Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Sunday, April 19, 2026

The Classical Stoic System — How the Parts Relate

 

The Classical Stoic System — How the Parts Relate

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


The Central Logical Spine

The system is not a collection of independent instruments. It is a single logical structure in which each layer makes the layer above it possible and is constrained by the layer below it. The spine runs as follows:

Six Commitments → Three Foundational Claims → 80 Propositions → Instruments → Outputs

Nothing at any level can override what is established at a lower level. An instrument finding that contradicts a proposition is a malfunction. A proposition that contradicts a commitment is impossible by definition. The spine is the system’s governing constraint, not a historical summary of how it was built. The spine was not planned — it was identified retrospectively as the logical order that the accumulated content required.


Layer One: The Six Commitments

The six commitments are Sterling’s original contribution and the philosophical floor of the entire system. They are not derived from Stoicism — they are what makes Sterling’s reconstruction of Stoicism philosophically defensible rather than merely asserted.

C1 — Substance Dualism makes the self/external boundary ontologically real. Without it, the control dichotomy is a practical heuristic rather than a metaphysical fact. The distinction between what is “up to us” and what is not collapses into a matter of degree rather than kind.

C2 — Libertarian Free Will makes assent a genuine act of origination. Without it, the discipline of assent is an illusion — the agent appears to choose but is determined. The entire framework becomes a description of mechanisms rather than a prescription for practice.

C3 — Moral Realism makes the verdict “this impression is false” objectively true rather than merely personally preferred. Without it, the value strip is a preference declaration, not a correction. The proposition that externals are neither good nor evil is a fact about reality, not a cultural option.

C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth makes “false” mean “fails to match reality.” Without it, the correction of dogmata has no external standard to correct toward. A belief is false because it does not correspond to how things actually are, not because it is incoherent or unpopular.

C5 — Ethical Intuitionism gives the rational faculty direct epistemic access to moral truth. Without it, the agent has no way to know what virtue requires in a particular situation. Moral knowledge is not inferred from empirical observation — it is directly apprehended by the rational faculty attending to what is actually present.

C6 — Foundationalism organizes moral knowledge into a stable dependency structure with self-evident first principles at the base. Without it, the correction of a false belief has no firm ground to correct toward. Sterling’s smorgasbord warning — his insistence that you cannot pick and choose among the theorems — is foundationalism in operation.

The six commitments work simultaneously, not sequentially. Document 20 (The Six Commitments Integrated) shows all six active at once in the three foundational claims. The most philosophically demanding is Foundation Three — that right assent guarantees eudaimonia — which requires all six commitments to be simultaneously true for the guarantee to hold.


Layer Two: The Three Foundational Claims

The six commitments ground three foundational claims that are the operational heart of Sterling’s Stoicism:

Foundation One: The only things in our control are inner events — beliefs, desires, acts of will. (C1 and C2 are the philosophical warrant.)

Foundation Two: Virtue is the only genuine good; vice the only genuine evil; all externals are indifferent. (C3, C4, and C5 are the philosophical warrant.)

Foundation Three: Right assent guarantees eudaimonia. (All six commitments are simultaneously required.)

These three claims are the governing standard for everything above. Any instrument output, any blog post, any practical recommendation that contradicts one of these three is incorrect by definition — not by preference, not by majority opinion, but by the logical structure of the system.


Layer Three: The Propositional Architecture

The 80 Unified Propositions translate the three foundational claims into a closed axiom set that governs every subsequent instrument move. Sections I–VIII cover the core theoretical content: foundations, impressions and assent, value theory, causation of emotions, virtue and action, appropriate positive feelings, eudaimonia, and the Stoic path. These are the propositional expression of everything the six commitments and three foundational claims require.

Section IX — the Action Proposition Set (Props 59–80) — is Dave Kelly’s architectural addition, grounded in Sterling’s theoretical foundations. It governs the practical movement from correct value-judgment to rational action: role identification, goal selection, means selection, reservation, verification. Section IX presupposes Sections I–VIII and cannot substitute for them.

The propositions are the governing language of the instruments. Every instrument finding must cite the specific proposition that warrants it. An instrument that produces findings without propositional citation is operating from training data, not from the corpus. The source texts — Sterling’s Nine Excerpts and additional ISF writings — are the court of appeal when a proposition’s meaning is disputed.


Layer Four: The Instrument Architecture

The Logic Engine (SLE v4.0) is the self-examination instrument. It audits an individual agent’s own assents against the 80 Propositions. It asks: does this assent correspond to moral reality? It is the instrument most directly connected to the foundational claims. Every other instrument presupposes that the agent using it has either run the SLE or is operating from a position in which his own assents are already under examination.

The Decision Framework (SDF v3.3) is the procedural instrument. It takes the output of correct value-judgment and structures rational action from it. The six steps — Agent Check, Purview Check, Value Strip, Virtue Identification, Action Determination, Outcome Acceptance — are a procedural replication of what a person of correct judgment does naturally. The SDF is downstream of the SLE: correct action cannot be determined without first establishing correct value-judgment. The Factual Uncertainty Gate and the Named Failure Modes are architectural safeguards against the six most common instrument malfunctions.

The Integrated Practical Model is the operational layer beneath the SDF. Where the SDF specifies what propositions govern each step, the Integrated Practical Model specifies what the rational faculty must actually do at each moment. The corrective module (C1–C5) operationalizes Nine Excerpts Section 7 sub-steps (a) and (b). The constructive module (D1–D7) operationalizes sub-step (d). Its critical architectural limitation — that D2’s failure is undetectable by subsequent operations — is the reason Dave Kelly’s corrective layer is architecturally necessary, not merely advisable.

The Urge to Act is a supplementary practical document identifying the 7.b intervention point as the accessible entry point for the beginning prokōptōn. It is not an instrument — it produces no verdicts. It is an account of where training can practically begin and how the intervention point migrates upstream toward reception over time. It sits adjacent to the Integrated Practical Model and supplements the SDF’s Step 0 Agent Check by naming the urge as the first reliable diagnostic signal available to the early-stage practitioner.

The Corpus Evaluator (SCE v1.0) evaluates any idea against the full corpus. It is the most general-purpose instrument: where the SLE audits assents, the CIA audits ideologies, and the CPA audits public figures, the SCE can be directed at any idea, argument, or claim. Its hard limitation — that it cannot evaluate whether the corpus itself is correct — marks the outer boundary of what the system can honestly claim.

The Classical Ideological Audit (CIA v2.0) audits ideological frameworks against the six commitments. It operates at the ideology level, not the individual level. Its four verdict categories (Convergent, Partial Convergence, Divergent, Orthogonal) and dissolution criterion make it the system’s primary tool for political philosophy. The dissolution finding is a finding about what happens to those who adopt a framework, not a verdict about any individual’s inner life.

The Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA v1.0) audits named public figures’ argumentative records against the six commitments. It operates at the person level. The fifth verdict category — Inconsistent — distinguishes figures whose record requires contradictory presuppositions across domains. The Political Application Constraint governs all CPA work without exception.

The key relationship among the three audit instruments: the SLE looks inward at the agent’s own assents. The CIA looks outward at ideological frameworks as systems of ideas. The CPA looks outward at individual public figures as argumentative records. All three use the six commitments as test criteria but at different levels of analysis. None substitutes for another.


Layer Five: The Training Layer

This layer is the system’s largest gap and its practical base. The propositional warrant for training exists in Props 78–80. The Nine Excerpts supply the mechanism: repeated refusal of assent weakens false-value impressions over time; repeated correct assent strengthens correct ones. The Sage is simply someone who has controlled his assents so carefully for so long that false-value impressions no longer arrive.

What does not yet exist as a completed corpus document is a systematic training curriculum — a sequenced set of exercises grounded in the propositional architecture, organized by difficulty, and calibrated to the practitioner’s current intervention point. The Urge to Act is the first document that directly addresses where training begins. The Temperament-Based Stoic Psychology project — mapping all sixteen personality styles against the six commitments — is the other registered project direction for this layer.

Without training, the instruments can be executed nominally. The propositional verdicts can be produced. But the mental operations the commitments require may not be occurring. The training layer is what makes the instruments more than formal exercises.


Layer Six: The Role Architecture

The role architecture bridges the theoretical system and the world of action. Props 64–66 govern role identification; Props 68–71 govern role conflict resolution. Every role generates kathēkon — appropriate duties of action. Those duties are the content of rational action once the value strip has been correctly completed.

The eight economic role manuals apply the propositional architecture to specific role-contexts. They are downstream of the instruments: they presuppose correct value-judgment and apply the Section IX Action Proposition Set to role-specific situations. The MacIntyre framework — identifying the Manager, Therapist, and Aesthete as the character types produced by emotivist culture — is the diagnostic context for the role architecture. Sterling explicitly maps MacIntyre’s analysis onto the Stoic account of what happens when a culture loses virtue ethics as its organizing framework.


Layer Seven: The Political Philosophy Layer

The CIA is the instrument; the political philosophy layer is its application domain. CIA runs produce findings about ideologies and public figures. Those findings are Dave Kelly’s work, derived from Sterling’s theoretical foundations, and governed by the Political Application Constraint throughout.

The book project — systematic CIA application to nationalism, libertarianism, progressivism, conservatism, communitarianism, anarchism, and monarchism — is the major remaining gap in this layer. The CIA instrument is ready; the systematic application has not been executed.


The Governing Relationships — Summary

The six commitments govern everything. No instrument output, no blog post, no role manual can contradict what the six commitments require. They are not negotiable and not revisable from within the system.

The SLE and SDF are complementary, not redundant. The SLE audits value-judgment; the SDF structures action. The SLE must precede the SDF for the SDF to be operating correctly. An action determined without a prior value-judgment audit is structurally incomplete regardless of how well-reasoned it appears.

The Integrated Practical Model is the operational layer of the SDF, not a separate instrument. It describes what the faculty must actually do, not merely what propositions govern the output. Its undetectable failure at D2 is why the human corrective layer is architecturally necessary.

The audit instruments apply the six commitments externally; the SLE applies them to the agent himself. This is the fundamental distinction in the instrument hierarchy.

The training layer is the system’s practical base. Everything above it is available to the practitioner only insofar as his assents are actually under examination. Without training, the instruments can be executed nominally but the mental operations the commitments require may not be occurring. The training layer is what makes the instruments more than formal exercises.

The System Map (v2.6) is the authoritative governance document. When a question arises about what exists, what its status is, or how it relates to other corpus documents, the System Map is the court of first appeal.

The Classical Stoic System — Comprehensive Outline

 

The Classical Stoic System — Comprehensive Outline

Version 1.0 — April 2026. Philosophical foundations: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. System architecture and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.

This outline maps the full logical structure of the system from its philosophical foundations to its practical applications. Items marked [GAP] identify components required for comprehensiveness that do not yet exist as completed documents. Items marked [PARTIAL] exist in preliminary or incomplete form. Items marked [COMPLETE] exist as ratified corpus documents.


LAYER ONE: PHILOSOPHICAL FOUNDATIONS

The foundation layer establishes the metaphysical and epistemological commitments that make the entire system philosophically defensible. Everything above it presupposes it. Nothing in the practical layers is valid unless this layer is sound.

1.1 The Six Philosophical Commitments

The six commitments are Sterling’s original contribution. They are not derived from the system — they are what the system rests on. Each commitment does specific load-bearing work within the three foundational claims of Stoic practice.

  • C1 — Substance Dualism: the rational faculty is categorically distinct from the body and all external conditions. [COMPLETE] Source texts: Documents 12–13. Analytical essay: Document 25.
  • C2 — Libertarian Free Will: assent is a genuine act of origination, not a determined output of prior conditions. [COMPLETE] Source text: Document 15. Analytical essay: Document 26.
  • C3 — Moral Realism: there are objective moral facts independent of preference, consensus, or cultural formation. [COMPLETE] Source texts: Documents 16, 19. Analytical essay: Document 27.
  • C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: a belief is true if and only if it corresponds to mind-independent fact. [COMPLETE] Source texts: Documents 16, 18. Analytical essay: Document 28.
  • C5 — Ethical Intuitionism: moral truths are directly apprehensible by the rational faculty, non-inferentially. [COMPLETE] Source texts: Documents 16–17. Analytical essay: Document 29.
  • C6 — Foundationalism: justified moral beliefs form a hierarchy grounded in self-evident first principles. [COMPLETE] Source texts: Documents 17–18. Analytical essay: Document 30.

1.2 Architectural Integration of the Six Commitments

  • Core Vector Space: Explanation — defines the structural relationship between commitment, load-bearing concepts, and discriminative boundary. [COMPLETE] Document 24.
  • The Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism — maps each commitment to the three foundational claims (control dichotomy, false belief, assent guarantee). [COMPLETE] Document 20.
  • Dogmata, the Six Commitments, and the Structure of Sterling’s Stoicism — establishes dogmata as the mediating layer between the commitments and the three foundations; central claim: Epictetus and Sterling are the same system at two different levels of analysis. [COMPLETE] Document 31.
  • Master integration essay: a single document holding the full logical architecture from commitments through propositions through instruments through practical applications, explaining how every layer presupposes every layer below it. [GAP — Priority 4]

1.3 Framework Scope and Theological Position

  • Grant C. Sterling on What Makes a Stoic — defines the moral psychology as the essential core; physics and cosmology as non-essential. [COMPLETE] Document 14.
  • Two and One-Half Ethical Systems — situates Sterling’s Stoicism in relation to deontology, consequentialism, and virtue ethics. [COMPLETE] Document 10.
  • Stoicism Is Not Therapy, But Training — distinguishes the framework from therapeutic frameworks and comfort-restoration models. [COMPLETE] Document 9.
  • Providence language: established as optional framing only; the control dichotomy is the sufficient warrant for all claims that reference Providence. [COMPLETE] Architectural note in System Map.

LAYER TWO: THE PROPOSITIONAL ARCHITECTURE

The propositional layer translates the philosophical commitments into a formal axiom set governing all subsequent analysis. The propositions are the governing standard for every instrument in the system.

2.1 The 80 Unified Stoic Propositions

  • Section I — Foundations, metaphysics, and anthropology (Props 1–5). [COMPLETE]
  • Section II — Impressions and assent (Props 6–15). [COMPLETE]
  • Section III — Value theory (Props 16–22). [COMPLETE]
  • Section IV — Causation of emotions and desires (Props 23–31). [COMPLETE]
  • Section V — Virtue and action (Props 32–38). [COMPLETE]
  • Section VI — Appropriate positive feelings, eupatheiai (Props 39–42). [COMPLETE]
  • Section VII — Eudaimonia (Props 43–51). [COMPLETE]
  • Section VIII — The Stoic path, prokopō and askēsis (Props 52–58). [COMPLETE]
  • Section IX — Action Proposition Set (Props 59–80): structure of rational action, role identification, multiple roles and competing preferred indifferents, means selection, verification test, prospective preparation and retrospective review. [COMPLETE]

2.2 Source Texts for the Propositions

  • Core Stoicism — Grant C. Sterling’s primary theoretical text. [COMPLETE] Document 1.
  • Nine Excerpts from the International Stoic Forum — primary propositional source material. [COMPLETE] Document 3.
  • Additional ISF messages incorporated into Props 16–80 via synthesis at project direction. [COMPLETE] Provenance recorded in System Map v2.6.
  • Gmail archive mining — estimated 100–200 additional ISF discussions in which Sterling participated. Recovery ongoing. [PARTIAL — ongoing]

LAYER THREE: THE INSTRUMENT ARCHITECTURE

The instrument layer operationalizes the propositions as formal procedures for specific analytical tasks. Each instrument has a defined scope, a defined input, a defined output, and named failure modes. No instrument can operate outside its defined scope without producing a named failure.

3.1 The Logic Engine v4.0

Function: audits an individual agent’s own assents and value-judgments against the 80 Propositions. Self-examination instrument. [COMPLETE] Document 2.

  • Part 1: LLM Instructions (Core Identity; Six-Pillar Framework; Operational Framework Standard, 15 named standards; Operational Protocol, Steps 00–6)
  • Part 2: User Quick-Start Card
  • Part 3: The 80 Unified Propositions (Sections I–IX)
  • Part 4: The Scenario Architect — generates graduated friction scenarios for training (Levels 1–3). [COMPLETE] Noted: this is an LLM tool, not a structured human curriculum. A curriculum layer is missing (see Layer Five).

3.2 The Decision Framework v3.3

Function: determines correct action in a specific situation through a five-step procedure with mandatory self-audit at every step transition. [COMPLETE] Document 4.

  • Preliminary Agent Check
  • Step 1 — Purview Check
  • Step 2 — Value Strip
  • Step 3 — Virtue Identification (appropriate object of aim among preferred indifferents)
  • Step 4 — Action Determination (Factual Uncertainty Gate; Move One; Move Two verification test)
  • Step 5 — Outcome Acceptance
  • Six named failure modes; mandatory self-audit at each step transition

3.3 The Integrated Practical Model

Function: operational layer of The Decision Framework; translates its propositional structure into a step-by-step cognitive sequence the agent can execute in real time. [COMPLETE] Document 32.

  • Corrective module (C1–C5): operationalizes impression examination and assent refusal; grounded in Props 23–31
  • Constructive module (D1–D7): operationalizes role identification, aim selection, means selection, and reservation; grounded in Props 32–38 and Section IX
  • Key architectural limitation: D2 failure is undetectable by subsequent operations; human corrective layer architecturally necessary

3.4 The Manual of Assent and Execution

Function: defines the formal architecture of rational agency from impression through execution; governs the agent’s operation across a full daily cycle. [COMPLETE — core sections; PARTIAL — Situation Library] Published April 17, 2026.

  • Version 1.0: terminological rule; foundational principles; core processing sequence; structural distinction (assent / impulse / execution); action architecture post-assent; universal rule; system scope; system objective. [COMPLETE]
  • Role Taxonomy: five role classes (Fundamental, Biological, Relational, Functional, Situational); role axiom; role activation; role function in execution; role conflict handling. [COMPLETE]
  • Daily Execution Protocol: four phases (Initialization, Continuous Processing, Mid-cycle Correction, Terminal Audit); sleep transition; failure conditions; system continuity. [COMPLETE]
  • Error Taxonomy and Correction System: primary error class (false value attribution); secondary error forms (misclassification, control error, role confusion, means error, outcome attachment); pathos diagnostic; detection protocol; seven-step correction procedure; error replay. [COMPLETE]
  • Situation Library (Judgment Packets): universal packet structure; baseline activity packets (Waking, Eating, Sleep); relational role packets (Receiving Criticism, Interpersonal Conflict); functional role packets (Task Failure, Ethical Conflict in Role — truncated). [PARTIAL — Priority 2] Requires: completion of functional packets; exceptional situation packets (grief, illness, financial catastrophe, legal jeopardy, social disgrace); virtue-temptation packets (anger, envy, fear, excessive desire, pride, despair).

3.5 Analytical Audit Instruments

  • The Corpus Evaluator v1.0: evaluates any idea against the full corpus; five-step procedure; six named failure modes. [COMPLETE] Document 22.
  • The Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v2.0: audits ideological frameworks against the six commitments; verdict categories: Convergent, Partial Convergence, Divergent, Orthogonal; dissolution criterion; two-stage variant procedure. [COMPLETE] Document 21. Political Application Constraint governs all runs.
  • The Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0: audits named public figures’ argumentative records against the six commitments; five verdict categories including Inconsistent; dissolution finding reframed as framework implication; nine named failure modes. [COMPLETE] Document 33. Political Application Constraint governs all runs.

LAYER FOUR: THE ROLE ARCHITECTURE

The role layer translates the system’s abstract value structure into situated practical guidance organized by the agent’s actual social relationships. It is the bridge between the philosophical system and the concrete life of the agent.

4.1 Philosophical Bridge

  • Role-Duty: The Bridge Between the Philosopher and the World — establishes role-duty as the practical answer to the question of what the agent aims at when all externals are indifferent; grounds role-duty in each of the six commitments; addresses independence from desert, role conflict resolution. [COMPLETE] Published April 15, 2026.
  • The Correct Stoic Attitude — A Manual — governs the agent’s practical orientation across all role-situations. [COMPLETE] Document 11.

4.2 Cultural Diagnosis: MacIntyre’s Emotivist Framework

  • MacIntyre’s Emotivist Culture: The World the Philosopher Must Navigate — establishes emotivism as the cultural framework within which all practical role-discharge occurs; introduces the three characters. [COMPLETE] Published April 15, 2026.
  • Classical Ideological Audit: Emotivism — full CIA v2.0 run; six Contrary findings; maximum divergence in instrument architecture; the philosophical foundation of the MacIntyre series. [COMPLETE] Published April 15, 2026.
  • Discipline of Emotivist Value-Claim Correction — operational module for detecting and correcting culturally-generated false impressions; ten role-based emotivist claim generators; seven-step correction sequence. [COMPLETE] Published April 17, 2026.

4.3 MacIntyre’s Three Characters — Virtuous Discharge

  • The Virtuous Manager — six sections; primary role-duty as role-clarity for those beneath him; correct performance measure; relationship to subordinates, to authority, and to the reserve clause. [COMPLETE] Published April 15, 2026.
  • The Virtuous Therapist — five sections; actual duties of the therapeutic role; what the virtuous Therapist cannot do (value-neutrality); therapeutic work organized around impression and assent; relationship to the layman’s framework. [COMPLETE] Published April 15, 2026.
  • The Virtuous Aesthete — six sections; preferred indifferents and the aesthetic life; the Aesthete’s self-defeating project; social function; the paradox of fuller engagement through non-attachment. [COMPLETE] Published April 15, 2026. Includes closing synthesis of all three characters.

4.4 Functional and Economic Role Manuals

Eight manuals applying the system to specific functional roles in 2026 economic life. Each manual identifies the false value structure, the governing question, daily practice, concrete behaviors, and the governing rule. [COMPLETE] Published April 15, 2026.

  • Manual One: The Employee
  • Manual Two: The Manager
  • Manual Three: The Consumer
  • Manual Four: The Investor
  • Manual Five: The Entrepreneur
  • Manual Six: The Contractor, Freelancer, or Gig Worker
  • Manual Seven: The Job Seeker
  • Manual Eight: The Household Budget Manager, Parent, or Caregiver

4.5 Relational Role Manuals

Sustained practical manuals for primary relational roles equivalent in depth and structure to the eight economic manuals. This is the most philosophically demanding and humanly important gap in the system. The relational roles are precisely those in which false value judgments run deepest — persons in relational roles are preferred indifferents the agent is most liable to treat as genuine goods. Epictetus’s Section 30 addresses this terrain directly. No sustained practical manuals yet exist. [GAP — Priority 1]

  • Manual: The Parent [GAP]
  • Manual: The Spouse or Partner [GAP]
  • Manual: The Adult Child [GAP]
  • Manual: The Sibling [GAP]
  • Manual: The Friend [GAP]
  • Manual: The Neighbor and Community Member [GAP]
  • Manual: The Citizen [GAP]

4.6 Exceptional Situation Manuals

Sustained practical manuals for major life disruptions that cut across all roles simultaneously. These situations are where the system is most severely tested and where pre-formed judgment is most urgently needed. [GAP — Priority 2, alongside Situation Library completion]

  • Manual: Grief and Bereavement [GAP]
  • Manual: Serious Illness (own illness and caregiving for another) [GAP]
  • Manual: Financial Catastrophe [GAP]
  • Manual: Legal Jeopardy [GAP]
  • Manual: Social Disgrace or Public Humiliation [GAP]
  • Manual: Profound Injustice Suffered [GAP]

LAYER FIVE: THE TRAINING ARCHITECTURE (ASKĒSIS)

The training layer provides a progressive, graduated curriculum for building the capacities the system requires. The Scenario Architect provides LLM-generated friction scenarios but does not constitute a structured human practice. Props 78–80 supply the propositional warrant for this layer (Prospective Preparation and Retrospective Review). The Daily Execution Protocol in The Manual of Assent and Execution supplies the temporal framework. What does not yet exist is the curriculum that populates those frameworks with specific, graded exercises. This entire layer is a gap. [GAP — Priority 3]

5.1 Morning Examination Protocol

  • Corpus-governed morning initialization procedure: specific propositions to assent to; anticipation of the day’s role-situations; pre-loading of judgment packets for identified difficult situations; commitment formulation. [GAP]

5.2 Evening Review Protocol

  • Corpus-governed terminal audit procedure: systematic review of the day’s impressions and assents; error identification using the Error Taxonomy; error replay procedure; judgment packet refinement. [GAP]

5.3 Graduated Exercise Curriculum

  • Level 1 (Novice): clear-cut external loss; basic impression recognition; single-role situations. [PARTIAL — Scenario Architect Level 1]
  • Level 2 (Intermediate): social pressure; multi-role situations; ethical conflict in role; relational role situations. [PARTIAL — Scenario Architect Level 2]
  • Level 3 (Advanced): life-altering circumstances; grief and bereavement; severe injustice; long-duration situations. [PARTIAL — Scenario Architect Level 3]
  • Structured human exercises independent of LLM tool use: impression examination drills; reserve clause practice; role-conflict resolution exercises; virtue-temptation recognition. [GAP]

5.4 Temptation Pattern Library

Pre-formed recognition and correction sequences for the recurring virtue-temptation patterns that produce the most common assent failures. Structurally equivalent to the Situation Library’s judgment packets but organized by temptation type rather than situation type. [GAP]

  • Anger pattern: impression structure, typical false judgment, correction sequence [GAP]
  • Envy pattern [GAP]
  • Fear pattern [GAP]
  • Excessive desire (epithumia) pattern [GAP]
  • Pride and vanity pattern [GAP]
  • Despair and hopelessness pattern [GAP]
  • Grief and attachment pattern [GAP]

LAYER SIX: THE TEMPERAMENT LAYER

The temperament layer addresses the gap between the universal system (which applies equally to all agents) and the particular agent (who has a specific temperament making certain errors more likely and certain virtues more natural). Logic Engine Standard 7 establishes that personality style is diagnostic only — this layer cannot generate virtuous style profiles but can generate characteristic error-pattern diagnostics and role-specific guidance calibrated to temperament type. [PARTIAL — project direction registered; development not recently resumed]

6.1 Foundational Document

  • Temperament-Based Stoic Psychology: integration of Oldham’s 16 personality styles with the system’s philosophical framework; characteristic error-patterns for each style; diagnostic function only. [PARTIAL — prior content not recently surfaced; may require re-retrieval]

6.2 Style-Specific Error Pattern Guides

  • For each of the 16 Oldham styles: characteristic false value assignments; recurring role-conflict patterns; most likely pathē; recommended judgment packet emphases. [GAP]

LAYER SEVEN: THE POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY LAYER

The political philosophy layer applies the CIA systematically to the major political ideologies and to specific political figures and arguments. This layer operates under the Political Application Constraint throughout: Sterling’s name is not associated with political applications or products. All political analysis is derived from Sterling’s theoretical foundations.

7.1 Completed CIA Runs

  • Emotivism (six Contrary; Full Dissolution) [COMPLETE]
  • Globalism (six Divergent) [COMPLETE]
  • Sovereign-Nation (two Divergent, three Partial Convergence, one Orthogonal) [COMPLETE]
  • Scalia Originalism (two Divergent, one Partial Convergence, one Convergent, two Orthogonal) [COMPLETE]
  • Eric Swalwell (CIA run) [COMPLETE]

7.2 Completed CPA Runs

  • Zohran Mamdani (Full Dissolution; two Contrary on C1 and C2) [COMPLETE]
  • Jordan Peterson (No Dissolution; five Partially Aligned; Inconsistent on C5) [COMPLETE]
  • Donald Robertson (CPA) [COMPLETE]
  • Ryan Holiday (CPA) [COMPLETE]
  • Sam Harris (CPA) [COMPLETE]
  • Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (CPA) [COMPLETE]
  • Malcolm Schosha (CPA) [COMPLETE]
  • Peter Singer (CPA) [COMPLETE]
  • John Rawls (CPA) [COMPLETE]
  • Alasdair MacIntyre (CPA) [COMPLETE]
  • Steve Marquis (CPA — personal philosophical satisfaction; not for publication) [COMPLETE]

7.3 Systematic Political Ideology Book Project

Applying the CIA systematically to the full range of major political ideologies. Registered project direction. [GAP — book project]

  • Nationalism [GAP]
  • Libertarianism [GAP]
  • Progressivism [GAP]
  • Conservatism [GAP]
  • Communitarianism [GAP]
  • Anarchism [GAP]
  • Monarchism (candidate given Sterling’s Aristotelian political preference) [GAP]

LAYER EIGHT: APPLIED AND INSTITUTIONAL OUTPUTS

The applied layer produces blog posts, educational materials, and extended public-facing work derived from the system. These are outputs of the system, not components of it. They are listed here for completeness and as a record of what the project has produced publicly.

8.1 Philosophical Foundation Posts

  • The conversion point in Epictetus’s Enchiridion (Sections 1–5) [COMPLETE]
  • Choosing philosophy over the layman’s life [COMPLETE]
  • Role-duty as the bridge between philosophy and the world [COMPLETE]
  • Posts on the political philosophy implied by the six commitments [COMPLETE]
  • MacIntyre’s emotivist culture (introductory essay) [COMPLETE]
  • CIA run on emotivism [COMPLETE]

8.2 MacIntyre Character Series

  • The Virtuous Manager [COMPLETE]
  • The Virtuous Therapist [COMPLETE]
  • The Virtuous Aesthete [COMPLETE]

8.3 Economic Role Manual Series

  • Eight role manuals: Employee, Manager, Consumer, Investor, Entrepreneur, Contractor/Freelancer, Job Seeker, Household Budget Manager [COMPLETE]
  • Toward a Virtue-Facilitating Economy [COMPLETE]

8.4 Manual of Assent and Execution Series

  • Version 1.0 (Core System) [COMPLETE]
  • Role Taxonomy [COMPLETE]
  • Daily Execution Protocol [COMPLETE]
  • Error Taxonomy and Correction System [COMPLETE]
  • Situation Library (Judgment Packets) [PARTIAL]

8.5 Hoque / AI Cognitive Outsourcing Series

  • Post 1: Effortful friction [COMPLETE]
  • Post 2: Attention collapse [COMPLETE]
  • Post 3: Loss of self through narrative [COMPLETE]
  • Posts 4–6 [GAP — pending]

8.6 Educational and Creative Series

  • The Practice (philosophical novel, 15 chapters) [COMPLETE]
  • Eli Series (children’s books, 9–11 age range; six commitments dramatized) [COMPLETE]
  • Eli Series parallel (15–17 age range) [PARTIAL]

8.7 Lexical and Linguistic Work

  • Stoic 500 Lexicon (471 terms with PIE etymologies across 10 tiers) [COMPLETE]
  • Universal Template for Logical Reformulation of Stoic Texts v2.3 [COMPLETE]
  • CBT Translation System (all 15 cognitive distortions mapped) [COMPLETE]

SYSTEMATIC CONTAMINATION AUDIT

A future project direction identified during session work. The discovery of “role-clarity” as training-data vocabulary contamination in the Manager Manual (the concept is corpus-derived from Props 64–66 and Theorem 29, but the term was borrowed from management literature) established the need for a systematic audit of all practical role manuals and instruments for similar contaminations. No corpus-governed term that appears in the practitioner-facing documents should be traceable to training-data pattern-matching rather than to specific corpus derivation. [GAP — systematic audit pending]


GAP SUMMARY — PRIORITY ORDER

Priority 1 — Relational Role Manuals (Layer 4.5). Seven manuals covering Parent, Spouse/Partner, Adult Child, Sibling, Friend, Neighbor/Community Member, Citizen. Philosophically harder and humanly more important than the economic manuals. Epictetus’s Section 30 addresses this terrain directly. These are the roles where false value judgments run deepest.

Priority 2 — Situation Library Completion and Exceptional Situation Manuals (Layers 3.4 and 4.6). The Situation Library is the practical training content the Daily Execution Protocol requires. Completion requires: functional role packets, exceptional situation packets (grief, illness, financial catastrophe, legal jeopardy, social disgrace, profound injustice), and virtue-temptation packets. Exceptional Situation Manuals (Layer 4.6) are the sustained document form of the same content.

Priority 3 — The Askēsis Curriculum (Layer 5). The morning and evening examination protocols, the graduated exercise curriculum independent of The Scenario Architect, and the Temptation Pattern Library. This layer is dependent on Layer 4.5 and the Situation Library being substantially complete first — a structured training curriculum requires the situational content it trains against.

Priority 4 — The Master Integration Essay (Layer 1.2). A single document explaining how all layers relate to each other and to the system’s single governing purpose. Essential for the coherence of the project as a public-facing body of work but not blocking anything operational.

Ongoing — Gmail Archive Mining (Layer 2.2). Estimated 100–200 additional ISF discussions in which Sterling participated. Recovery of this material may revise or extend the propositional architecture.

Ongoing — Systematic Contamination Audit. All practical role manuals and instruments to be audited for training-data vocabulary contamination following the “role-clarity” discovery.


The Classical Stoic System — Comprehensive Outline v1.0. Philosophical foundations: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. System architecture and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.

Sterling Corpus Evaluator (SCE) v1.0 — Run on Meghan Sullivan / AI Ethics Article (NPR, April 17, 2026)


Sterling Corpus Evaluator (SCE) v1.0 — Run on Meghan Sullivan / AI Ethics Article (NPR, April 17, 2026)

The philosopher trying to teach ethics to AI developers

Instrument: Sterling Corpus Evaluator (SCE) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Philosophical commitments, propositions, and theorems: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.

Corpus in use: Core Stoicism (Sterling), Nine Excerpts (Sterling), Sterling Logic Engine v4.0 (Kelly/Sterling), Sterling’s Framework for Personal Decision Making v3.3 (Kelly/Sterling), Stoicism Is Not Therapy But Training (Sterling), Two and One-Half Ethical Systems (Sterling), The Six Philosophical Commitments That Ground Stoic Practice (Kelly/Sterling), Dogmata, the Six Commitments, and the Structure of Sterling’s Stoicism (Kelly), The Little Enchiridion (Kelly), Harshness and Beauty in Epictetus (Sterling), Seddon’s Glossary (Seddon), Manual of Practical Rational Action (Kelly).


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Full corpus list is in view. Source document has been read in full. The instrument is not proceeding from a prior conclusion about the finding.

The input is an NPR article (April 17, 2026) reporting on philosopher Meghan Sullivan’s work applying ethical frameworks to AI development, including her participation in an Anthropic summit and her advocacy for agency, virtue ethics, and practical wisdom as resources for AI developers and ordinary citizens. The article’s content is complex and multi-layered: it advances several interconnected ideas with embedded philosophical presuppositions. Tier Two applies.


Step 1 — Scope Calibration

Axis A — Complexity: Complex. The article presents interlocking claims across at least four domains: the nature of ethical philosophy, the function of virtue ethics, the concept of human agency, and the political economy of resistance to AI. No single governing proposition covers all of them.

Axis B — Corpus Domain: Substantially within the corpus’s domain, with significant portions falling outside it. The corpus addresses individual virtue, rational agency, value ontology, the philosophical commitments grounding Stoic practice, and the relationship between philosophical doctrine and psychological benefit. The article’s claims about AI development, corporate strategy, democratic participation, and consumer behavior are outside the corpus’s domain and will be declared accordingly.

Axis C — Presupposition vs. Surface Claim: The evaluation must reach beneath Sullivan’s surface claims to identify the embedded presuppositions. She does not explicitly defend a complete ethical theory; she advocates a practice orientation. What that practice presupposes philosophically is the primary subject of corpus evaluation.

Tier selection: Tier Two.

Self-Audit — Step 1: The complexity determination is warranted. The corpus domain question has been clearly demarcated rather than inflated or contracted. Tier Two confirmed.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 2.


Step 2 — Presupposition Extraction and Corpus Mapping

Four load-bearing presuppositions are extracted from the article’s central claims. Peripheral claims about corporate strategy, AI policy, and consumer economics are not presuppositions but empirical and political observations outside the corpus’s domain. They will receive a corpus boundary declaration at Step 4 rather than individual findings.


P1 — Philosophy functions as a resource for improving human behavior and decision-making in practical contexts.

Sullivan’s entire mission presupposes that philosophical reflection changes what people do — that applying ethical frameworks to AI developers produces better AI development. This is a functional claim about philosophy’s relationship to practice.

Corpus mapping: Core Stoicism (Sterling, Th 14); Stoicism Is Not Therapy But Training (Sterling); Nine Excerpts Section 3 and Section 7; SLE v4.0 Props 52–58.


P2 — Virtue ethics, centered on moral habits and practical wisdom, is the appropriate framework for addressing the ethical challenges of AI.

Sullivan is identified as a virtue ethicist. Her framework is Aristotelian: moral habits, practical wisdom, flourishing. This carries specific philosophical presuppositions about the structure of ethics and the nature of the good.

Corpus mapping: Two and One-Half Ethical Systems (Sterling); The Six Philosophical Commitments That Ground Stoic Practice (Kelly/Sterling) — C3 Moral Realism, C5 Ethical Intuitionism; SLE v4.0 Props 32–38.


P3 — Human agency is real, meaningful, and must be awakened from passivity in the face of powerful institutional forces.

Sullivan’s closing argument is that people “always have some choice” and that the primary obstacle to flourishing is a failure of imagination rather than a genuine lack of options. This presupposes libertarian or compatibilist agency of a robust kind.

Corpus mapping: Free Will and Causation (Sterling); SLE v4.0 Props 10–11, 52; Nine Excerpts Section 3; The Six Philosophical Commitments That Ground Stoic Practice — C2 Libertarian Free Will.


P4 — The goal of philosophical engagement with suffering and existential questions is to help people “achieve flourishing” and live “the good life.”

Sullivan frames the telos of her work as helping individuals and communities reach flourishing. This is an explicit eudaimonist claim. The content she gives it — more imagination, more options, waking up to agency — carries presuppositions about what flourishing consists in.

Corpus mapping: SLE v4.0 Props 43–51; Core Stoicism (Sterling) Th 14; Stoicism Is Not Therapy But Training (Sterling); Stoicism and Self-Interest: What Is Our Interest? (Sterling); Dogmata, the Six Commitments, and the Structure of Sterling’s Stoicism (Kelly).


Self-Audit — Step 2: All four presuppositions are load-bearing: the argument collapses without each. The corpus mapping is drawn from named documents, not from training data. Peripheral political and economic claims have been identified as outside the corpus’s domain and deferred to the corpus boundary declaration. No gap-filling has occurred.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 3.


Step 3 — Evaluation


P1 — Philosophy functions as a resource for improving human behavior and decision-making in practical contexts.

Finding against C2 (Libertarian Free Will) and Props 52–58 (SLE v4.0): Partial Convergence.

The corpus holds that philosophical doctrine changes behavior, but only through a specific causal mechanism: conviction produces belief-change, belief-change changes desires and emotions, and changed desires and emotions change action. Sterling argues this explicitly in Stoicism Is Not Therapy But Training: “all psychological benefits that Stoicism conveys can come only to those who believe Stoic principles. The psychology is parasitic on the philosophy.” Sullivan’s functional claim about philosophy improving practice converges with the corpus insofar as it treats philosophy as genuinely action-relevant. The divergence is in mechanism. Sullivan’s Socratic method — asking questions that expand the imagination and reveal more options — does not necessarily require the person to accept any philosophical doctrine. It is a technique for broadening practical perception. The corpus holds that techniques without doctrine produce nothing distinctively philosophical. A broadened range of perceived options does not, on the corpus’s account, change the underlying value judgments from which choices flow. Partial Convergence: the functional direction is correct; the mechanism is underspecified in ways the corpus would not accept.


P2 — Virtue ethics, centered on moral habits and practical wisdom, is the appropriate framework for addressing ethical challenges.

Finding against C3 (Moral Realism): Convergent on the realist commitment; Divergent on the structure of virtue.

Sullivan’s virtue ethics shares the corpus’s foundational moral realism: both hold that moral facts are real and that flourishing is a genuine end, not merely a cultural preference. This is a significant point of convergence. The Six Philosophical Commitments That Ground Stoic Practice states directly that moral realism is necessary because “virtue IS good” is a fact about reality, not a subjective preference.

However, Sullivan’s Aristotelianism carries structural presuppositions the corpus explicitly rejects. Two and One-Half Ethical Systems (Sterling) classifies Aristotelian virtue ethics as the “half” system — not one of the two coherent ethical systems (deontology and consequentialism), but a third view Sterling regards as philosophically unstable because it grounds virtue in what the virtuous person characteristically does rather than in an independent moral criterion that defines what the virtuous person should do. Sterling identifies as a deontological ethical intuitionist: moral duties are known directly by rational apprehension, not derived from an account of human character or flourishing. The corpus’s virtue is defined as holding only true value beliefs and acting on them (SLE v4.0 Props 34–37); it is not Aristotelian phronesis operating through habituated character.

Finding against C5 (Ethical Intuitionism): Partial Convergence.

The Socratic method Sullivan employs — asking questions that help interlocutors realize they have more options than believed — shares the intuitionist commitment to direct rational access: the interlocutor is helped to see something he could have seen had he attended correctly. This is structurally similar to the corpus’s account of rational perception of moral truth (Six Philosophical Commitments, C5). The divergence: Sullivan’s interlocutors are helped to perceive more options; the corpus holds that the key perception is not a wider set of options but a specific moral truth — that only virtue is genuinely good and that externals have no genuine value. Widening the range of choices without redirecting the value structure from which they flow does not reach the corpus’s target.


P3 — Human agency is real and must be awakened from passivity in the face of powerful institutional forces.

Finding against C2 (Libertarian Free Will) and SLE v4.0 Props 10–11: Convergent.

The corpus holds without qualification that judgment (assent to impressions) is in the agent’s control. SLE v4.0 Prop 52: “Judgment (assent to impressions) is in our control (by 10, 11).” Nine Excerpts Section 3: “The only things we control are inner events such as our beliefs, desires, and acts of will.” Sterling’s commitment to libertarian free will is constitutive of the entire system: the agent genuinely originates his assent; it is not determined by prior causes or external conditions. Sullivan’s insistence that “you always have some choice” and that the imagination’s limitations are the primary obstacle to flourishing is directly convergent with the corpus on this point. Where institutions and corporate leaders create the impression that no choice is available, the corpus would classify this as a false impression to which assent is being invited — and the corpus holds unambiguously that such assent is refusable.

Finding against the corpus’s account of what agency is directed at: Partial Convergence.

The convergence is genuine but partial. Sullivan locates the exercise of agency primarily in external decisions: which companies to give data and money to, how to vote, how to apply consumer and democratic power. The corpus holds that the primary domain of agency is assent — the internal governing judgments of the prohairesis. External action is the downstream consequence of correct internal agency, not its primary locus. Sullivan’s account treats the external exercise of choice as the substance of agency. The corpus treats it as an output that may or may not follow from genuine internal agency. An agent who votes and withholds consumer spending while still assenting to false value beliefs about what is genuinely good has not exercised his agency in the corpus’s primary sense. The primary work is internal, and Sullivan’s emphasis on external choice-sets leaves the internal unaddressed.


P4 — The goal of philosophical engagement is to help people achieve flourishing and live “the good life.”

Finding against SLE v4.0 Props 43–51 and Core Stoicism Th 14: Divergent on the content of flourishing; Convergent on flourishing as the genuine telos.

The corpus and Sullivan converge on the bare claim that flourishing is the appropriate telos of philosophical engagement. This is not a trivial convergence: it rules out hedonism, simple preference-satisfaction, and all merely procedural accounts of the good life. SLE v4.0 Prop 43: “The goal of life is eudaimonia.”

The divergence is substantial and load-bearing. The corpus specifies the content of flourishing with precision: complete moral perfection (acting virtuously) plus complete psychological contentment (positive feelings without negative feelings), with the latter being causally downstream of the former (SLE v4.0 Props 43–51). Crucially, Props 45–46 identify the exclusive cause of both psychological discontentment and moral imperfection: the belief that externals have value. Flourishing is achieved not by expanding one’s imagination about available options, not by exercising consumer or democratic power, but by eliminating the false belief that externals are genuine goods or evils. Sterling’s eudaimonia does not have more options in it; it has the correct value judgment, from which all psychological contentment follows necessarily.

Sullivan’s account of flourishing — reached through widened imagination, restored agency, and practical wisdom applied to the options available — does not address the corpus’s identified causal root of unflouring. Stoicism Is Not Therapy But Training (Sterling) makes this precise: “The problem is that the Stoic medicine has to be administered before the shock. Stoicism functions as an immunization, not as a cure.” A person who perceives more options but assents to the value of those options as genuine goods has not moved toward eudaimonia on the corpus’s account. He has merely enlarged the domain in which he pursues externals he falsely believes to be genuinely good.

This is the deepest divergence. It is load-bearing because Sullivan’s entire project presupposes that philosophical engagement with developers and citizens reaches the root of their existential distress. On the corpus’s analysis, it does not — unless it corrects the underlying false value beliefs from which that distress flows.

Self-Audit — Step 3: All four presuppositions have received findings. No Orthogonal verdicts have been used to avoid Divergent findings. The findings are not distributed for balance: P1, P2, and P4 carry significant divergences; P3 carries a genuine convergence on agency that the corpus would fully endorse. No findings have been issued on empirical or political questions within the article; those are deferred to the corpus boundary declaration. The same findings would be issued regardless of whether Sullivan’s project is sympathetic or unsympathetic to this framework.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 4.


Step 4 — Finding

Overall Verdict: Partial Convergence.

The Sullivan/NPR article presents a program that shares several structural features with the corpus — moral realism, genuine agency, philosophy as action-relevant, flourishing as the telos — without reaching the corpus’s core diagnostic claim or its specified mechanism of change.


Deepest Divergence.

The deepest point of divergence is the content of flourishing and its causal structure. The corpus holds that all psychological discontentment and all moral imperfection share a single cause: the false belief that externals have genuine value (SLE v4.0 Props 45–46). This is a precise etiological claim. Correction of that belief is the whole of the remedy; nothing else reaches the root. Sullivan’s program — widening the imagination, restoring the sense of agency, applying virtue ethics in practical contexts — addresses the surface but leaves the etiological root untouched. A person who recovers his sense of choice about which platforms to use, how to vote, and which companies to patronize has not, on the corpus’s account, moved toward eudaimonia unless those choices flow from corrected value beliefs. Sterling states the point in its sharpest form: “All psychological benefits that Stoicism conveys can come only to those who believe Stoic principles. The psychology is parasitic on the philosophy.” Sullivan’s Socratic method — practiced without requiring acceptance of the Stoic or any specific doctrine — produces expanded options, not corrected values.

A secondary but structurally significant divergence is the Aristotelian framework itself. Two and One-Half Ethical Systems (Sterling) classifies Aristotelian virtue ethics as the philosophically unstable “half system.” This is not a minor disagreement about emphasis. The corpus’s virtue is constituted by holding true value beliefs and acting on them; it is not constituted by the Aristotelian account of habituated practical wisdom operating through the cultivation of character traits.


Strongest Point of Convergence.

P3: the account of agency. Sullivan’s insistence that individuals always retain genuine choice, and that the primary obstacle to flourishing is a failure of imagination rather than a genuine lack of options, is directly convergent with the corpus’s libertarian free will commitment. The corpus holds that institutional power, social pressure, and material conditions can constrain the external field of action but cannot remove the agent’s capacity to assent or withhold assent. When Sullivan argues that political and corporate interests promote the false impression that no choice is available, she is describing precisely what the corpus calls a false impression — and the corpus is unambiguous that such impressions may be refused. This convergence is genuine and not merely verbal.


Corpus Boundary Declaration.

The article’s claims about AI development, the behavior of technology corporations, democratic and consumer power as political tools, and the institutional reception of philosophical ethics in Silicon Valley are empirical and political questions outside the corpus’s domain. The corpus addresses individual value ontology, rational agency, and the causal structure of psychological states. It does not address whether applying virtue ethics frameworks to AI development produces better AI, whether consumer power is an effective tool for shaping corporate behavior, or whether democratic institutions are the appropriate venue for resolving the existential questions AI raises. These questions receive no finding from the SCE. They require empirical investigation and political judgment that the corpus does not supply.

The SCE also cannot determine whether Sullivan’s philosophical project is sound on its own terms. The corpus governs the SCE. Whether Aristotelian virtue ethics is philosophically defensible independent of the Sterling corpus is outside the instrument’s reach.


Self-Audit — Step 4: The overall Partial Convergence finding follows from the Step 3 findings without adjustment at the synthesis stage. The deepest divergence (causal structure of flourishing and the Aristotelian framework) has been identified and stated first. The strongest convergence (agency) has been stated without inflation. No recommendation or action guidance has been issued. The corpus boundary declaration covers the empirical and political content of the article accurately.

Self-Audit Complete. SCE run complete.


Instrument: Sterling Corpus Evaluator (SCE) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Philosophical commitments, propositions, and theorems: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.

The Urge to Act

 

The Urge to Act

Sterling/Kelly Philosophical System — Practical Layer — Supplementary to the Operational Layer of the Sterling Decision Framework

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


Section 1: The Two-Assent Structure

Sterling’s account of the impression-to-action sequence in Nine Excerpts Section 7 is commonly read as a single event: impression arrives, assent is given or withheld, emotion or desire results. That reading is too compressed. The sequence contains two discrete assent events separated by a real structural gap, and the gap has practical consequences the compressed reading conceals.

The first assent — call it 7.a — is the assent to a value-laden impression. The impression arrives carrying a claim: this outcome is bad, this person’s behavior is an injury, this loss is a genuine evil. If the agent assents to that claim, desire or aversion forms. If the impression claims the event has already occurred, a pathos results — anger, fear, distress, or their variants. This is the point at which the pathological sequence is initiated.

The second assent — 7.b — is the assent to a further, action-generating impression. Sterling’s backpack example in Nine Excerpts Section 7 makes the structure explicit: after the first assent produces anger, there is “another impression” — the thought that it would be good to go find out who has been in the office — and assenting to that further idea is what produces the action. The action does not follow mechanically from the first assent. It requires a second one.

The gap between 7.a and 7.b is real. It is not a gap introduced by deliberation or effort. It is a structural feature of the sequence: the faculty has given a first assent and a desire or emotion has formed, but no action has yet occurred. The action-generating impression still has to arrive, and the agent still has to assent to it. Libertarian free will — Sterling’s second commitment — is the philosophical ground for this: assent is never determined. At 7.b, as at every other point in the sequence, the faculty’s response remains its own act to perform.


Section 2: Why the Urge Is Visible

The urge to act is the phenomenal face of the desire or pathos generated by 7.a. It has experiential presence: it is felt, it pushes, it presents the action as necessary or justified or urgent. This felt quality is precisely what makes it diagnostically valuable.

At the reception point — the moment when the original value-laden impression first arrives — the false value judgment typically runs too fast for the untrained practitioner to catch it as it happens. Sterling notes in Nine Excerpts Section 7 that the process of assenting “is very seldom explicit” — it appears to the agent that things pass directly from impression to belief, with no perceptible interval in between. The Correct Stoic Attitude Manual identifies this as the central practical problem: “if the value component is not noticed, the impression slides directly to assent without pause, and the pathological sequence runs uninterrupted.”

The urge does not have this problem. It announces itself. Its phenomenal presence is exactly what makes it available to the practitioner as a signal. When the urge to act is felt, the practitioner has something to work with that was not available at reception: evidence that 7.a has already run. The urge is not the problem — it is the record of the problem, arriving in a form the practitioner can actually perceive.

This means the urge, correctly understood, is the first reliable diagnostic instrument available to the early-stage practitioner. It does not tell him what the false value judgment was. But it tells him, with certainty, that one has occurred. The work of identifying and refusing 7.b can begin from that recognition.


Section 3: The Entry Point

The Stoic corpus identifies the reception point — the moment of the impression’s arrival — as the theoretically correct site of intervention. This is accurate. If the false value judgment can be caught before 7.a occurs, no desire or pathos forms, and the action-generating impression never arrives at all. The sequence terminates before it begins.

But the reception point is not accessible to the practitioner whose prosochē has not yet been trained to operate at that speed. Training in attentiveness — askēsis directed specifically at the interval between impression and assent — is what makes the reception point available as a practical intervention site. That training has to begin somewhere.

The urge to act is where it can begin. The practitioner who catches himself at the urge — who notices the pressure to act and pauses before crossing from 7.a to 7.b — has done something the framework requires, at the moment where he can actually do it. He has not caught the original false value judgment. He has not prevented the desire or emotion from forming. But he has refused the second assent. He has not acted from the pathos. The action-generating impression has been withheld.

This is not a lesser form of the practice. It is the practice, performed at the point where it is currently accessible. The common advice — stop and think before you act — is pointing at this same structural gap without the philosophical apparatus to explain what the gap is or why it exists. The Stoic account supplies both: the gap exists because assent is never determined, and stopping at the urge is the exercise of the freedom that libertarian free will requires to be real.


Section 4: The Training Progression

Repeated catching at 7.b produces a specific kind of learning. The practitioner who consistently pauses at the urge and refuses assent to the action-generating impression is, in each instance, turning his attention backward toward what produced the urge. He cannot yet catch 7.a as it happens. But he is, after the fact, holding the evidence of 7.a in view — the desire, the pathos, the felt pressure — and declining to act from it. That repeated act of declining is itself a form of attentiveness.

Over time, this attentiveness migrates. The practitioner who has trained at 7.b begins to recognize the characteristic feel of the value-laden impression before the urge has fully formed — because he has learned, through repeated catching, what impressions of that kind produce. The interval at reception begins to open. What was invisible becomes perceptible. The prosochē that the corpus identifies as the target of training is the product of this progression, not its precondition.

The theoretical target remains the reception point. The training progression is: 7.b catching first, as the accessible entry point — repeated catching builds the habit of recognizing value-laden impressions by their downstream effects — that recognition migrates upstream toward reception as the interval becomes experientially available. The practitioner does not begin where the sage operates. He begins where he can work, and the work itself moves the intervention point toward the ideal.

Seddon’s entry on pathos (Glossary §40) states that “one cannot directly extirpate a passion that one is already suffering.” This is correct and governs the 7.a event: once the false assent has been given and the pathos has formed, it cannot be directly undone. What the practitioner can do is refuse to act from it — which is the 7.b intervention — and decline to feed it with continued assent. The training progression does not promise to prevent 7.a from occurring. It promises to shorten the sequence: first at 7.b, eventually at reception.


Section 5: Placement in the Corpus

The two-assent structure described here is implicit throughout the corpus but is not named as a distinction in any prior document. Nine Excerpts Section 7 contains the backpack example that makes the structure visible; the Integrated Practical Model operationalizes the corrective module (C1–C5) around Section 7 sub-steps (a) and (b); but neither document names 7.a and 7.b as discrete assent events or addresses the question of which event is the practical entry point for the beginning prokoptōn.

The SDF’s Step 0 Agent Check asks: Am I currently under the influence of a false impression? The urge to act is one of the most reliable indicators that the answer is yes — that a value-laden impression has been assented to and the faculty is now operating under its influence. Step 0 does not specify how to detect this; the urge is the detection mechanism the beginning practitioner has available.

This document does not modify any existing instrument. It supplies the account of practical entry that the instruments presuppose but do not provide: where the prokoptōn who cannot yet catch impressions at reception actually begins, and how that beginning relates to the theoretical target the corpus identifies. The document is supplementary to the Integrated Practical Model and coordinates with the SDF’s Step 0, but it is not a procedural instrument. It is an account of the structure of training.

Personal practice evidence: the 7.b entry point is confirmed in Dave Kelly’s own practice as the currently accessible site of intervention, with upstream migration as the expected trajectory. This document will be updated as that evidence accumulates.

CIA v2.0 — Saxbe & Wei: Therapeutic-Physiological Framework

 

CIA v2.0 — Saxbe & Wei: Therapeutic-Physiological Framework -- Commentary



Subject: “Are You a Nihilist or Anhedonic?” Mengzhe Wei and Darby Saxbe, Ph.D., Psychology Today, April 17, 2026. Instrument: Classical Ideological Audit v2.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Corpus in view: CIA v2.0 instrument read directly from project file. Six commitments drawn from instrument Section IV. Supporting corpus: Nine Excerpts (Sterling), Core Stoicism, Free Will and Causation, Stoicism Moral Facts and Ethical Intuitionism, Stoicism Moral Realism, Stoicism Correspondence Theory of Truth, Stoicism Foundationalism, Two and One-Half Ethical Systems, Stoic Dualism and Nature, A Brief Reply Re: Dualism.

The subject is a cultural-intellectual framework advanced in the Saxbe/Wei article as a system of claims about the human person, his inner life, his relation to meaning, and the proper response to the experience of meaninglessness. The CIA instrument applies to any system of ideas audited for presuppositional compatibility with the six commitments. No finding is predetermined.


Step 1 — Framework Statement and Variant Identification

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

The article advances a coherent and auditable position. Its load-bearing presuppositions, stated propositionally:

P1 — Physiological Primacy of Inner States. The inner experience of meaninglessness, flatness, and purposelessness is primarily a symptom — a downstream effect of neurological and affective deficit. The person’s felt sense that nothing matters is explained by reference to a biological condition prior to and constitutive of the experience itself. The article’s governing metaphor: “the machinery that allows meaning to be felt.”

P2 — Emotions as Epistemic Determinants of Belief. Beliefs about meaning and value are causally produced by emotional states rather than arrived at by rational judgment. The article states explicitly: “our emotions are not just responses to our beliefs; they play crucial roles in shaping our global beliefs about ourselves, the world, and the future.” On this account, the belief “nothing matters” is not a judgment the agent makes — it is what the mind produces when the reward system is deficient.

P3 — The Self as Physiological System. The agent who experiences anhedonic meaninglessness is understood primarily as a person whose hedonic machinery is malfunctioning. The proper description of his condition is medical, not philosophical. The proper response is treatment, not reasoning.

P4 — Treatment as the Corrective. The framework holds that “restoring the machinery that allows meaning to be felt can change everything, without requiring you to change what you believe.” The corrective is external and physiological — it acts on the person rather than being enacted by him.

P5 — Meaning as Felt Quality. Meaning is operationalized as a felt experience causally produced by positive affect. Higher positive emotions correlate with higher meaning-in-life. Meaning is not a rational verdict about the nature of things — it is a hedonic quality registered in the nervous system.

Variants identified for Stage Two:

Variant A — Soft Therapeutism. The article acknowledges that genuine nihilism exists. A nihilist who still experiences joy, curiosity, and connection is simply a person with a worldview. This variant restricts the physiological explanation to cases of anhedonic flatness. Its distinguishing presupposition: the physiological account is correct when and because the subject also displays hedonic deficit.

Variant B — Hard Therapeutism. The framework at its most aggressive implies that any persistent judgment that life lacks meaning is presumptively a symptom. The line between philosophy and pathology collapses: “Before concluding that life has no meaning, ask yourself: Is the problem philosophical or physiological?” This variant presupposes that rational deliberation about meaning is reliable only after physiological function is restored — that the faculty of judgment is subordinate to the state of the hedonic system.

Self-Audit — Step 1: Presuppositions stated rather than surface claims. Core presuppositions shared across variants identified, not the most philosophically favorable version. Variants identified and their distinguishing presuppositions stated. No prior conclusion stated.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 2.


Step 2 — Stage One Core Audit

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

C1 — Substance Dualism: DIVERGENT.

Sterling’s governing proposition (Nine Excerpts, Section 4): “I am my soul/prohairesis/inner self. Everything else, including my body, is an external.” Supporting corpus: A Brief Reply Re: Dualism (Sterling): certainty of qualitative mental experience; science cannot account for the feeling of pain or modus ponens. Stoic Dualism and Nature (Sterling): morality is not and cannot ever be empirical; rational intuition is required to adjudicate moral questions.

P1, P3, and P4 together constitute a direct contradiction. The framework treats the experience of meaninglessness as explained by a neurobiological deficit — the reward system’s failure to generate positive affect. The agent’s inner experience is downstream of physiological state. This is precisely the reduction Sterling’s substance dualism is designed to block: the inner life of the rational faculty is treated as a product of the body’s material condition rather than as a categorically distinct substance with ontological priority.

P2 deepens the contradiction. The article asserts that emotions causally shape “global beliefs about ourselves, the world, and the future.” On Sterling’s account, the rational faculty is not reducible to emotional or physiological states. The article’s causal sequence runs in the opposite direction: physiological state → affect → belief. This sequence eliminates the rational faculty’s irreducible priority.

The body is an external. The framework treats the body’s reward-processing state as constitutive of the agent’s inner experience of meaning. The contradiction is load-bearing: remove P1 and P3, and the therapeutic recommendation has no grounds.

C2 — Libertarian Free Will: DIVERGENT.

Sterling’s governing proposition (Nine Excerpts, Section 7): “Choosing whether or not to assent to impressions is the only thing in our control.” Supporting corpus: Free Will and Causation (Sterling): the genuine act of assent as origination, not determined output; libertarian free will as load-bearing commitment, not philosophical decoration.

P2 is directly Divergent. If the belief “nothing matters” is caused by hedonic deficit, then the agent has not formed a judgment by assenting to an impression. He has had a belief produced in him by a state of his reward system. This is the exact account Sterling’s libertarian free will is designed to deny. The act of assent — the agent’s genuine origination of a judgment — is eliminated. The agent becomes an output of physiological processes.

P4 reinforces this: the corrective is external physiological intervention. The corrective bypasses the faculty of assent entirely. The entire therapeutic architecture requires that the agent’s condition be correctable from the outside — which requires that his condition be produced from the outside. The contradiction is load-bearing.

C3 — Ethical Intuitionism: PARTIAL CONVERGENCE.

Sterling’s governing proposition (Core Stoicism, Theorem 10): “The only thing actually good is virtue, the only thing actually evil is vice.” Supporting corpus: Stoicism, Moral Facts, and Ethical Intuitionism (Sterling): alternatives are intuitionism or nihilism; moral terms cannot be heard, smelt, tasted, seen, or felt; the same rational faculty that gives mathematical knowledge gives moral knowledge.

The framework does not directly engage ethical intuitionism. Its domain is psychological and therapeutic rather than moral-theoretical. However, P2 presupposes that moral and existential beliefs — beliefs about whether anything matters — are causally produced by affective states. If correct, the faculty of rational moral apprehension that ethical intuitionism requires is systematically compromised by the agent’s physiological condition. The framework does not deny that moral truths exist; it presupposes an account of belief-formation that makes the intuitive faculty unreliable under precisely the conditions where a person would most need it. The absence of direct denial prevents a Divergent finding. The structural compromise to the intuitive faculty under anhedonic deficit prevents Convergence.

C4 — Foundationalism: DIVERGENT.

Sterling’s governing proposition (Stoicism, Foundationalism, and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge, January 19, 2015): “I think the fundamental truths of ethics are necessary, self-evident truths. They are necessary, self-evident truths that any rational faculty can apprehend directly.” Supporting corpus: Sterling (same document): four sources of knowledge; rational perception of self-evidence as foundationalism’s epistemological home; the is/ought gap cannot be bridged by empirical premises alone.

The framework is explicitly and thoroughly empirical. Its claims rest on cited studies, statistical correlations, and neuroscientific models. It treats all foundational claims as empirical hypotheses supported by evidence and revisable in light of new findings. No claim is held as self-evidently true. This is anti-foundationalism in practice. The framework’s entire corrective architecture rests on empirical findings about affect and meaning — not on self-evident first principles about the nature of the person. The contradiction is load-bearing.

C5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: PARTIAL CONVERGENCE.

Sterling’s governing proposition (Nine Excerpts, Section 6): “This belief is factually false. Note that this is not a psychological claim — it is a value claim.” Supporting corpus: Stoicism, Correspondence Theory of Truth (Sterling): only criterion of truth is correspondence with the facts; the Stoics were pure realists; without objective facts, no basis for calling value impressions false rather than culturally contingent.

The framework does not deny correspondence theory directly. Its empirical claims are treated as objectively true or false. However, P5 introduces a structural complication: meaning is operationalized as a felt quality causally produced by positive affect. On this account, the claim “this life is meaningful” is not a fact about the world that either corresponds or fails to correspond to an objective standard — it is a report of a hedonic quality. Sterling’s position is that the false belief that externals are goods is factually false — a value claim, not merely a psychological one. The framework’s operationalization of meaning as felt quality is in tension with correspondence theory’s requirement that value claims track objective features of reality. The framework’s empirical claims are held objectively, preventing a Divergent finding. The operationalization of meaning prevents Convergence.

C6 — Moral Realism: PARTIAL CONVERGENCE.

Sterling’s governing proposition (Nine Excerpts, Section 3): “Only virtue is good and only vice is evil. All things not in our control are neither good nor evil.” Supporting corpus: Stoicism, Moral Realism (Sterling): moral facts have no source, just as 2+2=4 has no source; fundamental, necessary, and unalterable facts about the universe.

The framework does not deny moral realism. It does not argue that there are no objective moral facts. However, P5’s operationalization of meaning as a felt quality has a direct implication: the question of whether an agent’s life is well or poorly ordered with respect to genuine moral goods is not the operative question the framework asks. The operative question is whether the hedonic machinery is functioning. This treats the restoration of felt meaning as the terminal corrective, with no role for the agent’s rational apprehension of objective moral structure. The framework operates as if the question of objective moral facts is irrelevant to the corrective. This is genuine divergence at one structural point, but not a direct denial of moral realism as such.

Self-Audit — Step 2: All core presuppositions audited across all six commitments. No Orthogonal findings issued — all findings stated on positive grounds. Findings not distributed for apparent balance: two full Divergent, three Partial Convergence follow from the analysis. No findings outside the corpus’s domain. Symmetry check passed: findings would be the same regardless of whether the framework is sympathetic or unsympathetic.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 3.


Step 3 — Stage Two Variant Differential

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

Variant A — Soft Therapeutism. The soft variant explicitly acknowledges that a person who holds nihilistic beliefs but retains hedonic capacity is simply a person with a worldview. The physiological explanation is restricted to cases where hedonic deficit accompanies the judgment.

For C1: no shift. The soft variant still treats the anhedonic agent’s experience of meaninglessness as explained by physiological deficit. The body remains constitutive of the inner experience in the cases the framework’s therapeutic architecture addresses. Divergent finding unchanged.

For C2: no shift. The soft variant still grounds the corrective in external physiological intervention. The agent’s faculty of assent is still bypassed by the therapeutic recommendation. Divergent finding unchanged.

For C4: no shift. The soft variant’s restriction to anhedonic cases does not make its foundational claims non-empirical. Divergent finding unchanged.

For C3: the soft variant slightly supports the Partial Convergence finding by explicitly acknowledging that some judgments about meaning are genuine philosophical positions rather than symptoms. The finding is not shifted in category but the partial rather than full divergence is confirmed.

Variant B — Hard Therapeutism. The hard variant presupposes that rational deliberation about meaning is reliable only after physiological restoration. This makes C2 more deeply Divergent: not only does external intervention bypass assent in the corrective, but the reliability of the rational faculty is held hostage to physiological health. It also deepens the C1 Divergent finding: if rational judgment about meaning is a product of neurological function, then the inner life is constituted by physical state comprehensively rather than partially.

No finding shifts in category. Both variants keep C1 and C2 Divergent. The hard variant deepens the Divergent findings in degree but produces no categorical shift.

Differential summary: Neither variant shifts any finding in category. The baseline audit governs. The internal variation is philosophically significant in degree — the hard variant is more deeply Divergent on C1 and C2 — but not in kind. The ideology’s internal variation is philosophically insignificant at the level of the commitment categories.

Self-Audit — Step 3: Variant-specific presuppositions examined, not merely surface differences. No differentials claimed where none exist. Load-bearing presuppositions of each variant stated explicitly.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 4.


Step 4 — Dissolution Finding

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

C1: Divergent. C2: Divergent. Both Commitment 1 and Commitment 2 are Divergent.

Finding: Full Dissolution.

The framework structurally requires the agent to understand his inner experience of meaning — and the beliefs that inner experience generates — as products of his physiological system. His faculty of rational judgment is treated as downstream of his neurological state. The self-governing rational faculty the corpus identifies as the agent’s true identity — his prohairesis — is absent from the framework’s corrective architecture. The agent is not addressed as a rational agent capable of assenting to or withholding assent from impressions. He is addressed as a physiological system whose hedonic machinery requires repair.

The corrective the framework offers — treatment — is applied to the agent rather than enacted by him. This is the structural opposite of Sterling’s corrective architecture, in which the agent corrects his own false dogmata by the exercise of his rational faculty.

Variant differential applied to dissolution: neither variant shifts the dissolution finding. Variant A’s softening on C3 does not affect C1 or C2. Variant B deepens the dissolution without changing its category.

Self-Audit — Step 4: Dissolution finding follows mechanically from two Divergent findings on C1 and C2. Stated as a philosophical finding, not a political verdict. Variant differential applied correctly.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 5.


Step 5 — Summary Finding

Governing question: What is the overall pattern of findings, and what does it mean for an agent who holds this ideology?

Part A — Commitment Pattern.

C1 (Substance Dualism): Divergent. C2 (Libertarian Free Will): Divergent. C3 (Ethical Intuitionism): Partial Convergence. C4 (Foundationalism): Divergent. C5 (Correspondence Theory of Truth): Partial Convergence. C6 (Moral Realism): Partial Convergence.

Pattern: three Divergent, three Partial Convergence, zero Convergent, zero Orthogonal. The deepest divergence falls on C1 and C2 together — the framework’s entire corrective architecture requires that the agent’s inner experience and rational judgments be downstream of physiological state. This is not a peripheral divergence; it is constitutive of the framework. No finding reaches full Convergence. The Partial Convergences on C5 and C6 reflect the framework’s genuine empirical objectivism — it holds its psychological claims as objectively true or false — but are limited by the operationalization of meaning as hedonic quality.

Part B — Dissolution Finding.

Full Dissolution. The framework requires the agent to understand himself as a physiological system whose inner life is constituted by neurological function. No space remains within the framework’s corrective architecture for the self-governing rational faculty the corpus identifies as the agent’s true identity. The corrective bypasses the faculty of assent entirely. No variant shifts this finding.

Part C — Agent-Level Implication.

An agent who adopts this framework’s self-description accepts the following embedded commitments.

About himself: his inner experience — including his sense of meaning, his sense of purpose, his beliefs about what matters — is a product of his physiological condition. When those experiences are negative, the correct inference is not that his judgments may be false or his impressions incorrectly evaluated. The correct inference is that his machinery is malfunctioning.

About his agency: the corrective for his condition is external. He does not recover meaning by revising his assents in light of rational examination — he recovers meaning when treatment restores the system that produces the felt sense of meaning. His rational faculty is not the instrument of correction; it is the beneficiary of correction applied from outside.

About value: meaning is what the hedonic system registers when functioning correctly. The question of whether his beliefs about meaning correspond to objective features of reality — whether his life is in fact well or poorly ordered with respect to genuine goods — is not the operative question. The operative question is whether the machinery is working.

The corpus identifies this self-description as the structural root of pathē. An agent who understands himself as a physiological system whose inner experience is determined by neurological function has accepted, at the level of embedded assumption, precisely the account of himself that Sterling’s framework is designed to correct. He has identified himself with his body — an external — rather than with his prohairesis. He has located the corrective outside his own rational faculty. And he has operationalized value as a felt quality rather than as an objective feature of reality accessible to rational apprehension.

Self-Audit — Step 5: Summary follows from preceding steps; no new material introduced. Agent-level implication stated as a philosophical finding, not a political verdict. No claim made about clinical efficacy, policy, or institutional correctness. Summary is self-contained.

Self-Audit Complete. CIA run complete.


Mandatory Gap Declaration

This audit issues findings about philosophical presuppositions only. The CIA makes no finding about whether anhedonia is real, whether the framework’s empirical claims are clinically supported, whether psychiatric treatment produces positive outcomes, or whether the framework’s therapeutic recommendations are institutionally appropriate. These are questions outside the corpus’s domain. A Full Dissolution finding is not a finding that the framework is clinically wrong, medically dangerous, or to be rejected. It is a finding that the framework’s account of the human person contradicts Sterling’s commitments at every load-bearing structural point, and that an agent who accepts this self-description has accepted the foundational error the Stoic corrective is designed to address.


Instrument: Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v2.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.