrowth of the doctrine that I am the Captain of my own eudaimonia, not a passenger thrown about randomly by outside forces.”

What This Does and Does Not Establish

This argument defends the responsibility half of the Stoic picture — that when I am unhappy, the fault is mine — and it presupposes Th6 (only the agent controls the agent) rather than independently grounding Th3's specific causal claim. It does not address the mechanism half: why the causal pathway to unhappiness runs specifically through desire-and-frustration, rather than through some other internal process consistent with full agent responsibility.

Th3 therefore remains the least directly defended of the three foundational theorems examined. It gains plausibility from its neighbors — the responsibility argument above, and Th7's causal-judgment claim, to which Th3 is closely related — but it does not receive an independent argument of its own anywhere located in the archive to date.


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

Th7 — Desire and False Judgment v1.0

 

Th7 — Desire and False Judgment v1.0

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


The Theorem

Th7 — Desires are caused by beliefs (judgments) about good and evil.

This is the theorem Sterling himself names as most load-bearing. In his closing remarks to Core Stoicism he writes that denying it collapses lines 8, 9, 13, 14, 28, and 29 — “the whole house of cards, regarding both virtue and happiness, crumble[s] into dust.” Yet the archive shows Sterling defending it by a different method than he used for Th6 — illustration rather than closed argument.

The Smith Example

In the “Enchiridion #5” thread (May 2019), challenged for a concrete case, Sterling offers: “Smith loses her job. She knows that she's a better employee than Jones, who wasn't fired. She becomes angry... Why does she experience this emotion? Because she believes that having a job is good... But on the Stoic view, that is false. The only thing that is truly good for me is eudaimonia, and eudaimonia comes from virtuous choices that I make.” Her false value judgment, not the job loss itself, produces the emotion.

Pressed on Scope

When Michael Edelstein asks why the emotion is anger specifically rather than anxiety or guilt, Sterling extends the method rather than closing it: different impressions of the same event, conditioned by habituation, yield different emotions, but in every case some false value-belief does the causal work. He does not supply a scope-closing argument the way he does for Th6’s universal claim about control. Steve Marquis, a participant in the same thread, names the structural problem directly: giving examples rather than a definition “will lead to an infinite regress without understanding the essence.” Sterling's reply is to continue with examples.

What This Establishes

Th7's justification remains at the level of case-by-case introspective confirmation, extended by an auxiliary doctrine (impressions vary with habituation) that explains variation across people without closing the universal quantifier. This is Sterling's own “empirical propositions the Stoics thought were obvious” category — a provisional, not a strong, termination of the regress.

The asymmetry is worth stating plainly: Th7 is the theorem Sterling calls most load-bearing, and it is also the one he argues for least rigorously. Th6, comparatively peripheral by his own collapse-test, receives the tightest argument in the corpus. Th7, named explicitly as the point where the whole system stands or falls, is defended by illustration, even when a member of his own forum names the regress problem to his face.


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

Th6 — The Control Argument v1.0

 

Th6 — The Control Argument v1.0

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


The Theorem

Th6 — The only things in our control are our beliefs and will, and anything entailed by our beliefs and will.

In Core Stoicism (2005) this proposition is marked “Th” and given no argument. But Sterling defended it directly, more than once, against a real challenger on the International Stoic Forum. Two threads — “Control” (January 2021) and its follow-up — preserve the defense in full.

Three Arguments, Not an Assertion

1. The definitional argument. Sterling distinguishes “control” from “influence” by example. A friend claims “I control the City Council” and then, when the outcome fails, retreats to “I only meant I have some control.” Sterling treats this as a betrayal of the word’s meaning: “'I control the Council' means 'I can guarantee that the Council always does what I tell it to do.' That's what 'control' means, as opposed to 'influence.'”

2. The zero-sum conservation argument. If an agent has complete control over her own choices, no one else can have any control over them: “the sum total of control for everyone else in the universe must be 0%... there cannot be more than 100% of anything, control included.” Extended across the whole causal landscape: “With regard to my own actions, I have 100% control... With regard to the actions of others, they have 100% control, leaving none for me. With regard to external things other than the actions of others, God has 100% control, leaving none for me.”

3. The reductio from value-bivalence. Partial control would require partial moral value, which Sterling treats as incoherent: “Either such things have value (good or evil) or they don't — there is no middle ground,” so “'some control' is equal to 'complete control' from the standpoint of ethics, or it is neither good nor evil, in which case 'some control' is equivalent ethically to 'no control.' The middle is unstable.”

What This Establishes

Th6 is not a bare intuited postulate. It is argued — by a definitional move, a genuine logical derivation from a conservation premise, and a reductio that ties Th6 directly to Th10’s. good/evil bivalence. Of the three foundational theorems examined for their termination mechanism, Th6 is the one Sterling closes most completely: the universal scope (“the only things in our control”) is not left to introspective sampling but is derived from the conservation argument, which by its nature covers every case at once.

This reclassifies Th6 from an unassigned foundational postulate to a derived proposition (Sterling's own “provable-but-unproven” category, with the proof supplied later in the archive rather than in the 2005 post) — grounded jointly in a stipulative definition of “control” and in Th10’s prior claim about where value resides.


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

Thursday, July 02, 2026

The Atomic Foundation of Sterling’s Stoicism — A Dependency Structure


The Atomic Foundation of Sterling’s Stoicism — A Dependency Structure v1.0

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


I. The Question

Foundationalism (C4) requires a hierarchical, not a flat, structure: a set of non-derivative propositions at the base, with everything else standing in an explicit relation of derivation to them. This document classifies every line of Sterling’s Core Stoicism (ISF, September 19, 2005) against that requirement.

The classification separates two axes that are easy to conflate. The first is basic vs. derived — whether a proposition is underived (a primitive of the system) or reached by inference from prior lines. This is what “foundational” strictly means under C4. The second is load-bearing vs. peripheral — how much of the system collapses if the proposition is denied. A proposition can be basic yet peripheral: an underived axiom the system can lose without structural damage. Keeping these axes distinct is the whole point of the exercise.


II. Sterling’s Own Markers

Sterling supplies two markers directly, and they do less work than the “Th” label alone would suggest.

First, on what “Th” means: “Th = theorem… The basic principles of Stoicism, for which I give no argument here. Some of these may be true theorems [unprovable fundamental postulates defensible only by appeal to intuition of their truth], some are empirical propositions the Stoics thought were obvious, some are propositions for which a proof might be offered but it’s too complicated for me to bother with today.” The “Th” mark therefore does not reliably signal foundational status. By Sterling’s own account it covers three different things, one of which — the provable-but-unproven — is actually derived material with the proof omitted.

Second, on collapse-weight, in his closing remarks: “One could deny theorem 20, or 21, and this would undermine a great deal of the Stoic view of positive happiness, but would not obviously damage the views on virtue or avoiding unhappiness too seriously. But if one denies that emotions or desires are the result of false judgments [Th7], then 8, 9, 13, 14, 28, and 29 all collapse… So denying one theorem makes the whole house of cards… crumble into dust.”

Only two weightings are stated by Sterling directly: Th7 is load-bearing (its denial collapses 8, 9, 13, 14, 28, 29), and Th20/Th21 are peripheral (removable without damaging virtue or the negative-happiness argument). Every other weighting below is analytical inference from the “Ergo” dependency chains, marked as such, and subject to ratification.


III. Basic and Load-Bearing (the actual foundation)

Underived, and required by the derivations that follow. These are the propositions C4 identifies as the base of the system.

  • Th2 — It is irrational to accept incomplete happiness if complete happiness is available. The rationality standard invoked at lines 5 and 14. (Inferred from dependency — ratified.)
  • Th3 — All unhappiness is caused by desiring an outcome that then fails to result. The negative-happiness argument begins here; lines 4 and 5 run off it. (Inferred from dependency — ratified.)
  • Th6 — The only things in our control are our beliefs and will, and what they entail. Partners with Th7 and Th10 to reach 8 and 11. (Inferred from dependency — ratified.)
  • Th7 — Desires are caused by beliefs about good and evil. Named by Sterling in the collapse-test; denial takes down 8, 9, 13, 14, 28, 29. (Sterling-stated.)
  • Th10 — The only thing good is virtue, the only thing evil is vice. The value axiom; 11 and 12 depend on it. Invariant across Excerpt 3, Excerpt 8, and the ISF membership list. (Inferred from dependency — ratified.)
  • Th25 — Some things are appropriate objects of aim without being genuinely good. The preferred-indifferents axiom; line 29 depends on it. (Inferred from dependency — ratified.)
  • Th27 — Virtue consists of rational acts of will; vice, of irrational acts of will. The definition of virtue itself; 28 and 29 depend on it. (Inferred from dependency — ratified.)

Seven propositions. Note that these do not all carry the same spine: Th2, Th3, Th6, Th7, and Th10 sustain the negative-happiness argument; Th25 and Th27 sustain only the virtue section. Load-bearing weight is scoped, not uniform.


IV. Basic but Peripheral (underived, low collapse-weight)

Genuinely underived — therefore foundational in the strict C4 sense of not being derived from anything — but removable without structural collapse. These are axioms the system can afford to lose.

  • Th1 — Everyone wants happiness. A factual premise about motivation; sets up the audience, grounds no proof.
  • Th16 — Achieving a desire produces a positive feeling. Empirical-psychological; load-bearing only within the positive-happiness branch (17, 29 cite it), inert to virtue and negative-happiness.
  • Th18 — Some positive feelings do not result from desires. Empirical observation; grounds only line 19.
  • Th20 — The universe is, or is governed by, Nature, Providence, God or the gods. Marked peripheral by Sterling directly.
  • Th21 — That which is Providential is exactly as it should be. Paired with Th20 by Sterling as droppable.
  • Th22 — Regarding the world as it should be produces positive feeling. Conditional on Th20/21; inherits their peripheral status.
  • Th24 — An act of will must have content: the result aimed at. Definitional scaffolding for Section Four; grounds no proof on its own.

V. Derived (non-foundational)

Reached by inference. Every “Ergo” line, plus lines Sterling marks or treats as provable-but-unproven. These are the dependent propositions, not the base.

  • 2* — Complete happiness is possible. Sterling: “[To be proven below.]” A placeholder discharged by line 14.
  • 4 — Desiring the uncontrolled risks unhappiness. From Th3.
  • 5 — Desiring the uncontrolled is irrational. Sterling: “By 4, 2*, and Th2.”
  • 8 — Desires are in our control. From Th6 + Th7.
  • 9 — Desiring the uncontrolled is irrational. Sterling: “By 5 and 8.”
  • 11 — Virtue and vice are in our control. From Th10 + Th6.
  • 12 — Externals are never good or evil. From Th10 + 11.
  • 13 — Desiring externals involves false judgment. Sterling: “[cf 9, above].”
  • 14 — Valuing only virtue yields true judgment and immunity to unhappiness. From Th10 + 12 + 13; terminus of the negative-happiness proof; discharges 2*.
  • 15 — True judgment of virtue produces desire for it. From 14.
  • 17 — Correct judgment and will produce appropriate positive feeling. From 15 + Th16.
  • 19 — Non-desire feelings are not irrational unless we desire their continuation. From Th18.
  • 23 — The Stoic is positively happy in three ways. From 17 + 19 + Th22.
  • Th26 — Examples of appropriate objects of aim: life, health, knowledge, justice, truth-telling. An instantiation of Th25, not an independent axiom; illustrative despite the “Th” mark.
  • 28 — Aiming at external desire-objects is not virtuous. From Th27 + 13.
  • 29 — Virtue is the pursuit of appropriate aim; it yields feeling and never unhappiness. From 28 + 17 + Th25.

VI. What This Corrects

An earlier draft of this analysis treated “Th-marked” as equivalent to “foundational” and listed six co-equal foundation stones. That was wrong in both directions. It included Th1, which is basic but peripheral, and it omitted Th2, Th25, and Th27, which are load-bearing. It also placed Th1, Th2, and Th3 at the same tier as Th7 without noting that the “Th” mark, by Sterling’s own account, covers underived postulates, empirical observations, and provable-but-unproven propositions alike — three different statuses under one label. The correction is not cosmetic: of fifteen “Th”-marked lines, seven are load-bearing, seven are basic but peripheral, and one (Th26) is illustrative rather than axiomatic.

The foundationalist requirement (C4) is preserved throughout. Every derived line traces to basic ones; the regress terminates at the propositions in Sections III and IV. What has changed is only that collapse-weight is now recorded as a separate annotation rather than being allowed to masquerade as foundational status — and that the distinction between Sterling’s stated weightings and this analysis’s inferred ones is visible on every line.


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

The Atomic Foundation of Sterling’s Stoicism — A Dependency Structure

 TO BE REPLACED

The Atomic Foundation of Sterling’s Stoicism — A Dependency Structure

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


I. The Question

Foundationalism (C4) requires a hierarchical, not a flat, structure: a set of non-derivative propositions at the base, with everything else standing in an explicit relation of derivation to them. This document identifies what is actually non-derivative in Sterling’s texts — using his own compositional marker for the distinction — and places every other proposition in its dependent tier.

Sterling supplies the marker himself, in Core Stoicism: “Th = theorem… The basic principles of Stoicism, for which I give no argument here.” Everything he labels “Th” is asserted without derivation. Everything numbered plainly and reached by “Ergo” is derived from prior lines. That convention, not any synthesis-level judgment, determines the tiers below.


II. Tier 0 — Foundation Stones (Th-marked, no argument given)

Six axioms are independently asserted. None is derived from any other. Foundationalism does not require a single axiom — it requires that the base terminate the regress. These six terminate it, each doing distinct work:

  • Th10 — the value axiom: “The only thing actually good is virtue, the only thing actually evil is vice.” This is the proposition that fixes where good and evil reside. Confirmed independently in Excerpt 3 (“the vital heart of Stoic doctrine”) and Excerpt 8 (“Core Beliefs”), where it recurs unchanged across differently-dated, differently-purposed statements.
  • Th6 — the scope-of-agency axiom: “The only things in our control are our beliefs and will, and anything entailed by our beliefs and will.”
  • Th7 — the causal-psychology axiom: “Desires are caused by beliefs (judgments) about good and evil.”
  • Th1, Th2 — the motivational preamble: “Everyone wants happiness”; it is irrational to accept incomplete happiness if complete happiness is possible. These carry no ethical content on their own — they establish why the system’s guarantee matters, not what is good or evil.
  • Th3 — the mechanism axiom: “All human unhappiness is caused by having a desire or emotional commitment to some outcome, and then that outcome does not result.”

Nothing in Sterling’s text derives Th6 or Th7 from Th10, or Th10 from Th6 or Th7. They are co-equal axioms that must act as partners to generate anything downstream.


III. Tier 1 — First Derivations

Each line below is reached by “Ergo” and cites the specific Tier 0 axioms it draws on:

  • 11. Virtue and vice, being acts of will, are in our control. — from Th10 + Th6
  • 12. Things not in our control (externals) are never good or evil. — from Th10 + 11
  • 8. Desires are in our control. — from Th7 + Th6
  • 4–5. Desiring what is outside your control makes complete happiness impossible, and is therefore irrational. — from Th3 + Th2

IV. Tier 2 — Second-Order Derivations

  • 9, 13. Desiring things out of our control is irrational because it involves false judgment. — from 12 + 8
  • 14. If we value only virtue, we judge truly and become immune to unhappiness. — from Th10 + 12 + 13

Line 14 is the terminus of the negative-happiness argument. It is also the point where two of Sterling’s independent summary statements converge: Excerpt 3’s “vital heart” passage and Excerpt 8’s “Core Beliefs” list both arrive at the same place by a shorter route, without walking the full derivation chain.


V. Tier 3 — Positive Happiness (a second branch, gated behind Tier 2)

  • 15, 17. Correct judgment produces correct desire, which produces appropriate positive feeling. — from 14 + Th16
  • 19. Feelings not caused by desire (a sunset, a good meal) are not irrational — unless we desire their continuation. — from Th18, independent of the virtue branch.

Joy is a Tier 3 theorem. It cannot be promoted to Tier 0 without collapsing the structure Sterling himself marks — a correction made explicitly in the companion corpus document, “Joy as Theorem, Not Premise.”


VI. What This Corrects

An earlier synthesis in this corpus described Sterling’s framework as resting on “three foundations.” That description is Dave Kelly’s analytical compression of Excerpt 2 (“the heart and soul of Stoicism”) — a legitimate reading of the material, but not a structure Sterling himself labeled or numbered as three foundations, and it was presented without that distinction being marked. Sterling’s own enumerations take different forms for different purposes: Excerpt 8 (“Core Beliefs”) is a seven-item derivation chain; his answer to the ISF membership question is a five-item practical test, stated as independent commitments rather than as an “Ergo” sequence; Core Stoicism itself is a numbered theorem-and-derivation proof running to 29 lines and beyond. None of these is “the” canonical list. What is invariant across all of them — the value axiom, Th10 — is identified above as Tier 0, and the dependency structure built on top of it in Tiers 1 through 3 is what actually does the foundationalist work C4 requires.


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

The Natural Logic Extraction Instrument Applied to Discourses 3.3

 

The Natural Logic Extraction Instrument Applied to Discourses 3.3

Corpus in use: Core Stoicism, Nine Excerpts, Six Commitments, Discourses 3.3.1–22 (Oldfather translation, primary source).


What follows is a four-part run of the Natural Logic Extraction Instrument (NLE) across the whole of Discourses 3.3, taken in sequence: the coinage of the good (3.3.1–5), the good’s priority over kinship (3.3.5–10), the coinage of persons and the morning exercise (3.3.11–19), and the bowl of water (3.3.20). Read end to end, the four runs turn out to share a single fulcrum, restated at four different scales.


Part One — Discourses 3.3.1–5

Terminus. A soul cannot refuse to assent to a clearly apprehended impression of the good — its nature necessitates that response, exactly as an official handling Caesar’s coinage is legally bound to honor it once it is presented.

The Fork. Is the soul’s response to an impression of the good optional — a genuinely free choice that could go either way even once the good is clearly seen — or necessitated, guaranteed once the impression is genuinely clear?

Branch One — the response is optional even given full clarity. On this branch, seeing the good clearly and moving toward it are two separate events, joined only by a further act of choice. But nothing about clarity itself would then explain why the soul moves toward the good rather than away from it or not at all. The passage never introduces any such extra step; it moves straight from “the nature of every soul” to the resulting movement. This branch also makes the coinage comparison backwards: a banker free to refuse good currency at his own discretion is the opposite of what the passage describes.

Branch Two — the response is necessitated once the impression is genuinely clear. On this branch, clarity itself carries the response with it, the way presenting genuine imperial coinage carries the legal duty to honor it. The soul’s nature just is this set of fixed responses, triggered automatically by the corresponding clear impression. The closing line — “on this concept of the good hangs every impulse to act, both of man and of God” — follows directly.

The Fulcrum. Where the agent’s freedom is actually located: at the moment of response to an already-clear impression, or upstream of that moment — in whatever determines whether an impression becomes genuinely clear in the first place. Necessity applies only downstream; the upstream question of how impressions get correctly or incorrectly judged remains entirely open.

Consistency Check. Branch Two survives every sentence. The opening scope-claim, the threefold assent/dissent/withholding structure, the coinage analogy, and the closing line all fit a model where the good’s content, truly grasped, generates the impulse on its own. Branch One cannot produce the closing line without treating it as loose rhetorical flourish.

Self-Audit. No symbols used. Three terms tracked separately: the good itself, a clear impression of the good, and the resulting assent. Interpretive hazard flagged: the coinage analogy risks collapsing the second and third terms — mistaking the fact that an impression is presented for the further fact that it is thereby good.


Part Two — Discourses 3.3.5–10

Terminus. Preserving a relationship and refusing to trade virtue for it are not in conflict. The appearance of conflict comes entirely from one mistake: misdefining “the good.” Correcting that definition does not make the relationship safe from loss — nothing does. It locates what actually is safe from loss: the agent’s own fidelity, regardless of what becomes of the relationship.

The Fork. Everything turns on a prior question the passage does not let the reader skip: what is “the good”?

Branch One — the good is mere kinship-preservation. Under this definition, the good and virtue are two separate things. When they conflict, virtue is what stays and kinship is what gets dropped — and kinship never had a real hold to begin with. Father, brother, and country disappear entirely as sources of obligation, because nothing in the definition ever tied obligation to them in the first place.

Branch Two — the good is right moral purpose. The acts by which one honors a relation — fidelity, modesty, brotherly love — live entirely in the will. They are the agent’s own regardless of what becomes of the relationship itself. The relationship’s continuation is external, exactly as the farm is external. What is inviolable is never the relationship. It is only ever the agent’s own act toward it. Property can be surrendered without touching this good at all, and the relationship can be lost entirely without touching it either, for the same reason.

The Fulcrum. Whether virtue consists in the agent’s own act toward a relation, or in the relation’s outcome.

Consistency Check. Only Branch Two lets the passage say both “my father is nothing to me, but only the good” and “let him have all he wants, that does not touch my fidelity” without contradiction. Only Branch Two makes “not even Zeus” a true statement — because it governs only the agent’s own act, and Zeus does not touch that.

Self-Audit. No symbols used. Relationship and act-of-will tracked as two distinct terms throughout — the relationship classified as external, the agent’s act classified as inviolable.


Part Three — Discourses 3.3.11–19

Terminus. What makes a person “buyable” — by silver, by women, by boys, by a fine horse or dog, or by reflexive verdicts like “happy man” and “poor fellow” — is not a fixed feature of who that person is. It is a judgement, and for that reason it is exactly as correctable as grief or envy, by the same single rule applied to every impression from dawn to dusk.

The Fork. Is the internal buyer named in “Another constrains him from within, the one who has established this currency” a fixed feature of the person, separate from judgement and therefore not itself correctable — or is the internal buyer the false judgement itself, personified?

Branch One — the internal buyer is a fixed trait. On this branch, different men simply have different currencies the way different metals have different properties. This branch cannot produce the passage’s own closing claim — that weeping, misfortune, strife, and foolishness “are all judgements” — nor the guarantee of steadfastness once judgement is corrected, since a fixed trait is not eradicable by transferring judgement.

Branch Two — the internal buyer is the false judgement itself. On this branch, the thief’s silver-price, the adulterer’s price, the hunter’s price, and the passerby’s reflexive “poor fellow” are the same phenomenon at different price points: a false valuation of an external as good or evil, fixing what will move the soul. The morning exercise — examine every person and event, apply the single inside/outside test — is offered as the cure for both the coinage-susceptibility and the reflexive verdicts in the same breath.

The Fulcrum. Whether the internal buyer names a fixed non-judgemental ruler, or names the false judgement itself under another description. Get this wrong, and the coinage metaphor and the universal claim describe two different problems with two different remedies.

Consistency Check. Only Branch Two lets every sentence stand without contradiction. The universal claim needs the coinage phenomenon inside its scope; the guarantee of steadfastness needs the underlying problem to be judgement, since only judgement is correctable by rule-application.

Self-Audit. No symbols used. Three terms tracked separately: the object or person encountered, the impression or reflexive verdict formed about that object, and the internal ruler or false dogma that fixes what will count as payment. Interpretive hazard flagged: the exercise instructs examining the person first and the impression second, risking a collapse of object and verdict — the object is neutral; what requires correction is the judgement formed about it.


Part Four — Discourses 3.3.20

Terminus. When a man is seized by vertigo, it is never his arts and virtues that are thrown into confusion — only the medium in which they exist. Once that medium steadies, the arts and virtues are exactly as they were; they were never actually disturbed at all.

The Fork. Does disturbance reach the virtues and arts themselves, or does it reach only the medium in which they exist while leaving them untouched?

Branch One — disturbance reaches the virtues themselves. The analogy would then require the light ray genuinely to be disturbed when the water is disturbed — but the text states the opposite explicitly. Branch One cannot produce that sentence.

Branch Two — disturbance reaches only the medium. The water and the light ray it carries are two different things occupying the same space without being the same thing. Applied to the man with vertigo: the “spirit” is what vertigo disturbs. The arts and virtues, merely housed in that medium, are never touched. When the spirit steadies, nothing needs to be restored in the virtues, because nothing in them was ever disturbed.

The Fulcrum. Whether the virtues and arts are identical to the medium they are exercised through, or merely housed in it while remaining a different kind of thing.

Consistency Check. Only Branch Two survives the text’s own words: “it is not the arts and the virtues that are thrown into confusion, but the spirit in which they exist” directly denies Branch One.

Self-Audit. No symbols used. Three terms tracked separately: the medium (the bowl of water, called “spirit”), the content (the light ray, the arts and virtues), and the disturbance itself, which belongs to the medium alone.


Synthesis — One Fulcrum, Four Scales

Each run turns on the same underlying question, asked of a different pair of terms: is there a hard boundary between what can be touched and what cannot, or does disturbance leak across it? 3.3.1–5 asks this of the good and the soul’s response to it, and finds the boundary sits upstream, at judgement, not downstream, at necessitated assent. 3.3.5–10 asks it of the relationship and the agent’s act toward it, and finds the boundary between external outcome and internal fidelity. 3.3.11–19 asks it of the person encountered and the verdict formed about him, and finds the boundary at judgement again — the coinage that buys a man is his own false valuation, not a fixed trait. 3.3.20 asks it of the medium and its content, and finds the boundary between the spirit that can be shaken and the virtue that cannot. Four different pairs of terms; one recurring answer: what looks touched from the outside is never actually touched, because the real boundary was never where the appearance suggested.



Addendum — The Theme of Discourses 3.3

Q: I don’t quite get the theme of 3.3.

A: The whole chapter is answering one question, stated in its own title: what is the good man’s actual business? The answer given at the very start — his own governing principle, his prohairesis, full stop — and everything else in 3.3 is that claim getting tested against cases that look like they should break it.

3.3.1–5 states the claim in its strongest form: the soul, by nature, cannot help but assent to a clearly-seen good and reject a clearly-seen evil — as automatic as a banker honoring genuine coinage. This sounds almost too clean. So the rest of the chapter runs it through harder and harder cases to see if it holds.

3.3.5–10 tests it against the hardest emotional case: what about people you love? If externals include your father, your wife, your children — doesn’t the “coldness” charge stick? The answer: no, because what’s actually inviolable was never the relationship (that’s external, like the farm) — it’s your own act of fidelity toward it. The relationship can be lost. The fidelity can’t. This is the chapter’s first real proof that the opening claim survives contact with something that matters emotionally.

3.3.11–19 flips the coinage image from Part One and uses it against you: just as a genuine good necessarily draws correct assent, a false good — silver, a pretty face, someone else’s grief — can just as automatically “buy” a soul that hasn’t corrected its judgements. Same mechanism, wrong currency. The morning exercise is the daily discipline of catching that purchase before it happens, on every single person and event encountered.

3.3.20 tests the claim against the hardest physical case: what if the disturbance isn’t even a bad judgement, but literally vertigo — something happening to the body? Answer: the disturbance never actually reaches the virtues at all, only the medium they are exercised through, the way a shaken bowl of water can make a light ray look disturbed without the light itself changing at all.

So the thread is: the same claim, defended against emotional attachment, against desire, and against physical breakdown — three different ways someone might argue “here’s a case where externals really do get in.” Each time, the chapter relocates the actual boundary to somewhere the objection cannot reach: not the relationship but the act, not the person but the judgement about him, not the virtue but the medium it is housed in. The same move, run against increasingly hard test cases, each time holding.


Instrument: Natural Logic Extraction Instrument (NLE), draft v0.1. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

The Natural Logic Extraction Instrument (NLE) — Draft v0.1

 

The Natural Logic Extraction Instrument (NLE) — Draft v0.1

Instrument: Natural Logic Extraction Instrument (NLE), draft v0.1. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Corpus in use: Core Stoicism, Nine Excerpts, Six Commitments, Propositional Conversion Instrument (PLCI) v1.1.


I. Purpose

The NLE exposes the logical skeleton of a Stoic philosophical text entirely in plain English — the fork it turns on, the branches it weighs, the single claim its conclusion depends on — without translating any of it into symbolic notation. The instrument exists because a passage can be logically rigorous while remaining invisible as an argument to a reader who does not read formal logic. The NLE makes the rigor visible without requiring the reader to first learn a notation.

The NLE is not a restatement of PLCI in different formatting. PLCI converts a passage’s logical structure into symbolic form — defined variables, propositions, an argument derivation. The NLE performs the same underlying analytical work — exposing what the passage’s validity actually depends on — but every step is rendered as a full natural-language sentence, checkable by a reader with no symbolic training. The two instruments may be run on the same passage to cross-check one another; neither supersedes the other.


II. Procedure

Step A — Terminus. State the conclusion the passage is actually driving toward, in one plain sentence, before analyzing anything else.

Step B — The Fork. If the passage’s argument proceeds by ruling out an alternative, state the fork explicitly: what is the prior question whose answer determines everything downstream?

Step C — Branch Tracing. For each branch of the fork, state in full sentences: the premise that defines the branch, what follows from it, and what it costs or delivers. No symbols, no compression. Each branch must be traced with equal thoroughness; an asymmetrically detailed branch is a Step C failure (see Named Failure Modes, Section IV).

Step D — The Fulcrum. Name the single claim on which the whole argument’s validity actually turns — the one classification that, if wrong, collapses the passage’s conclusion. The fulcrum must be load-bearing in fact, not merely thematically prominent.

Step E — Consistency Check. Confirm that the traced branch is the only one that permits every sentence the text actually contains, without contradiction. Test each sentence of the passage individually against the branch. If a branch cannot produce one of the text’s own sentences, it is the wrong branch, or the fork has been mis-stated at Step B.

Step F — Self-Audit. Mandatory before output is finalized. Confirm explicitly: no symbolic notation was used at any step; no premise was introduced beyond what the passage states or directly entails; no training-data philosophical content was imported to fill a gap; every distinct term in the passage was tracked as its own term throughout, with no two distinct referents collapsed under one label (see Failure Mode 1).


III. Operational Protocol

Execute Steps A through F in strict sequence. The self-audit at Step F is mandatory and must appear explicitly in output; it is not an internal check. If any item in Step F fails, the run is not complete — return to the step where the failure originated and rerun forward from that point. Do not patch the output at Step F without revising the step that produced the defect.


IV. Named Failure Modes

Failure Mode 1 — Variable Conflation. Two distinct terms in the passage are tracked under a single label because they are related or because the passage’s prose moves between them without a hard grammatical break. This is the most consequential failure mode: it can produce a false claim of inviolability or necessity for something that was never inviolable, by silently transferring a property that belongs to one term onto the other. Every noun phrase load-bearing enough to appear in the Fulcrum (Step D) must be checked individually for whether it is doing one job or two.

Failure Mode 2 — Fulcrum Misidentification. The instrument names a claim as the fulcrum because it is the passage’s most quotable or rhetorically prominent line, rather than because removing it actually collapses the conclusion. A true fulcrum passes a removal test: state the argument without it and confirm the conclusion no longer follows. A claim that merely restates or illustrates the fulcrum is not itself the fulcrum.

Failure Mode 3 — Symbolic Leakage. Formal notation, variable letters, or symbolic operators enter the output at any step. This defeats the instrument’s purpose, which is a rendering checkable without symbolic training. Any output containing a symbolic token is not an NLE run; it is a mislabeled PLCI run.

Failure Mode 4 — Premise Importation. A premise appears in the branch tracing that is not stated in the passage and does not follow from what is stated, typically supplied from general philosophical knowledge of Stoicism rather than from the specific text under analysis. Where the passage under-specifies a step needed to complete the argument, the instrument must name the gap rather than fill it silently.

Failure Mode 5 — Branch Asymmetry. One branch at Step C receives full sentence-level tracing while the alternative is dismissed in a clause. This produces the appearance of a rigorously ruled-out alternative when the alternative was never actually traced far enough to rule out. Both branches require the same depth of tracing regardless of which one the passage endorses.

Failure Mode 6 — Consistency Check Omission. Step E is asserted rather than performed — the instrument states that the branch is consistent with the text without testing individual sentences against it. A Consistency Check that does not name which specific sentence would fail under the rejected branch has not been performed.


V. Scope and Limits

The NLE exposes the logical structure a passage already has. It does not evaluate whether that structure is philosophically sound, does not issue a correspondence verdict, and does not determine action. Those are the work of the SCE, the SLE, and the SDF respectively. The NLE’s output is descriptive: this is what the passage’s argument actually depends on, stated so a reader can check it without notation. Where the passage's soundness is in question, the NLE's Consistency Check (Step E) may show that the text is self-contradictory across branches — but the instrument stops at reporting that finding; it does not adjudicate which branch the text ought to have taken.


Instrument: Natural Logic Extraction Instrument (NLE), draft v0.1. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Wednesday, July 01, 2026

The Cultural Displacement Audit (CDA) — Run: Post-Conciliar Catholic Theological/Institutional Practice

 

The Cultural Displacement Audit (CDA) — Run: Post-Conciliar Catholic Theological/Institutional Practice

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

Instrument: Cultural Displacement Audit (CDA) v1.1. Domain: seminary formation, liturgical praxis, catechetical content, and chancery-level decision-making within Catholic institutional life, circa 1965–present.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Governing question: What is the target domain, and is it within the instrument's scope?

The domain is bounded to institutional Catholic practice specifically — not lay piety broadly, not Christianity in general, not adjacent Protestant currents. Observable default assumptions within this domain: seminary formation increasingly integrates psychological and developmental models alongside spiritual formation; liturgical translation has weighed dynamic equivalence against formal correspondence to the Latin; catechesis has shifted toward experiential and narrative method; chancery-level governance increasingly frames itself around discernment and accompaniment rather than fixed doctrinal application.

Self-Audit — Step 0:

  • Domain characterization drawn from observable institutional practice, not prior expectation. ✓
  • Domain bounded enough to permit specific signature identification. ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. Proceeding to Step 2.


Step 2 — Counter-Commitment Audit

C1 displaced — Constitutive Externalism. Seminary "human formation" pillars integrate psychological and family-of-origin work into spiritual formation. The signature is present but fails full specificity: abuse-crisis-driven institutional reform explains the same pattern without requiring C1 to be operative, and a dualist anthropology can coexist with psychological screening. Confidence: Low.

C2 displaced — Causal Determination. Pastoral moral theology's turn toward gradualness, mitigating-circumstance language, and accompaniment in cases of objective norm violation. A resistance signature is present: appeals to strict culpability are met with charges of rigorism or legalism rather than counter-argument, in specific moral-theology contexts documented in post-Amoris Laetitia reception debates. The pattern is concentrated in moral theology rather than general across the domain. Confidence: Partial.

C3 displaced — Expressivist Default. Catechetical materials have shifted from propositional instruction toward affective and experiential encounter language. The signature is concentrated specifically in catechetical method; a resistance signature — moral-intuition appeals dismissed as merely subjective — is present but partly explainable by broader cultural currents outside the domain boundary, weakening specificity. Confidence: Partial.

C4 displaced — Anti-Foundationalist Drift. The strongest finding. Behavioral: the historical-critical method has been adopted as the primary theological tool in formation curricula, often without a stable doctrinal check. Sociological: synodal processes are explicitly structured around ongoing "journeying" rather than fixed conclusions. Resistance: appeals to fixed dogmatic foundations are met with characterizations of "closed system," "self-referential," or "restorationist" rather than argued rebuttal — a pattern well-attested across multiple institutional levels, including seminary formation, chancery governance, and curial rhetoric, and not confined to one subdomain. All three signature categories are present and pass the specificity test. Confidence: High.

C5 displaced — Constructivist Truth. Liturgical translation practice — weighing what resonates against what the text asserts — is a direct behavioral signature. Pastoral rhetoric treating truth primarily as encounter rather than propositional correspondence, where this displaces rather than supplements propositional claims, is a second. The signature is present in liturgy and catechesis specifically, but not comprehensive across chancery governance generally. Confidence: Partial.

C6 displaced — Moral Subjectivism. Overlaps with the C2 cluster: "primacy of conscience" language is invoked in ways that treat conscience as generative of moral truth rather than as the faculty discerning a pre-existing one. Concentrated in the same moral-theology and pastoral-practice cluster as C2. Confidence: Partial.

Self-Audit — Step 2:

  • All six counter-commitments examined independently; none averaged. ✓
  • Specificity test applied and stated for every signature. ✓
  • No signature accepted without stating which condition it satisfies. ✓
  • Findings would hold given identical signatures in a domain found culturally unsympathetic. ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. Proceeding to Step 3.


Step 3 — Synthesis Finding

Confidence distribution: C4 High; C2, C3, C5, C6 Partial; C1 Low. This meets the Significant Displacement threshold via four or more counter-commitments operative at Partial confidence, with C4 additionally at High. It does not meet the Systemic Displacement threshold, which requires four or more counter-commitments at High confidence.

The operative constellation clusters in two ways. C4 (Anti-Foundationalist Drift) supplies the methodological solvent — a theological method treating prior formulations as revisable rather than fixed. C2 and C6 (Causal Determination, Moral Subjectivism) supply the moral-theological expression of that solvent in pastoral practice concerning culpability and conscience. C3 and C5 (Expressivist Default, Constructivist Truth) are the catechetical and liturgical carriers. This does not yet constitute a fully self-reinforcing four-High-confidence framework, but it is a coherent pattern rather than an incoherent mix: the same underlying anti-foundationalist move recurs across formation, liturgy, catechesis, and moral theology in specifically diagnostic ways.

Synthesis Finding: Significant Displacement, with C4 (Anti-Foundationalist Drift) as the load-bearing counter-commitment and C2, C3, C5, C6 as Partial satellite displacements. C1 is not established.

Self-Audit — Step 3:

  • Synthesis finding derived from the Step 2 findings, not from a prior conclusion. ✓
  • Finding not inflated to Systemic Displacement. ✓
  • Pre-argumentative absorption distinguished from consciously held doctrine throughout. This finding makes no claim about whether any individual theologian or bishop consciously holds these positions — only that the counter-commitments are doing structural work in institutional practice. ✓
  • Finding addresses the domain as a whole, not driven by any single primary-source statement. ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected.


Scope Note

Per instrument scope (CDA v1.1, Section IX), this finding makes no claim about which position — traditionalist or conciliar — is philosophically correct, and issues no verdict on the domain's overall philosophical soundness or on the quality of its participants' reasoning. It identifies displacement signatures at the pre-argumentative level only. Examination of whether the displaced classical commitments are correct, or the counter-commitments defensible, belongs to other instruments.


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