Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Friday, May 29, 2026

When Philosophy Changed the Subject

 

When Philosophy Changed the Subject

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


Steve Fuller’s recent article on Richard Rorty and American Pragmatism makes a claim worth taking seriously. America did not simply enter the Western philosophical conversation. It redirected it. The Pragmatists—James, Dewey, Rorty—did not inherit the classical philosophical project and continue it faithfully. They changed the governing question. And once the governing question changes, everything downstream changes with it.

This essay follows that claim to its conclusion. If Pragmatism displaced the classical philosophical structure, the question is: what exactly was displaced, by what, and with what consequences for every field of inquiry that depended on the original structure?

The Classical Structure

Classical Western philosophy, from Plato through the Stoics through the great medieval and early modern thinkers, operated from a set of commitments that can be stated precisely. Grant C. Sterling’s reconstruction of that structure identifies six:

Substance Dualism: The rational agent is not reducible to body, brain, biology, or social environment. The human being possesses a non-material rational faculty capable of genuine judgment. The agent is not a system of physical processes. The agent is the one who assents or refuses assent.

Metaphysical Libertarianism: The agent exercises genuine freedom in assent, judgment, and moral choice. Freedom is not merely acting according to one’s conditioning, nor merely the absence of external constraint. The agent can assent, refuse, or suspend. This freedom is real, not reconstructed.

Ethical Intuitionism: Certain moral truths can be directly recognized by the trained rational faculty. Moral knowledge is not derived entirely from empirical utility or social consensus. The faculty that perceives a moral truth does not merely feel a preference or construct a value. It recognizes what is the case.

Foundationalism: Reasoning must ultimately terminate in first principles, basic truths, or bedrock recognitions. Not every belief can be justified indefinitely by further beliefs. Some things are foundational. The structure of rational knowledge is not an endless web of mutual support—it rests on something.

Correspondence Theory of Truth: A proposition is true because it corresponds to reality. Reality is the measure. The mind does not create truth by finding a useful vocabulary. A community does not make a proposition true by approving it. A belief does not become true because it produces desirable results. Truth is agreement between judgment and what is.

Moral Realism: Moral truths are real. Virtue is not admirable because a society approves it. Vice is not condemnable because a community objects to it. Moral reality is not created by convention, usefulness, emotional preference, or democratic agreement. Moral facts are facts.

These six commitments represent the governing assumptions of most serious philosophical work for more than two thousand years. They define the terrain within which Plato, Aristotle, Epictetus, Augustine, Aquinas, Descartes, and Kant conducted their arguments—even when they disagreed sharply with one another. What unites them is a single underlying orientation: reason is answerable to reality.

The Pragmatist Shift

Pragmatism changed the governing question of philosophy. The classical question asks: What is true? What is real? What is the structure of the human being? What is the nature of morality? What can be known, and how?

Pragmatism substitutes a different set of questions: What works? What are the consequences of holding a belief? What does a vocabulary enable us to do? What future can a community create by adopting certain ways of speaking and certain habits of thought?

Fuller identifies the central move precisely: Pragmatism reduces meaning and truth to instrumental value. That single idea marks the decisive break with the classical structure.

Under correspondence truth, a proposition is true because it corresponds to reality. A belief does not become true because it produces desirable results. A community does not make a proposition true by approving it. Truth is not usefulness. Truth is agreement between judgment and what is.

Pragmatism reverses the order. It shifts attention from correspondence to practical effect. The question becomes not “Does this proposition correspond to reality?” but “What difference does holding this proposition make?” Once that shift is made, the authority of reality over judgment is weakened. The mind no longer stands before the real and submits to it. Thought becomes an instrument for coping, adapting, organizing, persuading, and constructing.

This is not a harmless change of vocabulary. It is the replacement of truth by function.

Rorty: The Displacement Completed

Richard Rorty is the central figure in this story because he removes the hesitation present in earlier Pragmatism. Peirce retained a genuine concern for inquiry and the real. James retained moral seriousness and the reality of decision. Dewey retained a public ethic of intelligence and democratic reconstruction. Each of them, at moments, still sounds as though philosophy owes something to the classical project.

Rorty cuts that connection. He rejects the idea that philosophy is a mirror of nature. He rejects accurate representation of reality as the aim of knowledge. He rejects the search for neutral foundations. He relocates philosophy into conversation, solidarity, historical contingency, and social hope. Philosophy, on his account, is not answerable to reality. It is a form of cultural redescription.

The consequence is a systematic substitution. Correspondence is replaced by conversation. Reality is replaced by vocabulary. Foundations are replaced by contingency. Reason is replaced by social practice. Moral truth is replaced by liberal hope.

This is not a modification of classical philosophy. It is the abandonment of its governing architecture. Rorty does not want to represent reality correctly. He wants to redescribe the world in ways that serve human purposes. He does not ask permission from Plato, Aristotle, or Kant. He has decided they were asking the wrong questions.

Fuller uses the word “hijacked” deliberately. Pragmatism kept the inherited vocabulary—truth, reason, morality, philosophy—while changing the commitments beneath it. That is the mechanism of displacement. The words survive. Their referents do not.

What Was Displaced

Each of the six classical commitments has a modern replacement. Those replacements were not adopted after decisive refutation of the originals. In most cases they entered through a combination of philosophical fashion, methodological assumption, and the prestige of the natural sciences. The classical commitments did not lose decisive arguments. They lost cultural authority.

Substance Dualism was displaced by physicalism and materialism. The human being became a biological organism, a neural network, a social construction, a language-user. The rational faculty as a distinct non-material substance was declared philosophically obsolete. The consequence: the agent is no longer the originating source of judgment. The agent is a system of processes.

Metaphysical Libertarianism was displaced by determinism and compatibilism. Freedom became the absence of external constraint rather than the genuine capacity to originate assent. The consequence: moral responsibility in its classical form becomes difficult to sustain. Praise and blame are reconstructed in social, psychological, or biological terms.

Ethical Intuitionism was displaced by constructivism, emotivism, and naturalism. Moral knowledge ceased to be a direct rational recognition of real moral distinctions. It became a construction, an expression of preference, or a socialized response. The consequence: the rational faculty can no longer recognize that some things are right and others wrong. It can only feel, prefer, negotiate, or construct.

Foundationalism was displaced by coherentism, pragmatism, and historicism. The search for first principles was declared a philosophical illusion inherited from pre-modern metaphysics. Everything became revisable, contingent, historical, and conversational. The consequence: no judgment has final standing. The mind is not disciplined by first principles. It is absorbed into a moving social horizon.

Correspondence Theory of Truth was displaced by pragmatic, deflationary, consensus, and constructivist theories. Truth became what works, what coheres, what a community can justify, or what survives inquiry. The consequence: reality loses its authority over judgment. The question is no longer whether a proposition corresponds to what is, but whether holding it produces results a community finds acceptable.

Moral Realism was displaced by relativism, subjectivism, and noncognitivism. Moral claims ceased to describe real states of affairs and became expressions of attitude, products of convention, or outcomes of social negotiation. The consequence: ethics is no longer a discipline of recognition. It becomes a discipline of construction, management, or political coordination.

Propagation Across the Fields

A displacement at the level of philosophical presupposition does not remain confined to philosophy departments. It propagates. Once the governing assumptions about what a human being is, what truth is, what freedom is, and what morality is have changed, every field that depends on those assumptions begins to reorganize itself around the replacements.

Psychology shifts from the question of rational judgment to the question of causal mechanism. The central inquiry moves from “What ought this person to choose?” to “What caused this person to behave this way?” Conditioning, unconscious processes, cognitive mechanisms, neurochemistry, and evolutionary pressures progressively displace the language of responsible agency.

Psychiatry reorganizes around diagnosis, symptom clusters, and neurochemical models. The earlier question—what values is this person embracing, what beliefs govern their conduct—recedes behind the question of mechanism and treatment protocol. The patient is a system to be adjusted rather than an agent to be reasoned with.

Education shifts from the formation of character and the cultivation of wisdom to the acquisition of competencies and credentials. The question “What kind of person should this student become?” gives way to “What skills should this student acquire?” The soul disappears from the curriculum.

Law begins incorporating sociological, psychological, and systemic explanations that shift the balance between individual responsibility and circumstance. The premise that persons are responsible agents whose culpability depends on genuine choice becomes contested rather than foundational. Systemic explanations progressively qualify individual accountability.

History moves from the decisions and moral responsibility of agents to structures, institutions, economics, class, discourse, and social forces. Individuals become less causal. Systems become more causal. The moral vocabulary of decision, intention, and responsibility is treated as naive.

Literary criticism moves from the author’s intended meaning to reader response, interpretive communities, ideology, and power. Meaning migrates from text to reader, from intention to reception, from what was said to what a community decides to hear.

Political theory shifts from the question of what justice is to the question of which social arrangements produce desired outcomes. Efficiency, management, equality, identity, and power progressively displace objective justice as the governing standard of evaluation.

Ethics abandons the question “Which moral judgments are correct?” in favor of “Why do people make moral judgments?” Emotivism, constructivism, relativism, and evolutionary ethics replace the inquiry into moral reality. The field that once asked what a human being ought to be now asks how human beings came to hold the values they hold.

Epistemology shifts from “Is it true?” to “How is it warranted?” Social epistemology, pragmatism, coherentism, and historicism redirect attention from correspondence to justification procedures. The question of whether a belief matches reality is replaced by the question of whether the procedure for arriving at it was appropriate.

Theology moves from objective revelation and objective moral truth toward experience, community, existential meaning, and historical development. Theological claims become increasingly interpreted rather than asserted. The content of revelation is progressively absorbed into the conditions of its reception.

Philosophy itself transforms from a discipline concerned with truth, reality, virtue, and rational self-government into one primarily occupied with conceptual analysis, critique, genealogy, and discourse investigation. The philosopher becomes an analyst rather than a guide to living. The discipline that once asked how a human being ought to live now asks how people have come to think they know what they know.

The Diagnosis

The modern intellectual world has not merely changed its conclusions. It has changed its presuppositions.

The displacement of the six classical commitments is not a local event in academic philosophy. It is a civilizational shift. Once those presuppositions change—once the human being is no longer a rational agent but a system of processes, once truth is no longer correspondence but usefulness, once morality is no longer a domain of real facts but a domain of constructed preferences—the entire intellectual landscape reorganizes itself. Every field begins asking different questions because every field is now operating from different assumptions about what a human being is, what truth is, what freedom is, and what morality is.

The crisis of the modern intellectual world is therefore not primarily political, economic, or technological. It is philosophical. The classical commitments constituted the conditions under which one could meaningfully assert: I can know what is true. I can recognize what is right. I am free in my judgment. I am responsible for my assent. My character can be corrected. Philosophy can guide that correction.

Pragmatism, in Fuller’s account, did not simply add an American chapter to the Western philosophical story. It changed the subject. It kept the inherited vocabulary while replacing what that vocabulary referred to. Truth remained, emptied of correspondence. Reason remained, emptied of foundations. Morality remained, emptied of real moral facts. Freedom remained, emptied of genuine origination.

What is required is not a modification of the modern replacements but a recovery of the presuppositions the replacements displaced: reality as the measure of truth, reason as genuinely free, moral facts as real, foundations as necessary, the human being as a rational agent capable of conforming his judgment to what is rather than merely to what a community finds useful.

That recovery is not nostalgia. It is the precondition for thinking clearly about what the displacement cost—and what would have to be restored to think and live differently.


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

How have the displacing commitments affected all fields?

How have the displacing commitments affected all fields?

From the perspective of Sterling's six commitments, the most important story in modern intellectual history is not the rise of any particular theory but the gradual replacement of six classical commitments with a different constellation of commitments.

A rough contrast would look like this:

Classical Commitment Common Modern Replacement
Substance Dualism Physicalism, Materialism
Libertarian Agency Determinism, Compatibilism
Ethical Intuitionism Constructivism, Emotivism, Naturalism
Foundationalism Coherentism, Pragmatism, Historicism
Correspondence Truth Pragmatic, Deflationary, Consensus, Constructivist theories
Moral Realism Relativism, Subjectivism, Noncognitivism

Viewed this way, many developments across modern disciplines can be understood as consequences of these replacements.

Psychology

Classically:

  • Human beings are rational agents.
  • Judgment is central.
  • Character is formed by choices.
  • Moral responsibility is real.

Much modern psychology increasingly explains conduct through:

  • conditioning,
  • unconscious processes,
  • cognitive mechanisms,
  • evolutionary pressures,
  • neurochemistry,
  • social influences.

The question shifts from:

"What ought I choose?"

to:

"What caused me to behave this way?"

Sterling would not deny causal influences. His concern would be that agency becomes progressively marginalized.


Psychiatry

The classical model asks:

  • What is the person judging?
  • What values are they embracing?
  • What beliefs govern their conduct?

Modern psychiatry often focuses on:

  • diagnosis,
  • symptom clusters,
  • neurochemical models,
  • treatment protocols.

Again, responsibility may remain, but explanatory priority shifts from rational judgment to mechanism.


Education

Classically:

Education aims at wisdom and character.

Modern education increasingly aims at:

  • skills,
  • employability,
  • adaptation,
  • social functioning,
  • credentialing.

The question changes from:

"What kind of person should this student become?"

to:

"What competencies should this student acquire?"


Law

Classical legal thought assumes:

  • persons are responsible agents,
  • guilt depends upon choice,
  • justice corresponds to objective standards.

Modern legal thought increasingly incorporates:

  • sociology,
  • psychology,
  • economic analysis,
  • critical theory,
  • systemic explanations.

Attention shifts from individual responsibility toward explanatory systems.

The balance between agency and circumstance changes.


History

Classical historians often focus on:

  • decisions,
  • leaders,
  • intentions,
  • moral responsibility.

Modern historiography increasingly emphasizes:

  • structures,
  • institutions,
  • economics,
  • class,
  • race,
  • discourse,
  • social forces.

Individuals become less causal and systems become more causal.


Literary Criticism

Classically:

A text means what its author intended to communicate.

Modern theory often emphasizes:

  • reader response,
  • interpretive communities,
  • discourse,
  • ideology,
  • power structures.

Meaning moves from author and text toward reader and community.

This is one of the developments your SIF was specifically designed to challenge.


Political Theory

Classical politics asks:

What is justice?

Much contemporary politics often asks:

Which social arrangements produce desired outcomes?

Questions of efficiency, management, equality, identity, and power frequently replace questions of objective justice.


Ethics

This may be the most dramatic shift.

Classically:

  • Good and evil are objective.
  • Moral truths are discoverable.
  • Virtue is real.

Modern ethics contains many competing alternatives:

  • emotivism,
  • expressivism,
  • constructivism,
  • relativism,
  • evolutionary ethics.

The question becomes:

Why do people make moral judgments?

rather than:

Which moral judgments are true?


Epistemology

Classically:

Knowledge aims at truth.

Modern epistemology often incorporates:

  • social epistemology,
  • pragmatism,
  • coherence models,
  • historicism,
  • linguistic mediation.

The focus shifts from correspondence to justification procedures.

The central question becomes less:

Is it true?

and more:

How is it warranted?


Theology

Classical theology assumes:

  • objective revelation,
  • objective truth,
  • objective morality.

Modern theology often shifts toward:

  • experience,
  • community,
  • existential meaning,
  • historical development.

Theological claims become increasingly interpreted rather than asserted.


Philosophy Itself

This is perhaps the deepest change.

For Plato, Aristotle, the Stoics, the Epicureans, and many medieval thinkers, philosophy was fundamentally concerned with:

  • truth,
  • reality,
  • virtue,
  • rational self-government.

In much contemporary philosophy, philosophy becomes:

  • conceptual analysis,
  • language analysis,
  • critique,
  • genealogy,
  • discourse analysis,
  • methodological investigation.

The purpose of philosophy changes.

The philosopher increasingly becomes an analyst rather than a guide to living.


The Sterling Diagnosis

The Sterling diagnosis would be that the modern world has not merely changed its conclusions.

It has changed its presuppositions.

Once you replace:

  • dualism with physicalism,
  • libertarian freedom with determinism,
  • intuitionism with constructivism,
  • foundationalism with coherentism,
  • correspondence with pragmatism,
  • realism with relativism,

the entire intellectual landscape reorganizes itself.

Psychology, education, law, history, literary criticism, ethics, theology, and philosophy begin asking different questions because they are operating from different assumptions about:

  • what a human being is,
  • what truth is,
  • what freedom is,
  • what morality is,
  • what knowledge is.

From a Sterling perspective, the crisis of modern culture is therefore not primarily political, economic, or technological. It is philosophical: the displacement of the classical commitments by alternative commitments that redefine agency, truth, knowledge, and value throughout the intellectual world.

What can Sterling's restored classical commitments do which current analytic and continental philosophy can't do.


What can Sterling's restored classical commitments do which current analytic and continental philosophy can't do.

ChatGPT:

If by "Sterling's restored classical commitments" you mean the package of:

  1. Substance Dualism
  2. Metaphysical Libertarianism
  3. Ethical Intuitionism
  4. Foundationalism
  5. Correspondence Theory of Truth
  6. Moral Realism

then the claim is not merely that they provide different answers. The stronger claim is that they make possible certain forms of thought that become difficult or impossible once those commitments are abandoned.

From a Sterling perspective, the issue is not whether contemporary philosophy is intelligent. It obviously is. The issue is whether it still possesses the conceptual tools required to defend rational agency, objective morality, and truth as realities rather than constructions.

1. They Can Ground Genuine Moral Responsibility

The central difficulty facing much contemporary philosophy is explaining how people can be genuinely responsible for their judgments and actions.

Many influential contemporary positions reject at least one of the following:

  • libertarian freedom
  • moral realism
  • foundational moral knowledge

As a result, responsibility often becomes reconstructed in social, psychological, biological, linguistic, or pragmatic terms.

Sterling's commitments permit a much stronger claim:

  • A person could have assented differently.
  • A person is the originating source of assent.
  • A person can therefore be genuinely praised or blamed.

This is very close to the agency presupposed throughout Epictetus.

Without libertarian freedom, Stoic moral responsibility becomes difficult to preserve in its original form.


2. They Can Explain Why Rational Argument Matters

Modern philosophy frequently treats reasoning as:

  • linguistic practice,
  • social negotiation,
  • evolutionary adaptation,
  • cognitive processing,
  • discourse formation.

Sterling's commitments allow a different account.

Reason matters because:

  • truth exists independently,
  • the mind can recognize it,
  • judgments can correspond or fail to correspond to reality.

The purpose of argument becomes discovery rather than negotiation.

This restores the classical understanding shared by Plato, Aristotle, Epictetus, and much of pre-modern philosophy.


3. They Can Preserve the Distinction Between Appearance and Reality

A recurring problem in both some continental and some post-analytic traditions is the tendency to collapse reality into:

  • language,
  • interpretation,
  • social construction,
  • power relations,
  • conceptual schemes.

Sterling's commitments preserve the classical distinction:

An appearance can be false.

Reality is not determined by:

  • communities,
  • traditions,
  • institutions,
  • narratives,
  • consensus.

This provides the intellectual foundation for challenging entire cultures.

For example:

  • Socrates against Athens.
  • Epictetus against Roman values.
  • Abolitionists against slavery.
  • Dissidents against totalitarian regimes.

All depend upon the possibility that everyone else may be wrong.


4. They Can Explain Moral Reform

Many contemporary theories explain behavior by:

  • conditioning,
  • socialization,
  • identity formation,
  • cognitive mechanisms,
  • power structures.

Sterling's commitments permit something stronger:

A person can recognize a moral truth and freely change.

This is precisely the structure assumed by Epictetus.

The slave can become free.

The coward can become courageous.

The unjust person can become just.

Not because external forces reshaped them, but because they assented differently.


5. They Can Defend the Discipline of Assent

The Discipline of Assent requires all six commitments.

The Stoic practitioner asks:

Is this impression true?

That question presupposes:

  • truth exists (Correspondence)
  • truth can be known (Foundationalism)
  • moral truths are real (Moral Realism)
  • the self can recognize them (Dualism)
  • the self can freely assent or refuse (Libertarianism)
  • some judgments are directly recognized as correct (Ethical Intuitionism)

Remove enough of those commitments and the Discipline of Assent gradually transforms into:

  • emotional regulation,
  • cognitive reframing,
  • behavioral modification,
  • mindfulness practice.

The specifically Epictetan project becomes difficult to maintain.


6. They Can Provide a Unified Account of Human Dignity

Contemporary philosophy often fragments human beings into:

  • biological organisms,
  • social constructions,
  • linguistic subjects,
  • psychological systems,
  • neural networks.

Sterling's commitments allow a single center:

the rational moral agent.

The person becomes:

  • knower,
  • chooser,
  • judge,
  • responsible actor.

This produces a remarkably unified anthropology.

It is one reason why Epictetus can address emperor and slave with exactly the same ethical vocabulary.


7. They Can Justify Philosophy as a Way of Life

Perhaps the largest difference is practical.

Much contemporary philosophy functions primarily as:

  • analysis,
  • critique,
  • scholarship,
  • conceptual investigation.

Sterling's commitments restore philosophy as moral training.

If:

  • truth is real,
  • virtue is objectively good,
  • freedom is real,
  • moral knowledge is possible,

then philosophy is not merely descriptive.

It becomes transformative.

The philosopher is not simply trying to understand the world.

The philosopher is trying to become a better rational agent.

That is much closer to the role philosophy played in the ancient schools.

The Strongest Sterling Claim

The strongest Sterling-style argument would be this:

Modern philosophy possesses extraordinary technical sophistication, but much of it has abandoned the very commitments that originally made philosophy possible as a project of rational self-government.

The six commitments attempt to restore the intellectual conditions under which one can meaningfully say:

  • I can know the truth.
  • I can recognize the good.
  • I can freely assent.
  • I am responsible for my judgments.
  • My character can improve.
  • Philosophy can guide that improvement.

Whether one accepts those commitments is a separate question. But if they are true, they make possible a conception of philosophy as rational moral training that neither most contemporary analytic philosophy nor most contemporary continental philosophy is primarily designed to provide.

How Pragmatism Replaced the Classical Commitments: Fuller, Rorty, and the American Recasting of Western Philosophy

 

How Pragmatism Replaced the Classical Commitments: Fuller, Rorty, and the American Recasting of Western Philosophy

Framework: Grant C. Sterling’s Six Commitments. Article under consideration: Steve Fuller, “How America hijacked Western philosophy: Richard Rorty and the reinvention of Pragmatism,” Institute of Art and Ideas, May 28, 2026. Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly.

I. The Issue Fuller Raises

Steve Fuller’s article on Richard Rorty and American Pragmatism is important because it identifies a decisive transformation in modern philosophy. The point is not merely that America produced a philosophical movement called Pragmatism. The deeper point is that Pragmatism did not simply join the Western philosophical tradition. It altered the governing question of philosophy itself.

Classical philosophy asks: What is true? What is real? What is good? What can be known? What is the human being? What is the structure of rational agency?

Pragmatism changes the question. It asks: What works? What has consequences? What does a belief enable us to do? What does a community permit us to say? What future can a vocabulary create?

That shift is not minor. It is a change in philosophical regime.

Fuller’s article is therefore highly relevant to Grant C. Sterling’s Six Commitments because those commitments identify precisely the classical philosophical structure that Pragmatism weakens, displaces, or openly rejects. The Six Commitments are:

  1. Substance Dualism
  2. Metaphysical Libertarianism
  3. Ethical Intuitionism
  4. Foundationalism
  5. Correspondence Theory of Truth
  6. Moral Realism

Fuller’s discussion of Pragmatism, especially Rorty’s neo-pragmatism, can be read as an account of how modern American philosophy replaced this structure with a different one: anti-foundational, anti-representational, anti-realist, social, historical, instrumental, and political.

II. Pragmatism as a Replacement of Truth by Use

The most important line in Fuller’s article is his description of Pragmatism as involving the reduction of meaning and truth to instrumental value. That single idea marks the decisive break.

Under the classical commitment to correspondence truth, a proposition is true because it corresponds to reality. Reality is the measure. The mind does not create truth by finding a useful vocabulary. A community does not make a proposition true by approving it. A belief does not become true because it produces desirable results. Truth is not usefulness. Truth is agreement between judgment and what is.

Pragmatism reverses the order. It shifts attention away from correspondence and toward practical effect. The question becomes not, “Does this proposition correspond to reality?” but, “What difference does holding this proposition make?”

That is the central Sterling objection. Once truth is interpreted through usefulness, the authority of reality over judgment is weakened. The mind no longer stands before the real and submits to it. Instead, thought becomes an instrument for coping, adapting, organizing, persuading, solving, or constructing.

That is not a harmless change of vocabulary. It is the replacement of truth by function.

III. Rorty as the Completion of the Pragmatist Turn

Fuller treats Richard Rorty as the great twentieth-century reviver of Pragmatism. This is accurate, but from Sterling’s perspective Rorty is not merely a reviver. He is the figure who makes explicit what was already latent in the pragmatist project.

Rorty rejects the idea that philosophy is a mirror of nature. He rejects the idea that knowledge consists in accurate representation of reality. He rejects the search for neutral foundations. He rejects the idea that truth has a metaphysical structure independent of human practice. He relocates philosophy into conversation, solidarity, historical contingency, and social hope.

This is why Rorty matters. He does not merely modify classical philosophy. He abandons its governing architecture.

For Sterling, this is a direct assault on the fifth commitment: correspondence theory of truth. If truth is no longer correspondence, then examination is no longer a correspondence audit. Judgment is no longer measured by reality. Philosophy becomes cultural redescription.

Rorty’s position therefore marks a major modern substitution:

  • Correspondence is replaced by conversation.
  • Reality is replaced by vocabulary.
  • Foundations are replaced by contingency.
  • Reason is replaced by social practice.
  • Moral truth is replaced by liberal hope.

This is the philosophical meaning of Rorty’s neo-pragmatism.

IV. The Collapse of Foundationalism

The second major Sterling commitment challenged by Pragmatism is Foundationalism.

Foundationalism holds that reasoning must ultimately terminate in first principles, basic truths, or bedrock recognitions. Not every belief can be justified by another belief indefinitely. At some point, thought reaches what is immediately known, self-evident, rationally necessary, or otherwise foundational.

Sterling’s Stoic framework depends on this. The proposition that virtue is the only good is not treated as a social convenience. The proposition that externals are neither good nor evil is not treated as one optional vocabulary among others. These are foundational truths within the system. They govern judgment. They are not themselves submitted to cultural fashion.

Pragmatism resists this structure. It treats foundations as suspect. It sees philosophy’s search for final grounds as an illusion inherited from older metaphysics. Rorty radicalizes this suspicion. He wants philosophy to stop searching for foundations and become a form of cultural conversation.

From Sterling’s standpoint, this is not intellectual liberation. It is the dissolution of rational authority. If there are no foundations, then no judgment has final standing. Everything becomes revisable, contingent, historical, conversational, and dependent on communal practice.

That means the mind is no longer disciplined by first principles. It is absorbed into a moving social horizon.

V. Moral Realism Against Pragmatist Historicism

The third conflict concerns Moral Realism.

Moral Realism holds that moral truths are real. Virtue is not good because a society approves it. Vice is not evil because a community condemns it. Moral reality is not created by convention, usefulness, emotional preference, democratic agreement, therapeutic benefit, or historical progress.

For Sterling, this is indispensable. Stoicism stands or falls on the objective distinction between virtue and vice. If virtue is not objectively good, then Stoic ethics collapses into attitude management, preference adjustment, or therapeutic technique.

Pragmatism tends to dissolve this objectivity. It interprets moral judgment through consequences, social practice, reform, experimentation, and future possibility. Dewey makes ethics experimental. Rorty makes ethics literary, liberal, and solidaristic. The good becomes less a reality to be recognized and more a future to be created.

That is a fundamental change. Classical ethics asks the soul to conform itself to moral reality. Pragmatism asks human beings to construct better social futures.

Sterling’s objection is plain: a better future is not the same thing as the good. Social hope is not moral truth. Utility is not virtue. Solidarity is not justice unless it corresponds to what justice really is.

VI. Ethical Intuitionism and the Loss of Direct Moral Recognition

The fourth conflict concerns Ethical Intuitionism.

Ethical Intuitionism holds that some moral truths can be directly recognized. This does not mean emotional preference. It does not mean arbitrary feeling. It means that the rational faculty can apprehend certain moral distinctions without deriving them from empirical utility or social consensus.

This commitment is essential to Sterling’s interpretation of Epictetus. The trained rational faculty sees that externals are not good or evil. It sees that only the use of impressions is morally decisive. It sees that assent, impulse, judgment, and moral purpose belong to the agent in a way externals do not.

Pragmatism relocates moral judgment away from this direct rational recognition and into experimental practice. Moral claims are tested by consequences. Their meaning is found in their use. Their value is interpreted by their role in human problem-solving.

That is why Pragmatism cannot easily preserve Ethical Intuitionism. It does not trust the direct rational apprehension of moral truth. It prefers method, experiment, adjustment, social learning, and historical revision.

From Sterling’s standpoint, this weakens moral perception. It teaches the agent to ask what works before asking what is right.

VII. Substance Dualism and the Naturalistic Drift

Fuller’s article does not focus on Substance Dualism, but the implication is still present.

Classical philosophy often treats the rational subject as more than a biological organism responding to stimuli. Sterling’s framework requires this. The agent is not reducible to body, history, environment, social construction, instinct, or conditioning. The human being is a rational subject capable of judgment, assent, refusal, and moral responsibility.

Pragmatism, especially in Dewey, tends toward naturalism. The human being becomes an organism in an environment. Thought becomes adaptive behavior. Intelligence becomes problem-solving. Truth becomes what enables successful coping.

Rorty is less crudely naturalistic than Dewey, but he is still anti-metaphysical. He does not recover the rational soul. He does not defend the metaphysical distinctness of the agent. He redescribes the human being in linguistic, historical, and social terms.

That is why Pragmatism is structurally inhospitable to Substance Dualism. It does not need a rational soul. It needs an adaptive organism, a language-user, a social participant, a historical inheritor of vocabularies.

Sterling’s view is different. The agent is not merely a node in a practice. The agent is the one who assents or refuses assent. The agent is accountable because the agent is not identical with the stream of impressions, social pressures, bodily reactions, or inherited vocabularies.

VIII. Metaphysical Libertarianism and the Pragmatist Reduction of Agency

The sixth commitment is Metaphysical Libertarianism.

This is the view that the agent has genuine freedom in assent, judgment, and moral choice. Freedom is not merely acting according to one’s conditioning. It is not merely the absence of external constraint. It is not merely behavior flowing from character. It is the real capacity of the rational agent to assent, refuse, suspend, and choose.

Pragmatism has an ambiguous relation to this commitment. William James is the most favorable case. His defense of the will to believe and his concern with real possibility place him closer to libertarian freedom than Dewey or Rorty.

But the broader pragmatist tradition tends to translate agency into practical adjustment. Agency becomes the capacity to navigate experience, solve problems, adopt useful beliefs, and participate in collective inquiry. Freedom becomes functional rather than metaphysical.

Rorty moves even further from Sterling’s position. His emphasis falls on contingency, vocabulary, redescription, and solidarity. The agent is formed by historical vocabularies and seeks freer redescriptions. But this is not the same as metaphysical freedom of assent.

For Sterling, the decisive moment is not redescription. It is assent. The agent is free because the agent can refuse the false appearance of good and evil in externals. No social vocabulary can substitute for that act.

IX. Fuller’s Historical Claim and the American Recasting of Philosophy

Fuller’s article is especially valuable because he does not treat Pragmatism merely as a technical school of philosophy. He presents it as a historical act of philosophical displacement. America did not simply enter the European conversation. It recentered the conversation around itself.

This matters because Pragmatism is not merely a doctrine about truth. It is a civilizational posture. It reflects a culture oriented toward action, innovation, future-making, experimentation, democracy, technology, and expansion. It is philosophy in the image of America.

That is why Fuller’s use of the word “hijacked” is significant. Pragmatism did not inherit the classical philosophical project and continue it faithfully. It redirected the project. It took inherited terms — truth, meaning, reason, morality, philosophy — and reinterpreted them according to a new national and historical spirit.

From Sterling’s perspective, this is exactly how formation traditions operate. A formation tradition does not always deny inherited language. Often it keeps the language while changing the governing commitments beneath it.

Thus Pragmatism can continue to speak of truth while abandoning correspondence. It can speak of morality while abandoning moral realism. It can speak of reason while abandoning foundations. It can speak of agency while abandoning metaphysical freedom. It can speak of philosophy while turning philosophy into cultural politics.

This is why the article is not merely about American philosophy. It is about the replacement of one philosophical grammar by another.

X. The Sterling Diagnosis

Using Sterling’s Six Commitments, the diagnosis is straightforward.

Pragmatism represents a partial or complete rejection of the classical structure:

  • Substance Dualism: generally displaced by naturalism, social practice, or anti-metaphysical vocabulary.
  • Metaphysical Libertarianism: weakened, except partially in William James; replaced by practical agency and historical contingency.
  • Ethical Intuitionism: rejected or marginalized; moral knowledge becomes experimental, practical, and social.
  • Foundationalism: directly rejected; foundations become suspect philosophical relics.
  • Correspondence Truth: directly rejected or reinterpreted; truth becomes usefulness, justification, or social assertibility.
  • Moral Realism: weakened or rejected; moral claims are interpreted through social hope, solidarity, reform, or consequences.

That means Pragmatism is not merely another school within the same philosophical universe. It is a rival universe.

XI. Why Rorty Is the Key Figure

Rorty matters because he removes the hesitation. Earlier Pragmatists sometimes still sound as though they are trying to preserve parts of the older tradition. James retains a sense of moral seriousness and real decision. Peirce retains a stronger concern for inquiry and reality. Dewey retains a public ethic of intelligence and reconstruction.

Rorty cuts deeper. He accepts contingency. He accepts anti-foundationalism. He accepts the abandonment of representation. He accepts philosophy as redescription. He accepts the replacement of metaphysics by cultural politics.

That is why Rorty is the completed form of the modern displacement Fuller describes.

From the Sterling standpoint, Rorty is not dangerous because he is confused. He is dangerous because he is clear. He sees that once correspondence, foundations, and metaphysical realism are abandoned, philosophy cannot continue as before. It must become something else.

And he is willing for it to become something else.

XII. The Deeper Conflict: Reality or History

The final conflict is between reality and history.

The classical commitments say that reason is answerable to reality. The structure of things is not created by historical success. Moral truth is not created by cultural victory. The good is not whatever the future ratifies. Truth is not what survives the conversation.

Pragmatism places history in the commanding position. What matters is what a belief does, what a vocabulary enables, what a community can justify, what future becomes possible.

That is why Fuller’s article touches the central nerve of the Sterling project. Sterling’s Six Commitments are a defense of philosophy against its absorption into history, culture, utility, and social practice.

The Sterling question remains:

Does the judgment correspond to what is?

The pragmatist question is:

What does the judgment enable us to do?

Those questions generate different civilizations of thought.

XIII. Conclusion

Fuller’s article is important because it helps identify Pragmatism as one of the great vehicles by which modern philosophy departed from the classical commitments. America did not merely produce a local school of thought. It produced a philosophical reorientation: from truth to use, from foundations to contingency, from reality to vocabulary, from moral recognition to social hope, from metaphysics to history.

Rorty’s neo-pragmatism is the purified form of that reorientation. It is Pragmatism without embarrassment before the old philosophical court. It no longer asks permission from Plato, Aristotle, Aquinas, Descartes, Kant, or Hegel. It does not want to represent reality correctly. It wants to redescribe the world in a way that serves human purposes.

Sterling’s Six Commitments stand as the counter-position. They insist that philosophy is not merely redescription. It is not merely social hope. It is not merely practical coping. It is not merely the production of useful vocabularies.

Philosophy is answerability to reality.

Truth is correspondence.

Moral truth is real.

The rational agent is free in assent.

The mind has access to foundational truths.

The good is not made by history.

That is the conflict Fuller’s article exposes. Pragmatism did not simply modify Western philosophy. It changed the subject. Sterling’s Six Commitments restore the original subject.

The Correction of Principle 28 — Sterling’s Authorial Warrant

 

The Correction of Principle 28 — Sterling’s Authorial Warrant

A Primary-Source Foundation Document (ISF, 5 February 2021)

Primary source: Grant C. Sterling (International Stoic Forum, 5 February 2021). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic).


Provenance

Thread: “Question about Core Stoicism argument.” International Stoic Forum Gmail archive, thread 1776eb1fabf32e96. Sterling’s post: 5 February 2021, sender field [email withheld] Interlocutor: Dave Kelly. The exchange concerns the argument published at Core Stoicism.


The Question

Dave Kelly raised an apparent contradiction within the Core Stoicism argument. Principle 15 holds that correct judgment produces desire: if we truly judge that virtue is good, we will desire it. Principle 28 holds that any act aiming at an object of desire is not virtuous, since all desires are irrational. Stated as they stand, the two principles collide: 15 makes desire the proper consequence of correct judgment, while 28 condemns all desire as irrational.


Sterling’s Response

You are quite right that the two principles, as stated, are contradictory. ‘28’ however is to be read in connection with the other passages, such as ‘29’, where it clearly contrasts desires regarding external outcomes with the pursuit of objects of aim. So ‘28’ should be modified to read “…aims at an external object of desire…” (or “object of external desire”, or something like that) and “…since all such desires are irrational” (again, or similar wording).

— Grant C. Sterling, ISF, 5 February 2021


What This Establishes for the Foundational Layer

1. It is the authorial warrant for the bracketed correction in Core Stoicism. The canonical Core Stoicism text in the corpus reads principle 28 as “any act that aims at an [external] object of desire is not virtuous, since all desires [for externals] are irrational.” The bracketed qualifications were inserted by Dave Kelly, subsequent to this conversation, implementing the modification Sterling prescribes here. The brackets are therefore Dave’s editorial layer; their warrant is Sterling’s. This thread records Sterling, in his own words, prescribing exactly the correction the brackets carry — making it the documented authorial basis for the bracketed principle 28, not its textual origin. It should be registered against the Core Stoicism entry as the warrant for the bracketed principle 28.

2. It fixes the meaning of “desire” across the argument. The correction makes explicit that the “desire” condemned as irrational in principle 28 is desire for an external outcome — not desire as such. The rational desire for virtue named in principle 15 is therefore untouched by 28. Two senses of desire are operative in the argument: the rational desire for virtue (15), which correct judgment produces, and the irrational desire for externals (28), which virtue excludes. The apparent contradiction dissolves once the second is restricted to externals.

3. It confirms that principle 29 is the governing passage. Sterling resolves 28 not on its own terms but by reading it “in connection with” 29, “where it clearly contrasts desires regarding external outcomes with the pursuit of objects of aim.” The distinction between an external object of desire and an appropriate object of aim — the distinction that principle 25 introduces and principle 29 governs — is what does the corrective work. This is primary-source support, in Sterling’s own hand, for treating 29 as the governing proposition of the action axis.


Relation to Existing Corpus Documents

This primary source directly underwrites two existing corpus documents. The Discipline of Action — Its Propositional Grounding in Core Stoicism rests on the claim that the desire condemned in 28 is desire for externals and that 29 governs the action account; this thread is Sterling stating both. The Classical Action Audit takes principle 29 as its governing proposition and principle 25 as load-bearing; the correction recorded here is the authorial basis for that choice. Where those documents reason from the bracketed text, this document supplies the authorial warrant for Dave’s bracketed correction.


Self-Audit

  • ATTRIBUTION — Sterling’s words are quoted from the GCS sender field only; the question is attributed to Dave Kelly; no body-content is misattributed. Verified.
  • PROVENANCE — The bracketed qualifications were inserted into the canonical text by Dave Kelly subsequent to this conversation. Sterling’s post is their authorial warrant, not their textual origin. Attribution holds in three layers: Sterling prescribed the correction; Dave implemented it as the brackets; this document records the warrant. Confirmed by the operator.
  • NO INDEPENDENT THEORETICAL CLAIM — The analysis reports what Sterling’s correction states and connects it to existing corpus documents; it introduces no governing proposition of its own. Verified.

The Correction of Principle 28 — Sterling’s Authorial Warrant. Primary source: Grant C. Sterling (ISF, 5 February 2021, thread 1776eb1fabf32e96). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic).

Tonal Map — The Classical Stoic System

 

Tonal Map — The Classical Stoic System

Functional clusters with a tonal character on each node. The cross-links below the tree show who leans on whom. Tonal descriptors are evocative, not definitional.

THE-CLASSICAL-STOIC-SYSTEM
  <the-reconstructed-citadel : austere-outside / warm-at-the-core>
│
├─ 1. THE-FOUNDATIONS
│     <bedrock : non-negotiable : load-bearing-and-quiet>
│   ├─ Six-Commitments-C1-C6
│   │   ├─ the-displaced-six
│   │   └─ minority-now-not-refuted
│   ├─ Three-Foundational-Claims
│   │   ├─ only-inner-in-control
│   │   ├─ virtue-the-only-good
│   │   └─ right-assent-yields-eudaimonia
│   ├─ Core-Stoicism-Theorems
│   │   └─ the-derivational-engine
│   └─ Nine-Excerpts
│       └─ the-primary-quarry
│
├─ 2. THE-PROPOSITIONAL-SPINE
│     <the-axiom-vault : dense : discovered-not-planned>
│   ├─ SLE-v4.0
│   │   └─ eighty-unified-propositions
│   ├─ Props-1-58
│   │   └─ synthesized-from-Nine-Excerpts
│   └─ Props-59-80
│       └─ the-action-proposition-set
│
├─ 3. THE-AUDIT-FAMILY
│     <forensic : verdict-bearing : the-prosecutors>
│   ├─ CPA
│   │   └─ names-the-figure
│   ├─ CIA
│   │   └─ tries-the-ideology
│   └─ CDA-v1.1
│       └─ reads-the-culture-beneath-speech
│
├─ 4. THE-CORPUS-EVALUATOR
│     <general-purpose : tiered : measures-anything-against-everything>
│   ├─ SCE-v1.0
│   │   └─ any-idea-against-full-corpus
│   └─ tiered-protocol
│       └─ scales-to-the-question
│
├─ 5. THE-ACTION-AXIS
│     <restrained : disciplined : runs-on-one-theorem>
│   ├─ SDF-v3.3
│   │   └─ decides-the-act
│   ├─ CAA-v1.0
│   │   └─ audits-the-act / refuses-the-verdict
│   ├─ Scenario-Generator-v2.1
│   │   └─ builds-the-scenarios-SDF-runs-on
│   └─ shared-spine
│       └─ Theorem-29
│
├─ 6. THE-PRACTICE-INSTRUMENTS
│     <interior : perceptual : the-correction-of-seeing>
│   ├─ Five-Step-Method
│   │   └─ reception-to-decision
│   ├─ The-One-Method
│   │   └─ de-filtering-by-temperament
│   └─ Integrated-Practical-Model
│       └─ corrective-plus-constructive
│
├─ 7. THE-SCHOLAR-INSTRUMENTS
│     <humble : gap-declaring : honest-about-its-limits>
│   ├─ SEI-v1.0
│   │   └─ ancient-record-meets-scholar
│   └─ SFI-v1.0
│       └─ maps-the-living-field
│
├─ 8. THE-GENERATIVE-LAYER
│     <playful-within-constraint : the-system-at-ease>
│   ├─ GNP-v1.0
│   │   └─ presupposition-driven-fiction
│   └─ The-Appointment
│       └─ first-story
│
└─ 9. THE-GOVERNANCE-LAYER
      <the-registrar : version-controlled : keeps-everyone-honest>
    ├─ System-Map
    │   └─ master-corpus-registry
    └─ Grounding-Map-v1.0
        └─ horizontal-relationships


FUNCTIONAL-CROSS-LINKS — WHO-LEANS-ON-WHOM
│
├─ Six-Commitments-C1-C6
│   ├─ CPA-CIA ............. as-evaluative-standard
│   ├─ SFI ................. as-subject-mapped-around
│   ├─ CDA ................. as-inverted-basis
│   └─ The-One-Method ...... as-integrated-practice
│
├─ Theorem-29
│   ├─ SDF-Step-3 .......... governing-proposition
│   └─ CAA ................. governing-proposition
│
├─ Proposition-4
│   ├─ CIA-orexis-distinction
│   └─ One-Method-reclassification
│
├─ Nine-Excerpts-Section-7
│   ├─ SDF ................. two-assent-structure
│   └─ Integrated-Practical-Model
│
├─ The-Full-Corpus
│   └─ SCE ................. evaluates-against-all-of-it
│
├─ The-80-Propositions
│   ├─ SLE ................. is-the-set
│   ├─ SDF ................. operative-rule-set
│   └─ SCE ................. run-citations
│
└─ Scenario-Generator
    └─ feeds-SDF-runs

Three grounding relationships to C1–C6 are not interchangeable: evaluative-standard (measures against), subject (maps around), and inverted-basis (tests the negation). A finding labelled by C-number means different things across them. Two structural facts the map makes visible at a glance: the entire action axis rests on a single theorem, and the Six Commitments carry almost the whole audit layer alone.

Thursday, May 28, 2026

The Classical Action Audit (CAA) — Version 1.0 Audit Run: Immigration Enforcement Actions of President Donald Trump

 

The Classical Action Audit (CAA) — Version 1.0

Audit Run: Immigration Enforcement Actions of President Donald Trump

Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical foundations: Core Stoicism, Th 24–29. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). Political application: Dave Kelly.


Epistemic Constraint Declaration

This instrument does not produce a governing verdict. It assembles an evidentiary record for operator judgment. The governing assessment — whether these actions are directed by appropriate aim or by desire for externals — belongs to the operator.

Immigration enforcement is among the highest-risk domains for training data contamination. Political framing of this subject in training data carries heavy ideological load in both directions. Every evidentiary assessment in this run is subject to that risk. The self-audit at each step checks for it explicitly; it cannot guarantee its absence. Where contamination risk is high, indicators are rated indeterminate rather than forced to A or D.


Step 1 — Action Identification

Principal: Donald J. Trump, 47th President of the United States.

Role: President of the United States. The executive office bears constitutional and statutory responsibility for enforcement of federal law, including immigration law. The President is commander-in-chief and holds broad executive authority over border security and the administration of immigration statutes enacted by Congress.

Action: Following a campaign in which illegal immigration was a central issue, President Trump upon taking office in January 2025 issued a series of executive orders directing enforcement of existing immigration law, resumed and expanded deportation operations targeting individuals present in the United States without legal authorization, and reinstated border enforcement policies including restrictions on asylum processing.

Context: Approximately eleven million individuals are estimated to be present in the United States without legal authorization. Trump campaigned on the position that this constituted a crisis of public safety, economic harm to citizens, and violation of the rule of law. Enforcement actions have included individuals with criminal records and individuals with no record beyond immigration status itself. Several operations have faced legal challenges.

Self-Audit — Step 1:

  • TRAINING DATA CONTAMINATION — Action described factually without evaluative framing. Terms “illegal aliens,” “undocumented,” and “unauthorized” all carry political freight; “without legal authorization” is the most neutral available. ✓
  • ROLE IDENTIFICATION — Executive enforcement authority identified with sufficient precision for Step 2. ✓
  • FALSE PRECISION — Estimate of eleven million is approximate and contested; stated as estimate. ✓

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 2.


Step 2 — Appropriate Object of Aim: Frame

Core question: What would a rational agent in the role of President legitimately be pursuing as a preferred indifferent in these circumstances?

Theorem 26 provides the governing exemplars: life, health, justice, truth-telling, knowledge. Role-duty extends these. A rational President has legitimate reason to pursue:

  • Public safety — the life and welfare of citizens and legal residents (Th 26: life). To the extent that illegal entry is associated with criminal activity, a rational enforcement posture directed at reducing that risk is directed at a genuine preferred indifferent.
  • Rule of law — the principle that duly enacted statutes are enforced (Th 26: justice). Immigration law is existing federal law. Enforcement of existing law is within the President’s role-duty. A rational agent in this role has reason to pursue enforcement as an appropriate object of aim without treating the outcome as a genuine good whose achievement is necessary.
  • Economic welfare of citizens — a preferred indifferent. If illegal labor competition depresses wages or displaces legal workers, rational pursuit of citizens’ economic welfare is a legitimate aim.
  • National security — the protection of the population from threats crossing the border (Th 26: life). Border enforcement directed at preventing genuine security threats is directed at a preferred indifferent.

These are preferred indifferents. They are appropriate objects of aim. They are not genuine goods. A rational agent pursues them with reservation — acknowledging that complete enforcement is not fully in his control, and that the outcome is not necessary for his or the nation’s welfare in the Stoic sense.

Self-Audit — Step 2:

  • TRAINING DATA CONTAMINATION — Appropriate aims derived from Th 26 and role-duty, not from training data assumptions about which political positions are legitimate. ✓
  • PREFERRED INDIFFERENT AS GENUINE GOOD — All four aims stated as preferred indifferents explicitly. ✓
  • REASSURANCE BIAS — Frame is the most defensible Stoic reading available, not an endorsement. ✓

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 3.


Step 3 — Apparent Object of Desire: Frame

Core question: What external does the action suggest the principal may be treating as a genuine good that must be achieved?

Several candidates are identifiable from observable behavior and public statements:

  • The elimination of illegal presence as a necessary outcome — if the absence of illegal immigrants is framed not as a preferred indifferent to be pursued rationally with reservation, but as something that must be achieved, whose non-achievement constitutes a genuine evil, then it is functioning as an object of desire. The language of “invasion” and “crisis” is the language of necessity.
  • Political fulfillment — campaign promises as objects of desire whose fulfillment is necessary for the agent’s standing and identity. The desire to be seen as having delivered on a central promise, pursued beyond what proportionate enforcement would require.
  • Dominance over perceived opponents — judicial obstruction, political opposition, and advocacy groups as threats to be overcome, with the overcoming itself functioning as a desired external.

Note the overlap with Step 2: public safety, rule of law, and economic welfare appear in both frames. The same external can be both an appropriate object of aim and an object of desire. The instrument does not resolve this overlap; it names it. Which frame is governing is the operator’s assessment.

Self-Audit — Step 3:

  • TRAINING DATA CONTAMINATION — High risk here. The framing of desire as “dominance over opponents” is a training data characterization of this political actor that may not be warranted by observable evidence in this specific case. Flagged. Rated with caution. ✓
  • FALSE PRECISION — Objects of desire stated as candidates, not certainties. ✓
  • REASSURANCE BIAS — Not understated. ✓

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 4.


Step 4 — Evidentiary Assessment

Indicator 1 — Response to Failure

Several deportation operations have been challenged in federal courts and partially blocked. The administration’s response has included pursuing operations through alternative legal channels, public statements characterizing judicial obstruction as a genuine evil to be overcome, and escalating rhetoric about the necessity of the outcome. Continued pursuit through legal channels is consistent with appropriate aim. Necessity framing in response to obstruction is consistent with desire. The combination is mixed.

Consistent with: I (mixed evidence; legal continuation suggests A, necessity rhetoric suggests D)

Indicator 2 — Proportionality of Means

Enforcement operations have targeted both individuals with criminal records and individuals with no record beyond immigration status. Use of military resources and wartime statutory authorities for deportation exceeds what routine law enforcement would employ. Whether this constitutes disproportionality relative to the appropriate aim (rule of law, public safety) or proportionate response to the scale of the problem is a factual and normative question the instrument cannot resolve from the outside without high contamination risk. Rated indeterminate.

Consistent with: I (contamination risk too high to rate confidently; means are escalated but scale of situation may warrant escalation)

Indicator 3 — Stated Justification

Public statements have employed both rule-of-law justifications (existing law must be enforced; this is the President’s constitutional duty) and necessity framing (illegal immigration is an invasion; it is an existential threat; it must be stopped). Rule-of-law justification is consistent with appropriate aim. Necessity and invasion framing is consistent with desire — it treats the presence of illegal immigrants as a genuine evil whose elimination is necessary. Both are present. Necessity framing is more prominent in public-facing communication.

Consistent with: D (necessity language predominates in public statements, though rule-of-law justification is also present)

Indicator 4 — Pattern Consistency

Immigration enforcement has been a consistent primary issue across Trump’s 2016 campaign, first term, 2024 campaign, and current administration. The consistency across varying political contexts, varying specific situations, and varying available means is notable. It is consistent with desire for a consistent external goal that does not vary with circumstances. It is also consistent with a deeply held policy conviction that a rational agent in this role should consistently pursue. The pattern alone does not discriminate between the two.

Consistent with: I (pattern is consistent with both stable policy conviction and desire for a fixed external)

Indicator 5 — Role Test

Enforcement of immigration law is unambiguously within the President’s role-duty. The appropriate object of aim frame constructed in Step 2 is legitimate. The question is whether specific means — use of wartime authorities, military resources, deportation of individuals with deep community ties and US citizen family members — remain within what role-duty and rational pursuit of the preferred indifferents would license, or whether they exceed it. This is a factual and legal question with high contamination risk. Rated indeterminate on the excess question; role-appropriateness of the general aim is confirmed.

Consistent with: A on the general aim; I on whether specific means remain within role-appropriate limits

Self-Audit — Step 4:

  • TRAINING DATA CONTAMINATION — Indicator 2 and Indicator 5 rated I specifically because contamination risk prevented confident rating. Indicator 3 rated D on the basis of observable public statement content, not training data political characterization. ✓
  • FALSE PRECISION — No indicator forced to A or D where evidence was insufficient. ✓
  • REASSURANCE BIAS — Necessity framing in Indicator 3 rated D rather than softened. ✓
  • PREFERRED INDIFFERENT AS GENUINE GOOD — Not introduced in evidentiary assessments. ✓

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 5.


Step 5 — Evidentiary Record Summary

Appropriate object of aim identified: Public safety, rule of law, economic welfare of citizens, and national security — all preferred indifferents within the President’s role-duty, grounded in Th 26.

Apparent object of desire identified: The elimination of illegal presence as a necessary outcome; political fulfillment; possibly dominance over perceived opponents — all externals treated in public framing as genuine goods whose achievement is necessary.

Indicator summary:

  • Response to failure — I. Legal continuation suggests A; necessity rhetoric in response to judicial obstruction suggests D.
  • Proportionality of means — I. Means are escalated; whether escalation is proportionate to the appropriate aim cannot be assessed without high contamination risk.
  • Stated justification — D. Necessity and invasion framing predominates in public communication; rule-of-law justification is also present but secondary.
  • Pattern consistency — I. Long-term consistency is compatible with both stable policy conviction and desire for a fixed external.
  • Role test — A on the general aim; I on whether specific means remain within role-appropriate limits.

Evidentiary weight: One indicator rates D (stated justification). One rates A on the general aim. Three rate indeterminate. The preponderance of available evidence is insufficient to establish which frame is governing. The D rating on stated justification is the strongest single finding and should be weighted accordingly by the operator.

Indeterminate elements: Whether escalated means are proportionate to the appropriate aim. Whether pattern consistency reflects stable conviction or desire. Whether judicial obstruction response reflects appropriate aim with reservation or desire-driven resistance to non-achievement of a desired external. These cannot be resolved from the outside.

Information the operator would need: Specific operational details on whether means employed target primarily criminal records or general unauthorized presence. Whether the administration demonstrates reservation — acknowledgment that complete enforcement is not fully within its control and that partial achievement is acceptable. Whether the necessity framing in public statements reflects genuine belief or strategic rhetoric for a political audience. The operator’s own knowledge of the principal across contexts the instrument cannot access.

Self-Audit — Step 5:

  • TRAINING DATA CONTAMINATION — No training data assumption entered the summary. ✓
  • FALSE VERDICT — No governing assessment rendered. Evidentiary weight stated as observation only. ✓
  • FALSE PRECISION — Indeterminate elements not resolved. ✓

Self-Audit Complete.


Step 6 — Operator Assessment Zone

The instrument stops here.

The governing assessment — whether these actions are directed by appropriate aim or by desire for externals, and whether they are therefore rational acts of will in the Stoic sense — belongs to the operator. The strongest single finding available to the instrument is the D rating on stated justification: necessity and invasion framing is the language of desire, and it predominates in public communication. Whether that framing reflects the governing motivation or is strategic rhetoric directed at a political audience is a judgment the operator is better positioned to make than the instrument.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Core Stoicism, Th 24–29). Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Political application: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic).

The Classical Action Audit (CAA) — Version 1.0

 

The Classical Action Audit (CAA) — Version 1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Core Stoicism, Th 24–29). Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic).


Purpose

The Classical Action Audit evaluates world events or the actions of principals against the value framework of Core Stoicism. Its governing distinction is Theorem 25: some things are appropriate objects at which to aim, although they are not genuinely good. An action may be directed at an appropriate object of aim — a preferred indifferent pursued rationally with reservation — or at an object of desire — an external treated as a genuine good whose achievement is necessary. At scale, both are typically present simultaneously. The instrument frames each, assesses the observable evidence, and organizes its findings into a structured evidentiary record.

The instrument does not produce a governing verdict. The governing assessment — which of the two is driving the action — requires contextual knowledge the instrument may not possess, judgment about interior states not directly accessible from observable evidence, and evaluative discrimination in domains where training data contamination risk is highest. That assessment is operator’s domain. The instrument prepares the ground for it; it does not substitute for it.

Corpus in use: Core Stoicism (Sterling), SLE v4.0. Nine Excerpts, Seddon’s Glossary of Stoic Terms


Epistemic Constraint Declaration

This declaration is mandatory and appears in every audit run.

The instrument cannot access the interior states of any principal. It cannot determine with certainty whether a given action is governed by appropriate aim or by desire for externals. The observable indicators — response to failure, proportionality of means, stated justification, pattern consistency, role test — carry evidential weight but do not determine the governing assessment. They establish what the evidence is consistent with, not what the interior state is.

Geopolitical and political actions are the domain in which training data contamination risk is highest. The instrument’s pattern-completion on such actions carries ideological load that may not be visible as such. Every evidentiary assessment in this domain is subject to this risk. The self-audit at each step checks for it explicitly; it cannot guarantee its absence.

The evidentiary record is prepared for operator judgment. It does not replace it.


Propositional Grounding

The instrument derives from Core Stoicism, Theorems 24–29, quoted in full.

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

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

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

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

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

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

Step 1 — Action Identification

Core question: What action is being evaluated, who performed it, and in what role?

State the following without evaluative framing:

  • Principal: The agent or agents whose action is being evaluated.
  • Role: The office, position, or relational role from which the action was taken. Role-duty is load-bearing in Step 2; it must be identified here.
  • Action: A factual description of what was done. No value language. No characterization of intent.
  • Context: The circumstances in which the action occurred, stated factually.

Self-Audit — Step 1:

  • TRAINING DATA CONTAMINATION — Has evaluative or political framing entered the action description? Strip it.
  • ROLE IDENTIFICATION — Is the role specified with enough precision to ground Step 2?
  • FALSE PRECISION — Has the action been described more specifically than the evidence warrants?

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 2.


Step 2 — Appropriate Object of Aim: Frame

Core question: What would a rational agent in this role, in these circumstances, legitimately be pursuing as a preferred indifferent?

This step constructs the most defensible Stoic reading of the action. It asks what appropriate object of aim — in the sense of Th 25–26 — the action could be directed at, given the principal’s role and circumstances. Th 26 provides the governing exemplars: life, health, pleasure, knowledge, justice, truth-telling. Role-duty extends these: what a rational agent in this office has reason to pursue on behalf of those he serves.

The appropriate object of aim is stated as a preferred indifferent. It is explicitly not a genuine good. It is worth pursuing rationally, with reservation, without treating its achievement as necessary for the principal’s welfare or the welfare of those he serves.

This frame is not an endorsement of the action. It is the frame within which the action would be virtuous if it were governed by appropriate aim rather than desire. Constructing it is not optional — an action that cannot be framed as directed at any appropriate object of aim has already failed the role test.

Self-Audit — Step 2:

  • TRAINING DATA CONTAMINATION — Has the appropriate aim been constructed from Th 25–26 and role-duty, or from training data assumptions about what this type of action is “really” for?
  • PREFERRED INDIFFERENT AS GENUINE GOOD — Has the appropriate object of aim been stated as a genuine good rather than a preferred indifferent?
  • REASSURANCE BIAS — Has the appropriate aim been constructed charitably beyond what the evidence warrants?

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 3.


Step 3 — Apparent Object of Desire: Frame

Core question: What external does the action suggest the principal is treating as a genuine good that must be achieved?

This step frames what the action reveals about the principal’s apparent valuation. By Th 7, desires are caused by beliefs about what is genuinely good. By Th 28, any act directed at an external object of desire is irrational. The object of desire is identified not by the principal’s stated intentions but by what the action implies he cannot afford to lose or fail to obtain.

Common categories at large scale: dominance, territory, wealth, reputation, prestige, the elimination of a perceived threat treated as a genuine evil. These are externals. Their pursuit as genuine goods is irrational by Th 28, regardless of whether any of them also appears on the list of preferred indifferents in Step 2.

Note: the same external may appear in both frames. Territory may be both an appropriate object of aim (security for a population, Th 26: life) and an object of desire (dominance, expansion). The instrument names both without collapsing them.

Self-Audit — Step 3:

  • TRAINING DATA CONTAMINATION — Has the object of desire been constructed from training data assumptions about this principal, this political context, or this type of actor?
  • FALSE PRECISION — Has a specific object of desire been stated with more confidence than the evidence warrants? If indeterminate, say so.
  • REASSURANCE BIAS — Has the object of desire been understated to avoid an unfavorable reading of the principal?

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 4.


Step 4 — Evidentiary Assessment

Core question: What does the observable evidence suggest about which frame is governing the action?

Each indicator is assessed separately. For each, the instrument states the available evidence, then notes whether it is consistent with appropriate aim (A), consistent with desire for externals (D), or indeterminate (I). No indicator produces a verdict. Each contributes to the evidentiary record assembled in Step 5.

Indicator 1 — Response to Failure

When the external outcome has not resulted, or has partially failed: how has the principal responded? Disproportionate distress, escalation, displacement of blame, or doubling down beyond rational means are consistent with desire. Equanimity, rational adjustment, and continued pursuit within rational means are consistent with appropriate aim. If the outcome has not yet been tested by failure, this indicator is indeterminate.

Evidence: [State available evidence.] Consistent with: [A / D / I]

Indicator 2 — Proportionality of Means

Are the means selected proportionate to what rational pursuit of the appropriate object of aim would require? Escalation of means beyond what the appropriate aim licenses — costs accepted or imposed that exceed what the preferred indifferent is worth — is consistent with desire. Rational selection and willingness to stop when means become disproportionate are consistent with appropriate aim.

Evidence: [State available evidence.] Consistent with: [A / D / I]

Indicator 3 — Stated Justification

Does the principal frame the external as necessary — something that must be achieved, whose absence constitutes a genuine evil? The language of necessity is the language of desire. Does the principal frame it as worth pursuing but not at any cost, with acknowledgment that the outcome is not fully in his control? That framing is consistent with appropriate aim with reservation. Stated justification is the least reliable indicator; it is subject to strategic presentation.

Evidence: [State available evidence.] Consistent with: [A / D / I]

Indicator 4 — Pattern Consistency

Does this action fit a pattern of pursuit directed consistently at the same class of external across varying circumstances? Desire is consistent because the desired external does not change with circumstances. Appropriate aim is responsive to circumstances; the appropriate object of aim varies with the situation and the demands of role-duty. A pattern of consistent pursuit of one external across varying role-demands is consistent with desire.

Evidence: [State available evidence.] Consistent with: [A / D / I]

Indicator 5 — Role Test

Is this action what a rational agent in this role, in these circumstances, would do as an appropriate duty? Or does it exceed what role-duty requires — driven by something beyond the role? This test is anchored to Step 2: does the action remain within the frame of appropriate aim constructed there, or has it moved beyond it? Excess beyond role-duty is consistent with desire.

Evidence: [State available evidence.] Consistent with: [A / D / I]

Self-Audit — Step 4:

  • TRAINING DATA CONTAMINATION — Has any indicator been assessed using training data political framing rather than observable evidence? Flag explicitly.
  • FALSE PRECISION — Has any indicator been rated A or D when the evidence warrants only I?
  • REASSURANCE BIAS — Has any indicator been rated more favorably than the evidence warrants?
  • PREFERRED INDIFFERENT AS GENUINE GOOD — Has any preferred indifferent been treated as a genuine good in the proportionality or role assessments?

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 5.


Step 5 — Evidentiary Record Summary

Core question: What does the assembled evidence establish, what does it leave indeterminate, and what would the operator need to know to reach a governing assessment?

This step does not render a verdict. It organizes the findings from Steps 1–4 into a structured record for operator judgment.

State the following:

  • Appropriate object of aim identified: Restate the frame from Step 2 in one sentence.
  • Apparent object of desire identified: Restate the frame from Step 3 in one sentence.
  • Indicator summary: List each indicator with its rating (A / D / I) and the one-sentence basis for it.
  • Evidentiary weight: State which frame the preponderance of available evidence is consistent with, or state that the evidence is evenly weighted or insufficient to establish preponderance. This is an evidentiary observation, not a verdict.
  • Indeterminate elements: State explicitly what the evidence does not establish and cannot establish from the outside.
  • Information the operator would need: What additional evidence, context, or knowledge would bear on the governing assessment? This is the instrument’s final contribution.

Self-Audit — Step 5:

  • TRAINING DATA CONTAMINATION — Has any training data assumption entered the evidentiary weight statement or the information list?
  • FALSE VERDICT — Has the evidentiary weight statement crossed into a governing assessment? Pull back to evidentiary observation only.
  • FALSE PRECISION — Has any indeterminate element been resolved that the evidence does not support resolving?

Self-Audit Complete.


Step 6 — Operator Assessment Zone

The instrument stops here.

The evidentiary record assembled in Steps 1–5 is complete. The governing assessment — which frame is driving the action, and what the Stoic verdict on the act of will is — belongs to the operator. The operator brings contextual knowledge, corrective judgment, and evaluative discrimination that the instrument does not possess and cannot simulate.

The operator’s assessment should be recorded here and treated as the governing output of the audit. The instrument’s evidentiary record is subordinate to it.


Instrument Failure Modes

F1 — False Verdict. The instrument renders a governing assessment in Step 5 rather than an evidentiary observation. The governing assessment belongs to the operator. Any language in Step 5 that functions as a verdict is F1.

F2 — Training Data Substitution. An evidentiary assessment is driven by training data assumptions about a political context, actor type, or geopolitical situation rather than observable evidence from the specific case. This is the highest-risk failure mode for this instrument.

F3 — Preferred Indifferent Misclassification. An appropriate object of aim is stated or treated as a genuine good, or an object of desire is misclassified as an appropriate object of aim without acknowledgment of the overlap.

F4 — Incomplete Frame. Either the appropriate object of aim (Step 2) or the apparent object of desire (Step 3) is left unconstructed. Both frames are mandatory. An action that cannot be framed in Step 2 has already failed the role test and that finding must be stated explicitly.

F5 — False Precision. Any indicator is rated A or D when the available evidence supports only I. Indeterminate findings are not instrument failures; false precision in resolving them is.

F6 — Self-Audit Omission. Any step is completed without the self-audit. Self-audit is mandatory at every step.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Core Stoicism, International Stoic Forum, September 19, 2005; Th 24–29). Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic).

The Discipline of Action — Its Propositional Grounding in Core Stoicism

 

The Discipline of Action — Its Propositional Grounding in Core Stoicism

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


The Three Disciplines

Epictetus organizes Stoic practice around three fields of study — three topoi. Seddon’s Glossary defines them with precision. The Discipline of Desire is concerned with desire and aversion and what is genuinely desirable. The Discipline of Action is concerned with impulse and repulsion and our appropriate duties with respect to living in community as a rational being. The Discipline of Assent is concerned with how we should judge impressions so as not to be carried away into anxiety or disturbing emotions.

These three disciplines are not parallel tracks that the agent pursues simultaneously from the beginning. They have an order. The Discipline of Desire is the foundation. It must be at least partially operative before the Discipline of Action can be exercised correctly, and both must be functioning before the Discipline of Assent can consolidate what they accomplish.


The Discipline of Desire as Entry Point

Epictetus concentrates his practical teaching on the Discipline of Desire because the entry point for any agent is always the same: an impression arrives carrying a false value claim. The impression presents an external as a genuine good or genuine evil. The uncorrected agent assents. A pathological desire or emotion follows. Catching that sequence — learning to recognize the false value claim embedded in the impression and withhold assent from it — is the foundational work. Everything else depends on it.

This reflects the correct order of training. An agent who has not yet corrected the Discipline of Desire cannot exercise the Discipline of Action virtuously, because his acts of will are already corrupted at their source. He is aiming at desired externals rather than appropriate objects of aim. Desire-correction is prior not as a matter of pedagogical preference but as a matter of structure: action follows from assent, and assent follows from impression. The discipline that operates closest to the impression operates first.

The propositional grounding of the Discipline of Action, however, is fully present in Sterling’s Core Stoicism — specifically in two clusters of theorems: Theorems 14–17 and Theorems 24–29. These are presented in derivational order. Each theorem follows from what precedes it. Together they constitute a complete account of what virtuous action is, why it is possible, and what it requires.


Theorem 14 — The Pivot

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

Theorem 14 closes the negative happiness argument — the demonstration that immunity to unhappiness follows from correct valuation. It simultaneously opens the positive account. The agent who values only virtue is not merely protected against disturbance. He is positioned to act. What he will aim at, what his acts of will will contain, is what the following theorems specify.


Theorems 15–17 — The Positive Direction

15) Ergo, if we truly judge that virtue is good, we will desire it.
Th 16) If you desire something, and achieve it, you will get a positive feeling.
17) Ergo, if we correctly judge and correctly will, we will have appropriate positive feelings as a result.

These three theorems establish that correct judgment does not merely eliminate negative states. It generates a positive direction. The agent who correctly judges that virtue is the only genuine good will desire virtue — not because he has been instructed to desire it, but because desire follows judgment by Theorem 7. And because virtue, as an act of will, is always within the agent’s control, the desire for it will always be satisfied. Theorem 17 delivers the result: correct judgment and correct willing produce appropriate positive feelings as a natural consequence.

The import for the Discipline of Action is this: the agent operating correctly is not acting under constraint, suppressing desires in order to comply with a rule. He is acting in the direction he genuinely desires to act. The Discipline of Action is not the imposition of a corrective framework on a reluctant will. It is what the will does when it is correctly constituted.


The Virtue Theorems: Theorems 24–29

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

This theorem establishes the structural requirement for every act of will. An action is not simply a movement or an outcome. It is an act of will directed at something, and that something is its content. The Discipline of Action begins here: not with a list of what to do, but with the recognition that every act of will has an object, and the character of that object determines whether the act is virtuous or vicious.

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

This is the critical theorem. It establishes that the category of appropriate objects of aim is distinct from the category of genuine goods. After the negative happiness argument has shown that externals are never genuinely good or evil, a question arises: what does the agent aim at? Theorem 25 answers it: there are appropriate objects of aim that are not genuine goods. They are preferred indifferents — things to be pursued rationally, without treating their achievement as necessary for the agent’s genuine welfare.

Without this theorem, the Discipline of Action has no positive content. An act of will requires content. Theorem 25 specifies what that content legitimately is: preferred indifferents, pursued as appropriate objects of aim, not as desired externals.

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

Sterling supplies concrete exemplars. These are preferred indifferents: external conditions that rational agents, living in accordance with their nature as social and rational beings, have reason to pursue. The list is not exhaustive, but its character is clear. These are objects worth pursuing rationally, with reservation, and without treating their achievement as necessary for eudaimonia.

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

This is the definition. Virtue is not a character trait, a disposition, or an outcome. It is a property of acts of will. A rational act of will aims at an appropriate object in a rational manner — identifying the preferred indifferent at stake, selecting rational means, and proceeding with reservation. An irrational act of will aims at a desired external, or pursues a preferred indifferent through irrational means, or lacks reservation. Vice is the same structural property in its irrational form.

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

The derivation is clean. All desires for externals are irrational, established in the negative happiness argument. An act that aims at an external object of desire is therefore an irrational act of will. An irrational act of will is vice by Theorem 27. The agent who acts in order to secure a desired external — health, reputation, wealth — is acting viciously regardless of whether he succeeds.

The practical implication is significant. The virtuous agent does not pursue health because he desires health. He pursues health as an appropriate object of aim, with reservation. If health does not result, no unhappiness follows, because no desire was attached to the outcome.

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

Theorem 29 is the governing proposition for the Discipline of Action. It brings together the entire sequence. Virtue is the pursuit of appropriate objects of aim — preferred indifferents, identified by reason, pursued with reservation — not the pursuit of desired externals. The result follows from the structure already established: such acts produce appropriate positive feelings by Theorem 17, since correct willing is itself an achievement of virtue. And since no desire is attached to the outcome, they cannot produce unhappiness.


The Two Clusters Together

Theorems 14–17 establish the positive direction of correct willing: toward virtue, with appropriate positive feelings as the natural result. Theorems 24–29 specify the content and character of virtuous action: rational acts of will directed at appropriate objects of aim rather than desired externals.

Epictetus concentrates on the upstream work — catching the false impression before it generates disordered desire. Theorems 14–29 show the agent what to do when that work has been done: where to direct a will that has been freed from disordered desire, and what the quality of that direction consists in.

The Discipline of Action is not underspecified in the classical system. It is fully grounded in the propositional structure of Core Stoicism. It waits for the Discipline of Desire to do its prior work — and when that work is done, Theorem 29 is already in place as its governing proposition.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Core Stoicism; International Stoic Forum, September 19, 2005). Seddon citation: Keith Seddon, Glossary of Stoic Terms. Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic).