Sterling's Framework for Personal Decision Making
Sterling's Framework for Personal Decision Making
Preliminary Step: Agent Check
Before deliberation begins, examine your condition as a deliberating agent. The core question is: Am I currently under the influence of a false impression that is driving this decision?
The agent check is about your state, not the situation's contents. False impressions don't announce themselves. The person under the influence of one typically experiences it as simply seeing the situation clearly. So the agent check requires a specific trigger question rather than a general one.
Ask yourself: What is making this feel like it matters so much? Then examine whether the answer involves an external being treated as a genuine good or evil. If someone feels they must decide immediately because some external circumstance seems urgent or threatening, that urgency itself is a signal that a false value judgment is operating.
If a false impression is identified, correct it before proceeding. Running a sound procedure on faulty input will corrupt every subsequent step. The agent check is complete only when you can confirm that your rational faculty is operating without distortion from false impressions about externals.
Step One: Purview Check
The core question is: Is what I am trying to decide about actually mine to determine?
Most people experience personal decisions as a weighing problem. Sterling's framework reframes this entirely. Before any weighing can occur, the decision must be correctly formulated — stated in terms of what is actually within your control. Only your beliefs and your will are genuinely yours. Outcomes, other people's responses, and external circumstances are not.
In practice the purview check works as a two-part procedure. First, state the decision as you currently have it framed. Second, ask whether this formulation includes anything whose outcome depends on factors outside your beliefs and will. If yes, strip those elements out and restate. Keep restating until what remains is formulated purely in terms of your own beliefs and will. That restated version is the actual decision you are facing.
This step often reveals that the decision is much simpler than it appeared. Or it reveals there is no decision at all — only a situation to be accepted and responded to virtuously. If the remaining decision feels trivial or anticlimactic after the restatement, that is a signal the purview check worked correctly. The false weight has been identified and removed.
Step Two: Value Strip
The core question is: Am I treating anything in this situation as a genuine good or evil that is actually an indifferent?
This step concerns the situation's contents, not your condition as agent — that was addressed in the preliminary step. Here you take everything that remains after the purview check and classify each element correctly: virtue, vice, or indifferent.
The list of indifferents is long and includes things people routinely treat as genuine goods — health, financial security, relationships, reputation, career advancement, comfort, other people's approval. All of these belong in the indifferent column. Only virtue is a genuine good. Only vice is a genuine evil. Everything else is indifferent.
In practice this step involves two moves. First, list everything in the situation that feels like it is at stake. Second, ask of each item: is this something whose presence or absence would make me a better or worse person, or just a more or less fortunate one? Only virtue and vice affect the first. Everything else affects only the second. That distinction is the heart of the value strip.
The practical difficulty is that indifferents don't feel indifferent. They feel like they matter enormously. The value strip does not ask you to stop feeling that — it asks you to correctly classify what you are feeling about. The feeling can remain. The false moral weight gets removed.
What gets reassigned in this step is important. The indifferents are not discarded — they are reclassified as the practical context within which the real decision will be made. They inform the shape of the action without determining its moral content.
Step Three: Virtue Identification
The core question is: What does this situation specifically demand of me?
The previous steps have cleared the ground. The agent is operating properly, the decision is correctly framed within purview, and the false value has been stripped. Now the question is what the situation requires in terms of character. Not what outcome to pursue, but what kind of person this situation calls you to be.
In practice this means examining the situation as it now stands and asking which of the four cardinal virtues is specifically called for. Ask each in turn:
- Wisdom — Does this situation require careful discernment? Is the difficulty here that I don't yet see clearly what is actually happening or what the real options are?
- Justice — Does this situation involve my obligations to others? Is there a question of what is owed, to whom, and in what measure?
- Courage — Does this situation require me to act or speak in a way I am inclined to avoid because of discomfort, risk, or fear?
- Temperance — Does this situation involve an appetite or impulse that needs to be correctly regulated rather than simply followed?
More than one virtue may be called for simultaneously. That is common. When they are, wisdom typically has priority because it governs the correct application of the others — you need to see clearly before you can act justly, courageously, or temperately in the right measure.
The output of this step is a specific virtue or combination of virtues identified as the demand of this particular situation.
Step Four: Action Determination
The core question is: What does the identified virtue require of me in these specific circumstances?
This is importantly different from asking what will produce the best outcome. The action is not determined by calculating results — it is determined by what the virtue demands given the indifferents as practical context.
In practice this step involves two moves. First, take the virtue identified in step three and ask what it specifically requires in this situation. Not in general — in this situation, with these people, these constraints, these practical circumstances. Courage in a conversation with a close friend looks different from courage in a professional setting. The virtue is the same; its concrete expression varies with context.
Second, verify that the action determined is genuinely expressing the virtue rather than using the virtue's name to justify what you were already inclined to do. This is the most common failure mode at this step. A person identifies courage as the relevant virtue and then uses it to rationalize an action that is actually driven by anger or pride. The check is to ask: Would this action still be chosen if the emotional charge were removed? If not, the action is expressing something other than virtue, and the step must be repeated.
The output of this step is a specific action — something concrete that can actually be done, expressed in terms of your own beliefs and will rather than in terms of outcomes you hope to produce.
Step Five: Outcome Acceptance
The core question is: Can I release what follows from the action I have taken?
The action having been taken, the moral work is complete. What follows belongs to circumstances outside your purview. Outcomes are indifferent. Attaching moral weight to results at this stage would reintroduce exactly the false value that the value strip removed — it would treat the outcome as though it were a genuine good or evil rather than an indifferent.
In practice outcome acceptance requires recognizing that the quality of the decision is determined entirely by the quality of the deliberation and the virtue expressed in the action — not by what the action produces. A decision made correctly through this framework is a good decision regardless of its results. A decision made badly does not become good because it happens to produce a favorable outcome.
This step is not passive resignation. It is the correct understanding of where your moral responsibility ends. You are responsible for the quality of your beliefs, your will, and the virtue you bring to action. You are not responsible for what lies outside your purview. Outcome acceptance is the recognition of that boundary — and holding it is itself an exercise of the rational faculty that the entire framework is designed to protect.

