Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v3.0 Along Came a Spider — Alex Cross:
Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v3.0
Along Came a Spider — Alex Cross: Presupposition Set
Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling’s corpus. 2026.
Step 0 — Protocol Activation
Full corpus in view. Instrument not proceeding from memory. Specific documents will be cited by name and section when referenced.
The ideology under examination: the presupposition set embedded in the Alex Cross character as detective, psychologist, father, and moral agent in Along Came a Spider. The subject is not the novel’s plot but the systematic presuppositions about the nature of evil, the rational faculty, justice, the genuine self, harm, and integrity that the Cross character carries and enacts. Core claims CP1–CP6 as ratified govern the run.
The instrument is not operating under a prior conclusion.
Self-Audit Complete. Corpus in view. Ideology stated in propositional form. No prior conclusion stated or implied.
Step 1 — Ideology Statement and Variant Identification
Ratified presupposition set — what the Alex Cross character must presuppose in order to function as he does:
- CP1. Evil is a real and objective feature of certain agents — not a social construction, not a product of circumstance alone, but a genuine moral fact about what some persons are and do.
- CP2. The rational faculty — in Cross’s case, his psychological and analytical intelligence — is the agent’s primary instrument for understanding and engaging with the world.
- CP3. Justice requires the rational agent to pursue, identify, and constrain genuine evil — this pursuit is a moral obligation, not merely a professional function.
- CP4. The agent’s genuine self is constituted by his commitments — to his family, his community, his pursuit of justice — rather than by external conditions of success or failure.
- CP5. External conditions — the loss of cases, the escape of criminals, the harm done to innocents — are genuinely harmful and constitute real losses, not merely dispreferred indifferents.
- CP6. The agent sustains his integrity and identity through the quality of his commitments and his rational engagement with the world, independent of whether external outcomes vindicate him.
Note on internal tension: CP5 and CP6 are in direct tension. CP5 locates genuine harm in external outcomes. CP6 locates integrity and identity in the quality of commitments independent of external outcomes. This tension is load-bearing for the run and is examined explicitly throughout.
Major variants:
Variant A — Stoic detective reading. CP6 governs over CP5. Cross’s integrity is constituted entirely by the quality of his commitments and rational engagement, independent of outcomes. External losses — escaped criminals, harmed innocents — are dispreferred indifferents that Cross faces without losing his genuine self. CP5 is deprioritized to a natural human response rather than a governing presupposition.
Variant B — Consequentialist detective reading. CP5 governs over CP6. The genuine harm done to innocents and the genuine evil of unconstrained criminals are what motivate and morally ground Cross’s pursuit. External outcomes matter genuinely and fundamentally. CP6 is deprioritized to a psychological coping mechanism rather than a philosophical commitment.
Variant C — Integrated reading (governing). Both CP5 and CP6 are load-bearing and in genuine tension. Cross is genuinely affected by external harm — he does not treat the loss of innocents as indifferent — and simultaneously sustains his integrity through the quality of his commitments independent of outcomes. This tension is the character’s defining philosophical feature and governs Stage One.
Self-Audit Complete. Core claims load-bearing across all variants. Internal tension between CP5 and CP6 identified and carried forward. Variants identified by philosophical significance. Variant C justified as governing.
Stage One — Core Presupposition Audit
Commitment 1 — Substance Dualism
Structural finding: CP4 asserts that the agent’s genuine self is constituted by his commitments rather than by external conditions of success or failure. The structure is substance dualism’s structure: a real interior self — constituted by commitments — categorically prior to and independent of external outcomes. Cross remains Cross whether he catches the criminal or not, whether the innocent is saved or not. Structure: Aligned.
Content finding: The genuine self CP4 identifies is constituted by commitments — to family, community, and the pursuit of justice. Commitments are a function of the prohairesis — they are the agent’s assents to what matters, what he will pursue, what he will not abandon. This is closer to the corpus’s account than any prior CIA run subject has achieved on C1. The corpus holds that the genuine self is the prohairesis — the rational faculty in correct condition, committed to correct values. Cross’s commitments are not identical to the corpus’s account of virtue as the only genuine good, but they are functions of the rational faculty directed outward rather than features of embodied sensation or social identity. The gap is that Cross’s commitments include commitments to external outcomes — justice as external condition, family safety as external condition — which the corpus would classify as preferred indifferents rather than components of the genuine self. Content: Partially Aligned.
Composite verdict: Partial Convergence. The presupposition set correctly locates the genuine self in commitments — a function of the prohairesis — rather than in sensation, social identity, or external appearance. The gap is that the commitments include external outcomes as their objects, which the corpus holds to be preferred indifferents rather than constituents of the genuine self.
Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free Will
Structural finding: CP2 — the rational faculty as the agent’s primary instrument — and CP6 — integrity sustained through the quality of commitments and rational engagement — together presuppose that the agent genuinely originates his own condition through his own rational acts. Cross’s decisions, analyses, and commitments are presented as genuinely his own — unforced, self-determining, expressive of what he genuinely is. Structure: Aligned.
Content finding: CP6 holds that the agent sustains his integrity and identity through the quality of his commitments and rational engagement, independent of whether external outcomes vindicate him. This is the corpus’s account stated with precision. Nine Excerpts, Section 7: “Choosing whether or not to assent to impressions is the only thing in our control — and yet, everything critical to leading the best possible life is contained in that one act.” Cross’s integrity is not determined by whether he catches the criminal. It is determined by how he engages — the quality of his rational effort, the constancy of his commitments, the correctness of his assents. Content on CP6: Aligned.
CP5 introduces a divergence: genuine harm is located in external outcomes. The agent’s condition is partially determined by what external circumstances produce — the escape of criminals, the harm done to innocents. The corpus holds that the agent’s condition is determined entirely by his own assents. Content on CP5: Divergent. The content finding is split between CP6 (Aligned) and CP5 (Divergent).
Composite verdict: Partial Convergence. CP6’s content alignment with the corpus is genuine and precise. CP5’s content divergence is equally genuine and load-bearing. The character holds both simultaneously — which is what produces the Partial Convergence rather than either Convergent or Structural Imitation.
Commitment 3 — Ethical Intuitionism
Structural finding: CP1 — evil is a real and objective feature of certain agents, directly recognizable as such — carries an intuitionist structure. Cross does not derive his recognition of evil from prior premises or social consensus. He apprehends it directly through his psychological and analytical intelligence. The intuitionist structure of direct non-inferential recognition of moral fact is formally present. Structure: Aligned.
Content finding: What Cross directly apprehends is presented as the objective reality of evil in specific agents and acts. The corpus’s intuitionism holds that moral facts are directly apprehensible by the rational faculty. However a precise corpus constraint governs here: evil is exclusively a condition of the malfunctioning prohairesis — internal to the vicious agent and invisible to external observation. Cross cannot perceive evil in the world because evil is not a perceptible external property. What he apprehends as evil in the criminal is more precisely a dispreferred external condition — the behavioral expression of a malfunctioning prohairesis — not evil itself, which remains internal to the criminal’s own rational faculty. The intuitionist structure is present; the content of what is directly apprehended does not correspond to what the corpus identifies as genuinely evil. Content: Divergent.
Composite verdict: Structural Imitation. The ideology correctly apprehends the intuitionist structure of direct non-inferential recognition. It applies that structure to the apprehension of evil as an external property of agents — which does not correspond to the corpus’s account of evil as exclusively internal to the vicious prohairesis.
Commitment 4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth
Structural finding: CP1 — evil is a real and objective feature of certain agents, not a social construction — treats this as a claim that corresponds to how things actually are, independent of social consensus, institutional classification, or the criminal’s own self-presentation. Structure: Aligned.
Content finding: The corpus’s correspondence theory holds that the agent’s value judgments must correspond to moral reality. CP1’s correspondence claim — that evil is objectively real in certain agents as a perceptible external property — does not fully correspond to the corpus’s account of moral reality. Evil is objectively real as a condition of the vicious prohairesis — the corpus confirms this. But evil is not a perceptible external property of agents in the world. Cross’s correspondence claim partially aligns — evil is objectively real — and partially diverges — it is not externally perceptible in the way CP1 presupposes. Content: Partially Aligned.
Composite verdict: Partial Convergence. The correspondence theory structure is present and the claim that evil is objectively real aligns with the corpus. The specific claim that evil is a perceptible external property of agents partially diverges from the corpus’s account of evil as exclusively internal to the vicious prohairesis.
Commitment 5 — Foundationalism
Structural finding: CP1 and CP3 together carry a foundationalist structure. The reality of evil is not derived from prior premises — it is a bedrock moral fact. The obligation to pursue and constrain it is equally foundational — not derived from institutional role or social contract but from the moral reality itself. Structure: Aligned.
Content finding: The corpus’s foundationalism grounds ethical knowledge in self-evident necessary truths grasped by the rational faculty. CP1’s foundational claim — that evil is objectively real in certain agents — is partially aligned with the corpus: evil is objectively real as a condition of the vicious prohairesis, which is a self-evident necessary truth the corpus recognizes. The specific formulation — evil as a perceptible external property — diverges. CP3’s foundational claim — that the rational agent is morally obligated to pursue and constrain genuine evil — extends beyond what the corpus grounds foundationally into external action as a foundational requirement. Content: Partially Aligned.
Composite verdict: Partial Convergence. The foundationalist structure is present and the foundational claims are about moral facts the corpus partially recognizes. The gap is that the specific formulation of evil as externally perceptible and the extension of foundational obligation into external pursuit both diverge from the corpus’s account.
Commitment 6 — Moral Realism
Structural finding: CP1 and CP3 treat evil and the obligation to pursue justice as objective — not as preferences, social agreements, or institutional assignments. Cross’s moral realism is explicit and consistent: what the criminal has done is objectively wrong; the obligation to pursue justice is objectively real. Structure: Aligned.
Content finding: The corpus’s moral realism holds that only virtue is genuinely good and only vice is genuinely evil. Nine Excerpts, Section 3: “Only virtue is good and only vice is evil. All things not in our control are neither good nor evil.” CP1 identifies genuine evil in the criminal’s character and acts — partially aligned, since vice is genuinely evil in the corpus’s account, though it is not externally perceptible. CP5 introduces a divergence: genuine harm is attributed to external outcomes — the escape of criminals, the death of innocents. The corpus holds that external outcomes are neither good nor evil. The harm done to innocents is a dispreferred indifferent — real as an event, genuinely dispreferred, but not a genuine evil in the corpus’s precise sense. Content: Partially Aligned — CP1 partially aligns; CP5 diverges.
Composite verdict: Partial Convergence. The moral realist structure is present and the identification of vice as genuinely evil partially aligns with the corpus. The attribution of genuine evil status to external outcomes — harm done to innocents — diverges from the corpus’s precise account of where genuine evil resides.
Self-Audit — Stage One: Structural and content findings stated separately before composite verdict for each commitment. One Structural Imitation finding (C3). Four Partial Convergence findings (C1, C2, C4, C5, C6). The CP5/CP6 tension applied consistently across relevant commitments. The corpus constraint that evil is exclusively internal to the vicious prohairesis and not externally perceptible applied consistently. Findings reflect what the corpus requires. Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Stage Two.
Stage Two — Variant Differential Analysis
Variant A — Stoic Detective Reading. CP6 governs over CP5. Cross’s integrity is constituted entirely by the quality of his commitments and rational engagement, independent of outcomes. External losses are dispreferred indifferents.
C2 content improves decisively: with CP5 deprioritized, the content split between CP6 (Aligned) and CP5 (Divergent) resolves in favor of CP6. C2 content moves from split to Aligned. C2 composite moves from Partial Convergence to Convergent. C6 content improves: with genuine harm no longer attributed to external outcomes, C6 content moves from Partially Aligned to Aligned. C6 composite moves from Partial Convergence to Convergent. C1 content improves marginally: with external outcomes deprioritized as objects of genuine commitment, the commitments become more purely functions of the prohairesis.
Variant A commitment pattern: C1 Partial Convergence (strengthened). C2 Convergent. C3 Structural Imitation (unchanged — evil perception as external property remains). C4 Partial Convergence. C5 Partial Convergence. C6 Convergent. Two Convergent. Three Partial Convergence. One Structural Imitation.
Dissolution under Variant A: C1 content Partially Aligned. C2 content Aligned. Neither Divergent. No Dissolution.
Variant B — Consequentialist Detective Reading. CP5 governs over CP6. External outcomes matter genuinely and fundamentally.
C2 content worsens: with CP5 governing, the agent’s condition is substantially determined by external outcomes. C2 content moves from split toward Divergent. C2 composite moves from Partial Convergence toward Structural Imitation. C6 content worsens: integrity is now substantially dependent on external vindication. C6 moves from Partial Convergence toward Structural Imitation. C1 content worsens: the genuine self is now more substantially constituted by the outcomes of commitments rather than the commitments themselves.
Variant B commitment pattern: C1 Partial Convergence (weakened). C2 Structural Imitation. C3 Structural Imitation. C4 Partial Convergence. C5 Partial Convergence. C6 Structural Imitation. Zero Convergent. Three Partial Convergence. Three Structural Imitation.
Dissolution under Variant B: C1 content Partially Aligned. C2 content moving toward Divergent — does not fully reach Divergent under this variant. No Dissolution — neither C1 nor C2 content reaches the Divergent threshold cleanly. Approaches Partial Dissolution at the margin.
Variant C — Integrated Reading (governing). Stage One findings unchanged. Dissolution: No Dissolution.
Self-Audit — Stage Two: Each finding shift specified as content shift. Dissolution criterion applied to each variant using content findings only. CP5/CP6 tension applied consistently across variants. C3 Structural Imitation finding holds across all variants — the evil perception as external property presupposition is load-bearing across all three readings. Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 4.
Step 4 — Dissolution Finding
The dissolution criterion is governed by content findings on C1 and C2 only. Structural findings on C1 and C2 stated and excluded.
C1 structural finding: Aligned. C1 content finding: Partially Aligned. The genuine self is located in commitments — functions of the prohairesis — with the gap that the commitments include external outcomes as their objects. Excluded from dissolution calculation.
C2 structural finding: Aligned. C2 content finding: Split — CP6 Aligned (integrity through quality of commitments independent of outcomes), CP5 Divergent (genuine harm in external outcomes). The split does not reach the full Divergent threshold because CP6’s content alignment is load-bearing and genuine. Excluded from dissolution calculation.
C1 content: Partially Aligned. C2 content: Split, not reaching Divergent.
Finding: No Dissolution under governing Variant C.
The Alex Cross presupposition set preserves space for the self-governing rational faculty throughout. CP6’s explicit formulation — integrity and identity sustained through the quality of commitments and rational engagement, independent of external outcomes — is the No Dissolution finding’s governing content. The prohairesis is operative as the primary instrument (CP2) and the seat of integrity (CP6). CP5’s divergence introduces a genuine tension but does not dissolve the prohairesis — Cross does not locate his genuine self in external outcomes even when he is genuinely affected by them.
Variant range: Variant A produces No Dissolution with two Convergent findings. Variant B approaches Partial Dissolution at the margin without reaching it. Variant C produces No Dissolution under the governing integrated reading.
Self-Audit — Step 4: Dissolution finding follows mechanically from content findings on C1 and C2. Structural findings stated and excluded. CP5/CP6 tension resolved correctly — split content on C2 does not reach the Divergent threshold because CP6’s alignment is load-bearing. Finding stated as philosophical finding. Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 5.
Step 5 — Summary Finding
Part A — Commitment Pattern (Variant C governing)
- C1 — Substance Dualism: Structure Aligned / Content Partially Aligned — Partial Convergence
- C2 — Libertarian Free Will: Structure Aligned / Content Split (CP6 Aligned / CP5 Divergent) — Partial Convergence
- C3 — Ethical Intuitionism: Structure Aligned / Content Divergent — Structural Imitation
- C4 — Correspondence Theory: Structure Aligned / Content Partially Aligned — Partial Convergence
- C5 — Foundationalism: Structure Aligned / Content Partially Aligned — Partial Convergence
- C6 — Moral Realism: Structure Aligned / Content Partially Aligned — Partial Convergence
Zero Convergent. Five Partial Convergence. One Structural Imitation. Zero Divergent. Zero Orthogonal.
This profile is philosophically distinctive. The Alex Cross presupposition set is substantially corpus-compatible across five of six commitments — closer to the corpus than any existing ideology or literary presupposition set the CIA v3.0 series has examined. The single Structural Imitation finding on C3 identifies the precise load-bearing divergence: the presupposition that evil is a perceptible external property of agents. This single presupposition drives the C3 Structural Imitation finding and partially weakens C4 and C5.
The five Partial Convergence findings share a common structure: the presupposition set gets the relevant commitment substantially right and introduces a gap either through CP5 (genuine harm in external outcomes) or through CP1’s specific formulation of evil as externally perceptible. Both gaps trace to the same root: the attribution of genuine evil and genuine harm to external conditions and their perceptible expressions.
The strongest alignment is C2 — CP6’s formulation of integrity and eudaimonia sustained through the quality of commitments independent of external outcomes is the closest the existing Alex Cross presupposition set comes to the corpus’s own account. It is one of the most corpus-compatible single presuppositions any CIA v3.0 subject has produced.
Part B — Dissolution Finding
No Dissolution under governing Variant C. No Dissolution under all three variants, though Variant B approaches Partial Dissolution at the margin. The presupposition set preserves space for the self-governing rational faculty across all readings. CP6’s explicit formulation — integrity through the quality of commitments independent of external outcomes — is the governing content that prevents dissolution across all variants.
Part C — Agent-Level Implication
An agent who adopts the Alex Cross presupposition set as his governing self-description receives a substantially corpus-compatible framework with one Structural Imitation finding and five Partial Convergence findings. No Dissolution. The framework supplies a robust account of the rational faculty as primary instrument (CP2), integrity constituted by commitments rather than outcomes (CP4 and CP6), and the obligation to pursue justice as a moral rather than merely professional requirement (CP3).
The Structural Imitation finding on C3 identifies the precise corrective the corpus would supply. The presupposition that evil is a perceptible external property of agents — that Cross can recognize evil in the criminal by direct observation — does not correspond to the corpus’s account of evil as exclusively a condition of the malfunctioning prohairesis, internal to the vicious agent and invisible to external observation. What Cross perceives is the behavioral expression of a malfunctioning prohairesis — dispreferred external conditions produced by a vicious agent. He perceives the expressions of vice, not vice itself. The corpus-compatible formulation of CP1 would be: the criminal is an agent whose malfunctioning prohairesis produces dispreferred indifferents for others, and Cross’s appropriate action is directed at preventing those dispreferred indifferents.
The five Partial Convergence findings each require one root correction: CP5 restated as a dispreferred indifferent classification rather than a genuine harm attribution. The harm done to innocents is real as an event, genuinely dispreferred, and worth preventing through appropriate action — but it is not a genuine harm in the corpus’s strict sense, and it does not constitute a genuine evil. What the corpus would supply is the correct classification: the criminal imposes dispreferred indifferents on victims whose only genuine harm is self-harm through incorrect assent. Cross’s pursuit is appropriate action directed at preventing those dispreferred indifferents — grounded in Sterling’s theory of action from Nine Excerpts Section 10: my action is my choice.
The Alex Cross character is one root correction from the corpus on each of its two divergence sources. That is not a trivial distance. But it is a precise and identifiable one — and it is the distance the Stoic Detective character development has already begun to close.
Mandatory Gap Declaration
This finding addresses the philosophical presuppositions embedded in the Alex Cross character as presented in Along Came a Spider only. It does not address the novel’s literary merits, James Patterson’s intentions as an author, the broader Alex Cross series, or the cultural significance of the thriller genre. Those questions are outside the corpus’s domain and outside this instrument’s reach. The finding is addressed to an agent considering whether to adopt this presupposition set as his governing philosophical self-description.
Self-Audit — Step 5: Summary follows from preceding steps without new material introduced. One Structural Imitation and five Partial Convergence findings stated accurately. CP5/CP6 tension resolved correctly in the agent-level implication. Single corrective identified precisely for each divergence source. Reference to Stoic Detective character development stated as the practical downstream of this finding. Corpus boundary declaration accurate and complete. CIA v3.0 run complete.
Instrument: Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v3.0. Run: Along Came a Spider — Alex Cross Presupposition Set. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling’s corpus. 2026.

