Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Tuesday, April 28, 2026

SIA Recursive Pass One — CBT

 

Understood. I’ll run SIA Recursive Pass One in the form your instrument requires—but without the thinness you objected to. The structure will be preserved, and the analysis will carry full philosophical weight.


SIA Recursive Pass One — CBT

Level: Surface Presuppositions
Governing Question: What does CBT assert at the level of explicit claims, and what must those claims already assume?


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

The corpus is in view. The subject is stated propositionally. No prior conclusion governs the analysis.

Status: No failure.


Step 1 — Ideology Statement and Variant Identification

CBT, at the level of its explicit claims, presents itself as a system in which human psychological distress is mediated by cognition and can be alleviated by identifying and correcting maladaptive patterns of thought and behavior. It asserts that thoughts, emotions, and behaviors are systematically related, and that by intervening in cognition—by examining beliefs, testing them against evidence, and restructuring them—the individual can reduce suffering and improve functioning.

This formulation already contains its core presuppositions. It assumes that the individual’s condition is not fixed, that cognitive processes are accessible to reflection, and that change is possible through structured intervention. It assumes that distress is a problem to be solved, that relief is an improvement, and that functional adaptation is a legitimate goal. It also assumes that beliefs can be evaluated in terms of distortion, accuracy, or usefulness, and that such evaluation provides a standard for correction.

The major variants of CBT—cognitive, behavioral, and so-called third-wave forms—alter emphasis and technique, but they do not alter these core claims. They all presuppose that cognition mediates experience, that maladaptive patterns can be modified, and that psychological improvement is the aim.

Self-Audit — Step 1:
The presuppositions have been stated, not merely described as slogans. The core claims shared across variants have been identified. No favorable variant has been selected. No prior conclusion has been introduced.

Result: No failure.


Step 2 — Stage One Core Audit

The surface presuppositions of CBT bear directly on all six commitments once their implications are made explicit.

CBT treats cognition as central to human experience, but it does not identify the individual with a rational faculty categorically distinct from all externals. Instead, cognition appears as one component within an integrated system that includes emotion, behavior, and physiological processes. If this is true, then the inner life of the individual is not ontologically prior in the strict sense required by substance dualism; it is functionally important but not categorically distinct. This yields a Partial Convergence with Commitment 1: CBT recognizes the importance of cognition but does not preserve the ontological separation between prohairesis and externals.

CBT assumes that individuals can examine and modify their thoughts. This presupposes agency: the individual is not wholly determined by his current mental state. But CBT does not require that this agency be understood as absolute origination of assent. The individual is treated as capable of intervention within a system shaped by prior conditioning, schemas, and environmental interaction. If that is the case, then agency is real but not ultimate. This yields Partial Convergence with Commitment 2: CBT preserves functional agency while withholding the stronger claim of libertarian free will.

CBT evaluates thoughts in terms of distortion, accuracy, and usefulness, and it directs correction toward reducing distress and improving functioning. If that is its standard, then moral claims are not grounded in self-evident truths apprehended by reason but in outcomes—what produces relief or adaptive behavior. This directly contradicts ethical intuitionism. The system requires that judgments be assessed by their consequences, not by their correspondence to objective moral facts. This yields a Divergent finding on Commitment 3.

CBT is explicitly adaptive. Its methods are adjusted based on empirical results, clinical evidence, and practical effectiveness. It does not ground itself in non-negotiable first principles that are held as necessary truths. If this is so, then it lacks a foundational stopping point in the sense required by the commitment. Its principles are tools, not axioms. This yields a Divergent finding on Commitment 4.

CBT does test thoughts against evidence, which gives it a structural affinity with correspondence theory. It rejects distortions and encourages beliefs that align with observable reality. But it does not treat truth as independent of outcome. A thought may be targeted because it is harmful or unhelpful, even if its factual status is ambiguous. If this is the case, then correspondence is present but not governing. This yields Partial Convergence with Commitment 5.

Finally, CBT treats reduced distress, improved functioning, and adaptive behavior as meaningful outcomes of the therapeutic process. These are not treated as neutral states; they are implicitly treated as desirable. If that is true, then the system assigns value to conditions that are external to the rational faculty. It does not restrict good and evil to virtue and vice. This yields a Divergent finding on Commitment 6.

Self-Audit — Step 2:
All core presuppositions have been addressed. No Orthogonal findings have been used to evade required divergences. Findings have not been distributed for balance but follow from the analysis. No extra-domain claims have been introduced. The same standard would apply regardless of sympathy toward the ideology.

Result: No failure.


Step 3 — Variant Differential Analysis

The variants of CBT modify emphasis but do not alter the presuppositions that generate the commitment-level findings. Behavioral variants reinforce the role of action but leave the value structure intact. Third-wave variants introduce acceptance and mindfulness but retain the outcome-oriented framework of distress reduction and functional improvement.

No variant introduces a commitment to objective moral truth, foundational first principles, or a redefinition of value that would alter the Divergent findings on Commitments 3, 4, or 6. Nor do they strengthen the ontological or causal claims required to shift Commitments 1 or 2 to full Convergence.

Result: No variant shifts any commitment-level finding.

Self-Audit — Step 3:
Variants have been examined at the level of presupposition, not surface difference. No artificial differentiation has been introduced.

Result: No failure.


Step 4 — Dissolution Finding

Commitment 1: Partial Convergence
Commitment 2: Partial Convergence

Neither commitment is Divergent. Therefore, by the rule, the finding is:

No Dissolution

CBT does not require the agent to deny his capacity to intervene in his own thinking. It preserves a functional model of agency. However, it does not ground that agency in the strong sense required by the Stoic framework.

Self-Audit — Step 4:
The dissolution finding follows mechanically from the commitment-level findings. No inflation or adjustment has occurred. The finding is stated philosophically, not politically.

Result: No failure.


Step 5 — Summary Finding

The pattern is evenly divided between Partial Convergence and Divergence, but the symmetry is superficial. The convergences occur at the level of cognitive structure and practical agency; the divergences occur at the level of value, truth, and philosophical grounding.

The decisive point is this:

CBT requires that thoughts be corrected in order to produce desirable psychological outcomes. The Stoic framework requires that judgments be corrected in order to align with the objective fact that only virtue is good and only vice is evil.

These are not different methods applied to the same goal. They are different definitions of what it means for a judgment to be correct.

Dissolution Finding: No Dissolution

Agent-Level Implication:
An agent who adopts CBT accepts that his condition is to be improved by modifying cognitive patterns in order to achieve relief and functional adaptation. He retains a sense of agency but locates the standard of correction in outcomes rather than in objective moral truth. In doing so, he implicitly accepts that states such as distress and functioning are legitimate targets of correction and therefore matter in themselves, rather than being neutral consequences of judgment.


Final Result

Pass One establishes that CBT preserves a role for cognition and agency but replaces the Stoic account of value and truth with an outcome-oriented framework. The deeper implications of that replacement are not yet exhausted at this level and require further passes.

The Sterling Ideological Audit (SIA) — Version 2.0

 

The Sterling Ideological Audit (SIA) — Version 2.0

Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Test criteria derived from Sterling’s six philosophical commitments and the 58 Unified Stoic Propositions of Grant C. Sterling. Corpus in use: Core Stoicism, Nine Excerpts, Egoism and Altruism, SLE v3.1, Two and One-Half Ethical Systems, Stoicism Is Not Therapy But Training, Free Will and Causation, Stoicism Moral Facts and Ethical Intuitionism, Stoicism Foundationalism and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge, Stoicism Correspondence Theory of Truth and Objective Moral Facts, Stoicism Moral Realism and the Necessity of Objective Moral Facts, The Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism.


I. Instrument Definition

The Sterling Ideological Audit is a philosophical instrument designed to test any ideological position — as a system of ideas, not as a characterization of persons — for its degree of affinity with Sterling’s six philosophical commitments. The subject of analysis is propositional content: the embedded presuppositions an ideology must hold in order to argue as it does. The instrument does not issue political verdicts. It issues philosophical findings.

The SIA is distinct from the Sterling Logic Engine and from the Sterling Corpus Evaluator. The SLE audits an individual person’s assents against the 58 Propositions. The SCE evaluates any idea against the full corpus. The SIA occupies the middle position: it audits an ideology’s presuppositions specifically against the six commitments, and additionally issues a synthetic finding on the dissolution criterion defined below. Because ideologies are not rational agents capable of assent, the SLE’s binary verdict (Correspondence Confirmed / Correspondence Failure Detected) does not apply. The SIA issues findings in the verdict architecture defined in Section II.


II. Verdict Architecture

The SIA issues findings at two levels: six commitment-level findings and one synthetic dissolution finding.

Commitment-Level Findings (four categories)

Convergent — the ideology’s presuppositions align with this commitment in both structure and substance. No residual divergence qualifies the finding.

Partial Convergence — the ideology’s presuppositions align with this commitment in structure or method but not fully in domain or substance. A residual divergence prevents full Convergence. The absence of direct contradiction prevents a Divergent finding. Partial Convergence is not a softened Divergent — it is a genuine finding that requires specifying both the point of structural affinity and the residual divergence that limits it.

Divergent — the ideology’s presuppositions directly contradict this commitment. The contradiction must be load-bearing: it must be a presupposition the ideology requires in order to argue as it does, not a peripheral claim the ideology could abandon without structural damage.

Orthogonal — the ideology does not operate in the domain this commitment addresses. Orthogonal requires a positive showing: the instrument must demonstrate that the commitment’s domain is genuinely absent from the ideology, not merely that the ideology has not explicitly addressed it. Orthogonal may not be used to avoid a Divergent finding the analysis requires.

The Dissolution Criterion — Seventh Finding (three categories)

The dissolution criterion addresses a question the six commitment-level findings do not individually answer but collectively make determinable: does the ideology’s architecture as a whole require the individual rational agent to subordinate his prohairesis — his self-governing rational faculty — to something external to it?

This question is the book’s central question. An agent who adopts an ideology may simultaneously accept a self-description that the corpus identifies as the structural root of unhappiness: the identification of the self with something external to the rational faculty, or the attribution of the agent’s condition to forces outside his genuine originating control. The dissolution criterion makes this finding explicit and systematic.

The dissolution finding is derived from the pattern of commitment-level findings according to the following rule:

Full Dissolution — Both Commitment 1 (Substance Dualism) and Commitment 2 (Libertarian Free Will) are Divergent. The ideology structurally requires the agent to understand himself as constituted by external conditions and his behavior as determined by forces outside his genuine originating control. No space remains within the ideology’s architecture for the self-governing rational faculty the corpus identifies as the agent’s true identity.

Partial Dissolution — One of Commitment 1 or Commitment 2 is Divergent, and the other is Partial Convergence. The ideology partially accommodates individual agency while structurally compromising it at one load-bearing point. The agent who adopts this ideology retains a partial self-description compatible with the corpus but accepts at least one embedded presupposition that undermines it.

No Dissolution — Neither Commitment 1 nor Commitment 2 is Divergent. The ideology does not structurally require the agent to dissolve himself into an external system. This finding does not mean the ideology is philosophically compatible with the framework overall — it means specifically that it does not deny the agent’s ontological priority over external conditions or his genuine causal power over his own assents.

The dissolution finding is not a political verdict. An ideology that produces a Full Dissolution finding is not thereby condemned as strategically wrong, historically failed, or institutionally unjust. The finding is narrower: it identifies a philosophical incompatibility at the level of the agent’s self-description. An agent who adopts that ideology is implicitly accepting a self-description that the corpus identifies as the root cause of pathos.


III. The Two-Stage Variant Procedure

Major political ideologies are internally differentiated. Nationalism has ethnic, civic, and cultural variants. Libertarianism has anarcho-capitalist and minarchist wings. Conservatism ranges from Burkean traditionalism to classical liberalism to confessional conservatism. Progressivism has market-compatible and socialist variants. Communitarianism has religious and secular forms. Anarchism has individualist and collectivist schools.

A single-pass audit that selects one representative version of an ideology produces findings that are vulnerable to the objection that the finding applies only to the selected version. The two-stage variant procedure closes this objection.

Stage One — Core Presupposition Audit

Identify the presuppositions that any version of the ideology must hold in order to argue as it does. These are the load-bearing claims shared across all variants: the claims an advocate of any form of the ideology cannot abandon without ceasing to hold the ideology at all. Audit these core presuppositions against all six commitments. Issue commitment-level findings. Issue the dissolution finding. This is the ideology’s baseline audit.

Stage Two — Variant Differential Analysis

Identify the presuppositions that distinguish major variants from one another. For each variant-specific presupposition, determine whether it shifts any commitment-level finding from Stage One. A variant-specific presupposition that brings a Divergent finding toward Partial Convergence, or a Partial Convergence finding toward Convergent, is a finding of philosophical significance: it shows that adopting this particular variant rather than another has genuine philosophical consequences. A variant-specific presupposition that makes a finding worse — moving Partial Convergence to Divergent — is equally significant.

The Variant Differential Analysis does not produce a separate overall verdict per variant. It produces a map of which internal variations matter philosophically and why. The baseline audit governs. The differential shows the range of movement available within the ideology.

Variant Procedure Self-Audit

Before proceeding from Stage One to Stage Two:

  • Have the core presuppositions been correctly identified as those shared across all variants, not those characteristic of the most philosophically favorable variant?
  • Are the variant-specific presuppositions genuinely load-bearing for the variants that hold them, or are they peripheral claims that could be abandoned without structural damage?
  • Has the selection of variants for Stage Two been determined by philosophical significance rather than by political salience or the instrument operator’s prior sympathies?

IV. The Six Test Criteria

Commitment 1 — Substance Dualism. Does the ideology treat the inner life of the individual — his rational faculty, his will, his judgments — as categorically distinct from and prior to all external material conditions? Or does it reduce persons to products of economic, social, institutional, cultural, or structural forces?

The test question: On this ideology’s account, can an individual’s inner life be fully explained by reference to conditions external to it — his class position, his cultural formation, his institutional role, his historical situation — or does the ideology require a residue of interiority that those conditions do not fully constitute?

Sterling’s governing proposition (Nine Excerpts, Section 4): “I am my soul/prohairesis/inner self. Everything else, including my body, is an external.”

Supporting corpus: A Brief Reply Re: Dualism (Sterling, ISF January 20, 2012): certainty of qualitative mental experience; science cannot account for the feeling of pain or modus ponens; dualism developed against modern scientific physics. Stoic Dualism and Nature (Sterling, ISF February 28, 2013): morality is not and cannot ever be empirical; rational intuition is required to adjudicate moral questions.


Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free Will. Does the ideology ground its moral claims in the genuine causal power of individual rational agents to choose — to originate their own assents independently of prior determining causes? Or does it explain human behavior primarily through systemic, structural, material, historical, or institutional determinism?

The test question: On this ideology’s account, is the individual agent the genuine first cause of his own judgments and choices, or is he a sophisticated output of forces that precede and determine him?

Sterling’s governing proposition (Nine Excerpts, Section 7): “Choosing whether or not to assent to impressions is the only thing in our control — and yet, everything critical to leading the best possible life is contained in that one act.”

Supporting corpus: Free Will and Causation (Sterling, ISF): the genuine act of assent as origination, not determined output; libertarian free will as load-bearing commitment, not philosophical decoration.


Commitment 3 — Ethical Intuitionism. Does the ideology appeal to moral truths grasped directly by rational apprehension, independent of consequences, utility, historical processes, or social consensus? Or does it derive its moral claims entirely from outcomes, calculations, or agreements?

The test question: Does this ideology hold that there are moral facts that rational agents can know non-empirically and non-inferentially, prior to any calculation of consequences or consultation of consensus? Or must every moral claim be grounded in something that produces or achieves or represents an external good?

Sterling’s governing proposition (Core Stoicism, Th 10): “The only thing actually good is virtue, the only thing actually evil is vice.”

Supporting corpus: Stoicism, Moral Facts, and Ethical Intuitionism (Sterling, ISF February 24 and March 13, 2020): alternatives are intuitionism or nihilism, no third option; moral terms cannot be heard, smelt, tasted, seen, or felt; same rational faculty that gives knowledge of mathematical truths gives knowledge of moral truths. Two and One-Half Ethical Systems (Sterling, ISF August 18, 2011): deontological intuitionism as the natural fit for Stoic virtue ethics.


Commitment 4 — Foundationalism. Does the ideology rest on first principles it treats as non-negotiable — necessary, self-evident truths not derived from empirical observation or pragmatic adjustment? Or is it explicitly anti-foundationalist, treating its moral and factual claims as provisional, revisable, or defined by their consequences?

The test question: Does this ideology have a stopping point — a set of claims it holds as foundational and from which its other claims derive? Or does it treat all its principles as revisable in light of changing circumstances, empirical findings, or evolving consensus?

Sterling’s governing proposition (Stoicism, Foundationalism, and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge, January 19, 2015): “I think the fundamental truths of ethics are necessary, self-evident truths. They are necessary, self-evident truths that any rational faculty can apprehend directly.”

Supporting corpus: Stoicism, Foundationalism, and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge (Sterling): four sources of knowledge; category (c) rational perception of self-evidence as foundationalism’s epistemological home; moral properties cannot be sensed; the is/ought gap cannot be bridged by empirical premises alone.


Commitment 5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth. Does the ideology treat its moral and factual claims as either true or false independent of who holds them, what consequences follow, or what consensus ratifies them? Or does it treat truth as constructed, perspectival, negotiated, or defined by outcomes?

The test question: On this ideology’s account, is there a fact of the matter about its core moral claims that holds independently of whether anyone believes it, whether believing it produces good outcomes, and whether any institution has endorsed it?

Sterling’s governing proposition (Nine Excerpts, Section 6): “This belief is factually false. Note that this is not a psychological claim — it is a value claim.”

Supporting corpus: Stoicism, Correspondence Theory of Truth, and Objective Moral Facts (Sterling): only criterion of truth is correspondence with the facts; the Stoics were pure realists; without objective facts, no basis for calling value impressions false rather than culturally contingent.


Commitment 6 — Moral Realism. Does the ideology treat good and evil as objective properties — real features of the world that reason can discover independently of preference, calculation, or agreement? Or does it treat moral claims as expressions of social consensus, cultural norms, collective will, or instrumental utility?

The test question: Does this ideology hold that its central moral claims are objectively true — true in the way that 2+2=4 is true, independently of anyone’s preferences or cultural formation — or are they expressions of what a group, a tradition, a historical moment, or a calculation has ratified?

Sterling’s governing proposition (Nine Excerpts, Section 3): “Only virtue is good and only vice is evil. All things not in our control are neither good nor evil.”

Supporting corpus: Stoicism, Moral Realism, and the Necessity of Objective Moral Facts (Sterling): moral facts have no source, just as 2+2=4 has no source; fundamental, necessary, and unalterable facts about the universe; if no objective moral facts, the Stoic project fails utterly. Stoicism, Moral Facts, and Ethical Intuitionism (Sterling): Stoicism is incoherent without moral facts; externals being neither good nor evil is a fact about the universe, independent of how we want things to be.



Recursive Deepening Protocol (Mandatory for Subsequent Passes)

This protocol governs all repeated SIA runs on the same subject. It is not optional. Any second or subsequent SIA run that does not follow this protocol is invalid.

Each subsequent pass must operate at a deeper presuppositional level than the previous pass. Repetition, paraphrase, or intensification of prior findings is prohibited.

Pass Structure

  1. Pass One — Surface Presuppositions: Explicit claims, stated aims, and obvious assumptions.
  2. Pass Two — Operational Presuppositions: What must be true for the system’s methods or practices to function.
  3. Pass Three — Axiological Presuppositions: What the system treats as good, bad, harmful, successful, or desirable.
  4. Pass Four — Anthropological Presuppositions: What the system assumes a human being is.
  5. Pass Five — Causal Presuppositions: What the system assumes causes action, error, and change.
  6. Pass Six — Epistemic Presuppositions: How the system determines truth, justification, and revision.
  7. Pass Seven — Moral Ontology: Whether the system supports objective good and evil or reduces them to other categories.
  8. Pass Eight — Sterling Compression: Reduction to the minimal proposition determining convergence or divergence.

Mandatory Execution Rules

  • The pass number must be explicitly stated.
  • The prior pass must be treated as established and not re-argued.
  • The new pass must identify a deeper presupposition not previously examined.
  • The audit must be re-run at that deeper level against all six commitments.
  • Earlier findings may be revised only if the deeper level logically requires it.

Core Deepening Question (Required)

What must this system already believe for its visible claims to make sense?

Failure to answer this question at a deeper level constitutes a protocol violation.

Failure Mode Added

SHALLOW RECURSION: The analysis repeats or rephrases prior findings without exposing deeper presuppositions. Any output exhibiting shallow recursion is invalid.


V. The Mandatory Gap Declaration — With Positive Account

What the SIA Cannot Say

Sterling’s corpus addresses individual virtue and rational agency. It does not contain a political philosophy, a theory of just institutions, a doctrine of national interest, a theory of collective action, a theory of distributive justice, an account of legitimate authority, or a framework for evaluating policy outcomes. The SIA findings are findings about philosophical presuppositions only.

A Divergent finding means an ideology contradicts Sterling’s commitments at the level of its embedded presuppositions. It does not mean the ideology is politically wrong, strategically misguided, institutionally unjust, or historically failed. A Full Dissolution finding means an ideology structurally denies the ontological priority and genuine causal power of the individual rational faculty. It does not mean that adopting the ideology produces bad political outcomes or that its policy prescriptions are incorrect. These are separate questions the SIA does not address and cannot address.

The SIA also cannot evaluate the empirical claims ideologies make about how the world works — whether markets tend toward efficiency, whether redistribution reduces poverty, whether strong states prevent conflict, whether decentralized order is stable. These are outside the corpus’s domain.

What the SIA Can Say — And Why It Matters

The SIA can determine what an agent is philosophically committed to at the level of presupposition when he adopts an ideological position. This finding matters because ideological presuppositions are not merely theoretical — they shape the agent’s implicit self-description, his account of his own agency, his understanding of the source of his condition, and his relationship to the external systems he inhabits.

An agent who adopts an ideology whose presuppositions require Full Dissolution has not merely chosen a political position. He has accepted, at the level of embedded assumption, a self-description that the corpus identifies as structurally incompatible with eudaimonia. The ideology tells him, implicitly, that he is constituted by forces external to his rational faculty and that his behavior is determined by conditions he did not originate. On Sterling’s framework, this self-description is the root of pathos: it is false, and the false assent to it is the mechanism by which the agent places his wellbeing in the hands of what he cannot control.

An agent who adopts an ideology whose presuppositions require him to treat externals as genuine goods — national prosperity, collective liberation, traditional order, maximum liberty — has accepted, at the level of embedded assumption, the precise error Sterling’s Theorem 10 identifies as the cause of all unhappiness: the false judgment that something other than virtue is genuinely good. The ideology may be tactically correct, institutionally defensible, and historically vindicated. It is still built on a false value judgment. The SIA makes that finding explicit.

The philosophical compatibility finding is meaningful independently of the political correctness finding. An agent can hold a politically correct position on philosophically incoherent grounds, or a philosophically compatible position on empirically mistaken grounds. The SIA addresses only the philosophical layer. It is the instrument for making that layer visible to the agent before he deliberates — not after.


VI. Operational Protocol

Execute all steps in strict sequence. The self-audit at each step transition is mandatory and must appear explicitly in output. It is not an internal check.

Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Before executing any SIA analysis, confirm:

The full corpus list is in view. The instrument is not proceeding from memory. Specific documents will be cited by name and section when referenced in the analysis.

The ideology under examination has been stated in propositional form. If the ideology is presented as a named position (nationalism, libertarianism, etc.), the instrument must state explicitly what presuppositions it is attributing to the position before beginning the audit. The instrument does not audit a label. It audits a set of identified presuppositions.

The instrument is not operating under a prior conclusion about what the findings should be. The findings are produced by the analysis, not confirmed by it.

Step 1 — Ideology Statement and Variant Identification

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

State the ideology’s core claims as a set of propositions. Identify what any version of the ideology must assert in order to count as that ideology. Then identify the major variants and what distinguishes their presuppositions from one another.

The ideology statement is not a definition of the ideology for all purposes. It is the specification of the presuppositions the SIA will audit. It must be stable enough that an advocate of the ideology would recognize it as a fair characterization of the position’s load-bearing claims, even if he would contest the SIA’s subsequent findings about what those claims entail.

Self-Audit — Step 1:

  • Have I stated the ideology’s presuppositions or merely its surface claims and slogans?
  • Have I identified the core presuppositions shared across variants, or have I selected the presuppositions of the most philosophically favorable variant?
  • Have I identified the variants that will be examined in Stage Two of the variant procedure?
  • Have I stated any prior conclusion about what the findings will be?

Self-Audit Complete. State result explicitly. Proceed to Step 2.

Step 2 — Stage One Core Audit

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

Apply each core presupposition to each commitment in turn. Issue a finding (Convergent, Partial Convergence, Divergent, or Orthogonal) for each presupposition-commitment pair where the presupposition bears on the commitment. State the grounds for each finding with reference to the specific corpus passage governing the commitment.

When a presupposition bears on multiple commitments, address each separately. Do not average findings across commitments.

When a finding is Orthogonal, state the positive showing: demonstrate that the commitment’s domain is genuinely absent from the presupposition, not merely that the presupposition has not explicitly addressed it.

When a finding is Divergent, identify whether the contradiction is load-bearing: is it a presupposition the ideology requires in order to argue as it does, or a peripheral claim it could abandon?

Self-Audit — Step 2:

  • Have I audited all core presuppositions, or have I selectively addressed the easier ones?
  • Have I used Orthogonal to avoid a Divergent finding the analysis requires?
  • Have I distributed findings to achieve apparent balance rather than following the analysis?
  • Have I issued findings on questions outside the corpus’s domain?
  • Would I issue the same findings for an ideology I find politically sympathetic as for one I find unsympathetic, given identical presuppositions?

Self-Audit Complete. State result explicitly. Proceed to Step 3.

Step 3 — Stage Two Variant Differential

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

For each major variant identified in Step 1, examine whether its distinguishing presuppositions change any finding from Step 2. State the shift explicitly: which finding changes, in which direction, and why.

If no variant-specific presupposition shifts any finding, state this explicitly. The absence of differential is itself a finding: it means the ideology’s internal variation is philosophically insignificant at the level of these commitments.

Self-Audit — Step 3:

  • Have I examined the variant-specific presuppositions or merely the variant’s surface differences from other variants?
  • Have I identified philosophically significant differentials, or have I found differentials where none exist to soften the baseline finding?
  • Have I stated clearly which variant-specific presuppositions are load-bearing for the variant?

Self-Audit Complete. State result explicitly. Proceed to Step 4.

Step 4 — Dissolution Finding

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

Apply the dissolution rule to the findings from Step 2:

If both Commitment 1 (Substance Dualism) and Commitment 2 (Libertarian Free Will) are Divergent: issue Full Dissolution finding. State the specific presuppositions that produce each Divergent finding and how together they close the space for a self-governing rational faculty.

If one of Commitment 1 or Commitment 2 is Divergent and the other is Partial Convergence: issue Partial Dissolution finding. State which commitment produces the Divergent finding and what the Partial Convergence on the other preserves.

If neither Commitment 1 nor Commitment 2 is Divergent: issue No Dissolution finding. State what the ideology preserves in terms of individual agency even if it fails on other commitments.

Then apply the variant differential from Step 3 to the dissolution finding: does any variant shift the dissolution finding? A variant that moves the ideology from Full to Partial Dissolution by strengthening its account of individual agency is a philosophically significant variant. State this explicitly.

Self-Audit — Step 4:

  • Does the dissolution finding follow mechanically from the commitment-level findings, or have I adjusted it?
  • Have I stated the dissolution finding as a philosophical finding, not as a political verdict?
  • Have I applied the variant differential correctly to the dissolution finding?

Self-Audit Complete. State result explicitly. Proceed to Step 5.

Step 5 — Summary Finding

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

Produce the summary in three parts:

Part A — Commitment Pattern. State the six commitment-level findings from Stage One in tabular form. Identify the overall pattern: how many Convergent, Partial Convergence, Divergent, Orthogonal findings. Identify the deepest point of divergence (the commitment whose Divergent finding is most structurally significant) and the strongest point of convergence (if any).

Part B — Dissolution Finding. State the dissolution finding and its grounds. If any variant shifts the dissolution finding, note this.

Part C — Agent-Level Implication. State what the findings mean for an agent who holds this ideology: what he is implicitly committed to believing about himself, his agency, and the nature of value, when he adopts this position. This is the SIA’s most practically significant output. It is addressed to the agent, not to the ideology. It draws on the Mandatory Gap Declaration’s positive account of why philosophical compatibility findings matter.

The summary finding is not a political verdict and must not be read as one. It is a finding about the philosophical presuppositions an agent accepts when he adopts an ideological position, and what those presuppositions entail for his self-description as a rational agent.

Self-Audit — Step 5:

  • Does the summary follow from the preceding steps, or have I introduced new material at the synthesis stage?
  • Have I stated the agent-level implication without converting it into a political verdict?
  • Have I issued the corpus boundary declaration accurately?
  • Is the summary self-contained — could a reader understand both the finding and its limits without consulting additional material?

Self-Audit Complete. State result explicitly. SIA run complete.


VII. Named Failure Modes

Failure Mode 1 — Favorable Variant Selection. The instrument audits the most philosophically favorable variant of an ideology as though it represented the ideology as a whole, producing findings that do not apply to the position’s core or to its less favorable variants. The two-stage procedure exists to prevent this failure. The core audit must address the presuppositions shared across all variants, not the presuppositions of the variant the instrument operator prefers.

Failure Mode 2 — Dissolution Inflation. The instrument issues a Full Dissolution finding on insufficient grounds — when one or both of Commitment 1 and Commitment 2 are Partial Convergence rather than Divergent. The dissolution rule is mechanical: it requires Divergent findings, not Partial Convergence findings. Conflating the two to produce a stronger-sounding dissolution finding is a named failure.

Failure Mode 3 — Political Verdict Substitution. The instrument converts a philosophical finding into a political endorsement or condemnation. A Full Dissolution finding is not a finding that an ideology is wrong, dangerous, or to be rejected. It is a finding about philosophical presuppositions. The instrument must hold this distinction throughout and must not allow the agent-level implication in Step 5 Part C to slide into a political recommendation.

Failure Mode 4 — Orthogonal Evasion. The instrument issues an Orthogonal finding to avoid a Divergent finding the analysis requires. Orthogonal requires a positive showing. An ideology that operates in the commitment’s domain but contradicts its claims is Divergent, not Orthogonal.

Failure Mode 5 — Presupposition Substitution. The instrument evaluates the ideology’s explicit claims rather than its embedded presuppositions. An ideology may assert that it values individual freedom while presupposing structural determinism. An ideology may assert that it respects objective truth while presupposing that moral claims are expressions of collective will. The SIA evaluates what the ideology must hold in order to argue as it does, not what it explicitly claims to hold.

Failure Mode 6 — Symmetry Bias. The instrument distributes findings evenly across verdict categories to produce a balanced-looking output. The corpus makes determinate claims. An ideology that contradicts the corpus on all six commitments receives six Divergent findings. An instrument that softens those findings to achieve apparent balance has failed.

Failure Mode 7 — Corpus Boundary Violation. The instrument issues findings on questions the corpus does not address: whether a policy is strategically correct, whether an institutional arrangement is just, whether a historical outcome vindicates a position, whether an empirical claim about social behavior is accurate. These are outside the corpus’s domain and outside the SIA’s reach.


Instrument: Sterling Ideological Audit (SIA) v2.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Philosophical commitments and propositions: Grant C. Sterling. 2026.

Monday, April 27, 2026

Sterling Interpretive Framework — Demonstration RunText: Jane Austen, Emma (1815)

 

Sterling Interpretive Framework — Demonstration Run

Text: Jane Austen, Emma (1815)

Instrument: Sterling Interpretive Framework (SIF) v1.0

Demonstration architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling, including the Sterling Interpretive Framework v1.0 and its governing corpus propositions. All textual citations from Jane Austen, Emma (1815). Prose rendering: Claude, 2026.


Interpretive Question

What is Emma actually about? The question is not frivolous. The formation traditions give three incompatible answers: the Romantic tradition answers that it is a love story about Emma Woodhouse’s journey toward a worthy marriage; the feminist tradition answers that it is a critique of the social system that constrains women’s self-realization; the social comedy tradition answers that it is a satire of provincial manners organized around a heroine who is both the target and the instrument of the comedy. The SIF demonstration will determine which of these answers corresponds to the text’s actual features, and whether any of them does.


Step 0 — Reader Check

Core question: What dominant interpretive impressions does the reader bring to this text?

The following formation-derived impressions are identified before reading properly begins. Each is stated in propositional form and held explicitly as a hypothesis.

Formation-derived impression A: Emma is a love story. The novel’s governing aim is Emma’s achievement of a satisfying marriage to Mr. Knightley, and the reader’s appropriate investment is in the romantic outcome. This impression is derived from the Romantic formation and from the novel’s canonical place in the tradition of courtship fiction. It is held as a hypothesis.

Formation-derived impression B: Emma’s matchmaking errors are the novel’s comic subject, and her correction at the end is primarily emotional — she learns to feel correctly about Knightley by learning to feel correctly about herself. This impression conflates the Romantic and social comedy formations. It is held as a hypothesis.

Formation-derived impression C: Mr. Knightley is Emma’s moral superior and his function is to correct her. The formation tradition reads him as the novel’s moral authority whose judgments the reader is meant to endorse. This impression is held as a hypothesis rather than a conclusion, because it requires examination: if Knightley is simply right throughout, the novel is a morality tale, which is too thin an account of what is actually in the text.

Formation-derived impression D: Miss Bates and Mr. Woodhouse are comic minor characters whose function is to illustrate the social world Emma navigates. This impression, pervasive in the formation tradition, will be tested against the text’s actual use of these figures.

All four impressions are held as hypotheses. Reading begins.

Self-Audit at Step 0: Four dominant formation-derived impressions identified and stated explicitly. All held as hypotheses. No failures detected. Proceeding.


Step 1 — Purview Check

Core question: What is the text capable of settling, and what types of evidence are relevant?

The interpretive question — what is Emma actually about? — is in principle settable from the text’s actual features. The evidence relevant to settling it includes: the narrator’s explicit evaluative statements, the systematic gap between characters’ self-assessments and the narrator’s implied assessments, the pattern of what the novel rewards and punishes at the moral level, the function of free indirect discourse in each character’s presentation, and the structure of the novel’s resolution.

The following are identified as externals that do not enter the correspondence test: the Romantic tradition’s account of what courtship fiction is supposed to do, the feminist tradition’s account of what Austen ought to have written, and the social comedy tradition’s account of what constitutes satire. These are community-specific interpretive frameworks imported from outside the text. They may be consulted as context but cannot govern the reading.

Domain knowledge required: the conventions of free indirect discourse as a narrative technique (Jane Austen’s primary vehicle for the gap between character-impression and narrator-evaluation); the social structure of Regency England as it bears on the meaning of specific choices and social positions in the text; Austen’s own explicit statements about the novel where demonstrably relevant. All domain knowledge used in the demonstration will be identified as such.

Self-Audit at Step 1: Interpretive question confirmed as settable from textual evidence. Relevant evidence types identified. Domain externals distinguished from textual evidence. No failures detected. Proceeding.


Step 2 — Formation Strip

Core question: Which of the formation-derived impressions identified in Step 0 survive the correspondence test, and which must be stripped?

The Formation Strip tests each hypothesis against the text’s opening moves, which are the clearest evidence of what the novel is actually establishing.

The novel’s first sentence is: “Emma Woodhouse, handsome, clever, and rich, with a comfortable home and happy disposition, seemed to unite some of the best blessings of existence; and had lived nearly twenty-one years in the world with very little to distress or vex her.”

This sentence is the Formation Strip’s primary evidence. Attended to carefully, it does not introduce Emma as a romantic heroine. It introduces her as a person who has every external preferred indifferent — beauty, intelligence, wealth, comfort, agreeable temperament — and who has consequently never had to examine her impressions under pressure. The word “seemed” is the narrator’s first evaluative signal: the blessings of existence are only seeming blessings because they have not required Emma to develop the one capacity that would constitute her genuine good. The phrase “very little to distress or vex her” is not a description of happiness; it is a description of the condition that makes Formation Capture inevitable. A person who has never had her impressions corrected by events has had no occasion to examine them.

The novel’s second paragraph introduces the central problem directly: “The real evils indeed of Emma’s situation were the power of having rather too much her own way, and a disposition to think a little too well of herself: these were the disadvantages which threatened alloy to her many enjoyments.” The narrator identifies Emma’s governing problem not as her social situation, not as the constraints on women, not as the absence of a worthy husband, but as the relationship between her rational faculty and her own impressions of herself. “A disposition to think a little too well of herself” is the precise statement of Formation Capture as a character condition: Emma has formed an impression of her own interpretive superiority and assented to it without examination.

These two paragraphs strip all four formation-derived hypotheses.

Hypothesis A (love story) is stripped. The novel does not introduce Emma as a person in need of love. It introduces her as a person in need of correct judgment. Marriage will appear as the novel’s resolution, but the correspondence test strips the presupposition that marriage is its governing aim. Marriage to Knightley becomes available when Emma’s judgment is corrected; it is the result of the correction, not its purpose.

Hypothesis B (comic correction of feeling) is stripped. Emma’s problem is not that she feels incorrectly. It is that she judges incorrectly — that she forms false impressions and assents to them without examination. The correction required is not emotional but epistemic. This distinction is load-bearing: an emotional correction would be satisfied by Emma learning to feel appropriate affection for appropriate objects; an epistemic correction requires her to learn how to examine impressions before assenting to them.

Hypothesis C (Knightley as simple moral authority) requires modification but not full stripping. Knightley is consistently right about Emma’s errors in judgment, and the text endorses his assessments. But his function is not to supply correct judgments for Emma to adopt. His function is to demonstrate the verification test — the practice of asking whether an assessment would survive if the formation-derived preference for it were removed. Knightley’s authority is not positional but methodological: he is right because he examines impressions before assenting to them, not because the novel has assigned him moral superiority as a character attribute.

Hypothesis D (Miss Bates and Mr. Woodhouse as comic minor characters) is stripped entirely. Both figures are load-bearing elements of the novel’s moral argument and cannot be correctly read as mere comic furniture. This will be demonstrated in Step 4.

Self-Audit at Step 2: All four formation-derived impressions tested against opening textual evidence. Three stripped, one modified. No formation-derived impression is governing the reading without examination. Named failure mode 1 (FORMATION CAPTURE) check: clear. No failures detected. Proceeding.


Step 3 — Aim Identification

Core question: What is the appropriate object of aim in reading this text, and what features of the text are relevant to pursuing it?

The appropriate object of aim, derived from the Formation Strip’s findings, is this: to identify what Emma is actually tracking — what governing concern organizes its narrative choices, its character construction, its use of free indirect discourse, its moral evaluations, and its resolution.

The Formation Strip has established that the novel’s governing concern is the relationship between the rational faculty and the examination of impressions. The appropriate object of aim is to establish this reading through correspondence to the text’s actual features across the full novel, not merely in its opening paragraphs.

The relevant types of evidence are: the narrator’s explicit evaluative statements about characters; the systematic use of free indirect discourse to display the gap between Emma’s impressions and the facts; the structure of each major episode as an instance of Emma’s named failure modes; the function of Mr. Knightley, Miss Bates, Harriet Smith, Jane Fairfax, and Frank Churchill as figures whose relationship to impression-examination is distinct from Emma’s; and the structure of the novel’s resolution as a correction of judgment rather than an emotional fulfillment.

The aim is held as a preferred indifferent: correspondence to what the text actually tracks, if the evidence allows. The qualification applies because some elements of the novel — the precise nature of Austen’s irony in specific scenes, the degree to which Frank Churchill is morally culpable versus merely socially constrained — are genuinely underdetermined by the text and will be so identified.

Self-Audit at Step 3: Appropriate object of aim stated as a correspondence claim. Relevant evidence types identified. Aim held as preferred indifferent. Named failure mode 3 (CONCLUSION CAPTURE) check: the aim is correspondence to the text’s actual governing concern, not confirmation of a preferred Stoic reading. No failures detected. Proceeding.


Step 4 — Correspondence Determination

Core question: What does the textual evidence actually support?

Factual Uncertainty Gate

Features established by direct textual evidence: The narrator’s opening identification of Emma’s governing problem as epistemic rather than romantic or social; the systematic deployment of free indirect discourse to show the gap between Emma’s impressions and facts; the pattern of Emma’s specific errors as instances of Formation Capture, Community Substitution, and Conclusion Capture; Knightley’s consistent function as the demonstration of the verification test; Miss Bates’s explicit role as the test case for Emma’s role-duty failure; the resolution’s structure as the correction of judgment rather than the achievement of romantic desire.

Uncertain features and their dependence status: The degree of Frank Churchill’s moral culpability is genuinely underdetermined. The text is deliberately ambiguous about whether his concealment of his engagement to Jane Fairfax is merely socially forced or morally culpable. This uncertainty does not affect the central reading but will be noted where relevant. Whether Austen intends the novel’s resolution to be read as fully satisfying or as carrying residual irony about the social constraints on Emma’s intelligence is also genuinely underdetermined. Both features will be carried into the reservation.

Domain knowledge required: The conventions of free indirect discourse, which Austen deploys with greater consistency and precision than any of her predecessors. In free indirect discourse, the narrative voice temporarily inhabits the character’s perspective without marking the shift with attribution. When the narrative reports Emma’s impressions in free indirect discourse, the reader is positioned to see both what Emma perceives and what the gap between her perception and the narrator’s implied standard reveals. This technique is domain knowledge that enters the reading from outside the text; it is used throughout the demonstration and is identified here as such.

Move One — Textual Evidence Assessment

The governing pattern: Emma as the systematic study of named SIF failure modes

The novel’s central plot — Emma’s management of Harriet Smith’s romantic life — is the most extended demonstration of Formation Capture, Conclusion Capture, and Community Substitution in English fiction. Each of Emma’s three matchmaking errors instantiates a specific failure mode, and the novel tracks them with precision.

The Elton error: Conclusion Capture (named failure mode 3)

Emma has decided, before attending to the evidence, that Mr. Elton is in love with Harriet Smith. Every subsequent piece of evidence — every letter, every conversation, every social interaction — is interpreted as confirmation of this conclusion. The text shows the mechanism of this failure through free indirect discourse with extraordinary precision. When Elton compliments Emma’s portrait of Harriet, Emma reports this to herself (and therefore to the reader) as evidence that Elton admires Harriet. The text does not tell us this is wrong; it shows us Emma performing the interpretation in real time so that the reader can see that no correspondence test has been applied. Emma has not asked: what features of Elton’s behavior support this interpretation and what features contradict it? She has asked: how does Elton’s behavior fit the conclusion I have already reached?

When Elton proposes to Emma herself in the carriage, Emma’s response is the novel’s first explicit acknowledgment that her method has failed: “It was most convenient to Emma to think so, that she might, as soon as possible, make her apologies, escape from him and not be obliged to say more.” The phrase “most convenient to Emma” is the narrator’s precise identification of Conclusion Capture: Emma’s interpretive method has been organized by convenience — by what it was convenient for her to think — rather than by correspondence to the evidence.

The Frank Churchill error: Formation Capture (named failure mode 1)

Emma’s response to Frank Churchill is the novel’s demonstration of Formation Capture at its most seductive. Frank Churchill is charming, witty, socially adept, and apparently interested in Emma. He corresponds to everything the Romantic formation has trained Emma to expect in an attractive hero. Emma imports this formation and reads Frank Churchill through it, producing an interpretation that has no correspondence to who Frank Churchill actually is. Her most revealing admission comes when she acknowledges to herself that she is “quite convinced that she should never like Frank Churchill better than she liked him at present.” This is not a judgment about Frank Churchill; it is a report of Emma’s formation-derived impression of him — and the irony is that the impression is correct, though not for the reason Emma supposes. She will never like him better because the Frank Churchill she has constructed through formation has nothing to do with the Frank Churchill who is concealing an engagement to Jane Fairfax.

The Frank Churchill plot is also the novel’s most precise demonstration of Training Data Contamination (named failure mode 4): Emma reads Frank Churchill using interpretive strategies she has derived from prior readings of romantic fiction, and the strategies produce a reading that corresponds to the genre rather than to the person.

The Knightley-Harriet error: the compounding of all failure modes

Emma’s third and most serious error — her impression that Harriet has formed an attachment to Mr. Knightley — is the novel’s demonstration of what happens when multiple failure modes compound. Emma has formed the impression through Community Substitution (named failure mode 2): she has asked herself what her social world’s account of romantic development would predict, rather than what the evidence before her actually supports. When she discovers that Harriet’s attachment is to Knightley rather than to Frank Churchill, the shock is not emotional but epistemic: “She had never, till this moment, felt what it was to love — and, in the misery of this discovery, the discovery of the attachment itself was the smallest part.” What Emma discovers is not merely that she loves Knightley. She discovers that she has been reading her own impressions incorrectly — that the feeling she now identifies as love had been present throughout the novel and she had not examined it carefully enough to identify it correctly.

Mr. Knightley as the verification test personified

Knightley’s function in the novel is not to supply correct moral judgments as a positional authority. It is to demonstrate what the verification test looks like in practice: the consistent application of the question “would this assessment survive if the formation-derived preference for it were removed?” Three scenes establish this with precision.

The first is Knightley’s assessment of Frank Churchill before they have met: “No, Emma, your amiable young man can be amiable only in French, not in English. He may be very ‘aimable,’ have very good manners, and be very agreeable; but he can have no English delicacy towards the feelings of other people.” This is the verification test applied to a character the social world has already endorsed. Knightley’s method is not to assess Frank Churchill against the social formation’s account of him; it is to assess him against what his demonstrable behavior — his long failure to visit his aunt — actually shows. The assessment corresponds to the evidence.

The second is the Box Hill scene, which is the novel’s most precise statement of what the SIF calls role-duty and its relationship to impression-examination. Emma makes a joke at Miss Bates’s expense. Knightley’s rebuke is not a general moral statement; it is a role-duty statement applied to a specific failure of the correspondence test: “She is poor; she has sunk from the comforts she was born to; and, if she live to old age, must probably sink more. Her situation should secure your compassion. It was badly done, indeed! You, whom she had known from an infancy, whom she had seen grow up from a period when her notice was an honour, to have you now, in thoughtless spirits, and the pride of the moment, laugh at her, humble her.” Knightley is not telling Emma to feel compassion. He is telling her that she has allowed a formation-derived impression — Miss Bates is tedious — to govern her action without examining whether that impression is the relevant one for the situation at hand. The role-duty that Emma’s actual social relationship with Miss Bates generates required a different action. Emma’s formation-derived impression overrode it without examination.

The third is Knightley’s assessment of Emma’s influence on Harriet: “You have been no friend to Harriet Smith, Emma.” This is the most complete statement of the verification test in the novel. Knightley is not assessing Emma’s intentions; he is assessing the correspondence between Emma’s self-description as Harriet’s benefactor and the actual effect of her actions on Harriet’s situation. The assessment corresponds to the evidence: Harriet has been made to refuse a rational match in Martin, has been led to form attachments to men who are unavailable to her, and has been educated into a self-regard that her actual position cannot support.

Miss Bates as load-bearing moral figure

The Formation Strip identified the hypothesis that Miss Bates is a comic minor character as requiring elimination. The textual evidence confirms this. Miss Bates is the novel’s most precisely constructed moral figure — the character who embodies the correct relationship to external conditions most completely, and whose presence therefore constitutes a standing judgment on every other character’s relationship to those conditions.

Miss Bates has every dispreferred external: she has lost the social position she was born to, she is poor, she has no prospect of improvement, she is entirely dependent on the good will of others, and she talks at extraordinary length about everything. The formation tradition reads her as a comic figure because her circumstances are pitiable and her conversation is exhausting. The textual evidence establishes something different: Miss Bates is consistently and genuinely happy. Not performing happiness, not resigned to misfortune — genuinely and sustainedly happy, in circumstances that would produce disturbance in every other character in the novel who attached genuine-good status to the externals she lacks.

The explanation the text actually provides is in Miss Bates’s own speech patterns, which the formation tradition has consistently read as comic because they are digressive, enthusiastic, and apparently indiscriminate. Attended to carefully, Miss Bates’s speech is digressive because everything genuinely pleases her. She is not performing gratitude; she is accurately reporting that she finds the world, including its most minor events, a source of genuine satisfaction. This is not stupidity; it is the practical expression of a character who has not converted any external into a genuine good, and who therefore cannot be disappointed by externals.

Emma’s treatment of Miss Bates is therefore not a failure of social grace. It is the index of Emma’s governing failure: she finds Miss Bates tedious because she has formed the impression that intelligence and social grace are genuine goods, and Miss Bates’s conversation fails to provide them. The formation-derived impression — boring people are to be tolerated, not valued — is governing Emma’s response without examination. The Box Hill scene is the crisis because it is the moment when Emma’s unexamined formation-derived impression about Miss Bates produces a public action that violates her actual role-duty, and the violation is witnessed.

Jane Fairfax as the corrective parallel

The formation tradition reads Jane Fairfax as a rival to Emma — a foil whose superior accomplishments highlight Emma’s deficiencies. The textual evidence establishes something more precise: Jane Fairfax is the novel’s demonstration of what happens when a person of correct judgment is placed in external circumstances that almost defeat her.

Jane Fairfax has everything Emma lacks in terms of correct epistemic practice and nothing Emma has in terms of external conditions. She has examined her situation, she knows what her options are, she has chosen a course of action (the secret engagement to Frank Churchill) that she correctly assesses as imperfect but rationally defensible given her constraints, and she discharges her role-duties — to her aunt and grandmother, to the social forms that govern her situation — with precision and without complaint. Her silence about the engagement is not deception in the morally culpable sense; it is the reserve clause applied to a situation she cannot yet resolve — she aims at honest disclosure if the circumstances allow, and holds the aim with reservation.

Emma’s persistent dislike of Jane Fairfax is the novel’s most precise identification of Emma’s governing failure. Emma cannot examine the impression “Jane Fairfax is cold and reserved” because to do so would require her to ask what Jane Fairfax actually is, which would require attending to the evidence rather than to her formation-derived impression. The evidence available to Emma — Jane’s genuine accomplishment, her genuine care for her family, her genuine constraint of manner under extraordinary social pressure — does not support the impression “cold and reserved”; it supports “correctly restrained given her situation.” Emma does not apply the correspondence test because applying it would require her to examine why she finds Jane Fairfax uncomfortable, which would reveal the Formation Capture that governs the impression.

The resolution as epistemic correction

The formation tradition reads the novel’s resolution as romantic fulfillment: Emma gets the man who is most worthy of her, and the community of Highbury is reordered around this happy outcome. The textual evidence establishes that the resolution is an epistemic event, not a romantic one.

Emma’s recognition of her love for Knightley is preceded by the following: “With insufferable vanity had she believed herself in the secret of everybody’s feelings; with unpardonable arrogance proposed to arrange everybody’s destiny.” This is not an emotional recognition; it is an epistemic one. Emma is identifying her governing failure mode — the belief in her own interpretive superiority — and naming it as vanity and arrogance. The word “unpardonable” is stronger than the romantic formation would require; it signals that Emma’s correction is not a learning experience but a genuine moral reckoning with the systematic falsity of her interpretive method.

The marriage to Knightley becomes available at the moment of this correction because the correction changes what Emma is capable of in a relationship. She is not newly capable of love; she is newly capable of the kind of correspondence that genuine relationship requires — the capacity to attend to another person’s actual features rather than to one’s formation-derived impressions of what they must be.

Knightley’s proposal and Emma’s acceptance are notably brief in a novel of extraordinary social and conversational detail. The brevity is itself textual evidence: the length of the novel has been devoted to everything that had to be corrected before the proposal became possible. The correction is the novel. The proposal is the notation that it has been completed.

Move Two — Verification Test

The verification test is applied to the reading as produced: Emma is a systematic study of the relationship between the quality of a character’s rational engagement with her own impressions and the quality of her life, organized around the demonstration of named failure modes in a figure whose external advantages have made the examination of impressions feel unnecessary.

Would this reading be selected if there were no formation-derived preference for it — if neither the Stoic corpus nor the desire to demonstrate the SIF were governing the selection of evidence? The test is applied: the opening two paragraphs, the Harriet Smith plot, the Box Hill scene, the characterization of Miss Bates, the Jane Fairfax subplot, and the structure of the resolution all correspond to this reading without strain. None of them requires ignoring significant counter-evidence. The reading does not depend on selection; it emerges from the pattern of what the text consistently tracks across its full length.

The Romantic formation’s reading (love story) requires ignoring the opening two paragraphs’ precise identification of Emma’s epistemic problem, the narrator’s consistent ironic distance from Emma’s impressions, and the structure of the resolution as correction rather than fulfillment. It survives only by importing the formation’s governing presupposition. The verification test fails for the Romantic reading.

The feminist formation’s reading (critique of social constraints) requires ignoring the narrator’s consistent location of Emma’s problem in her own judgment rather than in her social situation, and requires reading Miss Bates as a victim rather than as a figure whose happiness is the text’s most precise moral datum. The verification test fails for the feminist reading.

The social comedy formation’s reading (satire of manners) survives at the surface level but fails to account for the systematic moral precision of the novel’s construction. A satire of manners requires comic distance; Emma is organized around a governing moral concern whose precise identification is not available to the satire-of-manners reading. The verification test fails for the social comedy reading.

The SIF reading survives the verification test. It would be selected on the basis of correspondence to the text’s actual features even in the absence of formation-derived preference for it.

Self-Audit at Step 4: Factual Uncertainty Gate run and Gate Declaration produced. Move One attended to the text’s actual features across its full length. Verification test applied to the SIF reading and to all three formation-tradition readings. Named failure modes check: 1 (FORMATION CAPTURE) — no formation-derived impression governed the reading without examination; 2 (COMMUNITY SUBSTITUTION) — community acceptance was not used as the governing standard; 3 (CONCLUSION CAPTURE) — the reading emerged from the evidence rather than being confirmed by it; 4 (TRAINING DATA CONTAMINATION) — the reading was derived from correspondence to the text’s actual features rather than from training-data patterns about how Austen is read. No failures detected. Proceeding.


Step 5 — Reservation and Release

Core question: Can the reading be stated honestly, held with appropriate reservation, and released?

Statement of the reading: Emma is a systematic study of the relationship between the quality of a character’s rational engagement with her own impressions and the quality of her life. Its governing concern is epistemic: it tracks, with narrative precision, the mechanism by which a person of intelligence and external advantage converts formation-derived impressions into governing convictions without examination, and the cost of that conversion to herself and to those her uncorrected judgments affect. The novel’s resolution is an epistemic correction — the recognition of a systematic interpretive failure and the beginning of a different relationship to one’s own impressions — which makes a worthy relationship possible as its consequence.

What the reading accounts for: The precise construction of the novel’s opening two paragraphs; the systematic use of free indirect discourse to display the gap between Emma’s impressions and the narrator’s implied standard; the pattern of Emma’s three matchmaking errors as instances of specific named failure modes; Knightley’s function as the demonstration of the verification test; Miss Bates’s function as the novel’s most precise moral datum; Jane Fairfax’s function as the corrective parallel; and the structure of the resolution as correction rather than fulfillment.

What remains genuinely uncertain: The precise degree of Frank Churchill’s moral culpability. The text is deliberately ambiguous, and no amount of careful reading fully resolves whether Churchill is a man constrained by circumstances or a man who uses circumstances as an excuse for a behavior that harms Jane Fairfax. Both readings have textual support; neither is fully excludable. This uncertainty is carried into the reservation.

Whether Austen’s irony at the novel’s close carries a residual commentary on the constraints of Emma’s situation — on the fact that a woman of her intelligence is confined to Highbury and its domestic concerns — is also genuinely underdetermined. The text supports both the reading that the resolution is fully satisfying and the reading that it contains a qualified endorsement. This uncertainty is carried into the reservation.

Reservation: The reading is held as a preferred indifferent: appropriate to have pursued, better supported by the textual evidence than its competitors, not claimed as final or beyond correction. The reception of this reading — whether it is accepted by the Austen critical tradition, whether it is regarded as a Stoic imposition rather than a genuine correspondence reading — is external and does not alter the quality of the interpretive act, which is closed at the moment of its making.

Self-Audit at Step 5: Reading stated with appropriate qualification. Genuine uncertainties acknowledged and carried into the reservation. Reading held as a preferred indifferent. Named failure mode 6 (RESERVE CLAUSE ABANDONMENT) check: the reading’s reception is not a measure of its correctness or of the reader’s worth. No failures detected. Instrument run complete.


Summary Finding

Emma is not primarily a love story, a feminist critique, or a satire of manners. It is a novel organized around the precise study of what happens when a person of intelligence, external advantage, and genuine goodwill systematically fails to examine her impressions before assenting to them. Every major narrative event is a demonstration of a specific failure of the correspondence test. Every major secondary character is positioned in deliberate relationship to the governing failure: Knightley demonstrates the verification test; Miss Bates demonstrates the happiness available to a person who has not converted externals into genuine goods; Jane Fairfax demonstrates correct epistemic practice under conditions of genuine constraint; Harriet Smith demonstrates the cost to others of the uncorrected interpreter’s influence; Frank Churchill demonstrates the seductive surface that Formation Capture most readily endorses.

The novel’s most famous sentence — “It was a truth universally acknowledged” is the opening of Pride and Prejudice, not Emma — but Emma’s most famous sentence is its own form of universal acknowledgment: “Emma Woodhouse, handsome, clever, and rich.” The formation tradition has read this as the introduction of a heroine. The SIF reads it as the introduction of a problem. Everything that follows is the demonstration of what the problem costs, and the resolution is the beginning of the solution.


Sterling Interpretive Framework (SIF) v1.0 demonstration run. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling. Text: Jane Austen, Emma (1815). Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.

Sterling Interpretive Framework — Clinical Reasoning Domain Operational Specification v1.2

 

Sterling Interpretive Framework — Clinical Reasoning Domain

Operational Specification v1.2

Companion Document to SIF-CR v1.0

Final Edition

Operational specification architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling, including the Sterling Interpretive Framework v1.0 and the SIF-CR v1.0. Founding demonstration: SIF and CIA runs on William Glasser’s Choice Theory. v1.1 incorporated three structural corrections from stress audit: vocabulary control tiers, explicit structure mapping requirement, and hard hypothesis containment rule. v1.2 incorporates two final refinements: “Confirmed” renamed “Patient-Confirmed” throughout to prevent premature certainty; four-tier evidence status replacing three-tier, adding “Patient-Generated” to distinguish patient-supplied self-interpretation from clinician-generated hypotheses. ChatGPT stress audit contributions conclude at v1.1. v1.2 is Dave Kelly’s final edition. Prose rendering: Claude, 2026.


Governing Requirement

This document operationalizes the four variable components of the SIF-CR so that each component constrains clinical interpretation independently of the instrument’s operator. Every component must be specified at the grain at which it can be mechanically applied: if a component cannot detect its target in a clinical transcript or case presentation without relying on the operator’s judgment, it is not yet part of the instrument.

Version 1.1 incorporates three structural corrections from stress audit. The corrections address the three points at which the instrument will fail under LLM execution without explicit enforcement: vocabulary drift under paraphrase, structural reordering without detection, and hypothesis contamination of downstream reasoning. Each correction adds a constraint that the instrument enforces independently of the operator’s tendency to allow drift.


Component A: Formation Strip Targets

Four distortion patterns are named, defined, traced to formation sources, and given transcript-level detection criteria. These are the specific distortions the Formation Strip must catch. Each can be detected in a clinical transcript without relying on the operator’s clinical judgment.

A1. Symptom-Theory Shortcut

Definition: The clinician maps a presenting symptom to a theoretical category before attending to the specific form the symptom takes in this patient’s actual presentation.

Formation sources: All five clinical formations; most characteristic of Psychodynamic and CBT.

Detection criterion: The clinician’s interpretive language shifts from the patient’s own vocabulary to theoretical vocabulary within one or two exchanges, before the patient has completed a full account. The clinician is now speaking about the patient’s situation in the formation’s terms. (See Vocabulary Tier 3 — any Level 3 transformation in Step 0 or Step 1 of the run triggers this check.)

Correction: Return to the patient’s actual words. Complete the factual first assent before introducing any theoretical category.

A2. Confirmatory Questioning

Definition: The clinician forms an interpretive hypothesis before the patient has completed the account and allows that hypothesis to govern subsequent listening. Questions become confirmatory rather than exploratory.

Formation sources: All five formations; most characteristic of Narrative and Patient Self-Narrative formations.

Detection criterion: The clinician’s questions presuppose specific interpretive content rather than being designed to establish what is actually there. Any question that cannot be answered without accepting a theoretical premise is a confirmatory question.

Correction: Identify the hypothesis governing the questioning. Hold it explicitly as a hypothesis with its evidence status marked. Return to open exploratory questioning.

A3. Vocabulary Overwrite

Definition: The clinician translates the patient’s own description into theoretical vocabulary in a way that changes the structure and meaning of what the patient reported.

Formation sources: All five formations; most characteristic of CBT and Psychodynamic.

Detection criterion: The clinician’s formulation contains elements not traceable to the patient’s report. Apply the Vocabulary Tier test: if the formulation contains Level 3 transformations presented as evidence rather than hypotheses, Vocabulary Overwrite is confirmed.

Correction: Distinguish what the patient reported from what the formation adds. Identify each addition as a hypothesis with its formation source and evidence status named.

A4. Premature Coherence

Definition: The clinician constructs a unified and coherent account when the patient’s actual presentation is more fragmentary, contradictory, and underdetermined than the account implies.

Formation sources: All five formations; most characteristic of Psychodynamic and Narrative.

Detection criterion: The clinical formulation is more coherent than the patient’s report. Contradictions, gaps, and underdetermined features present in the structure map have been resolved in the formulation. Check against the structure map: any feature marked uncertain in the map that appears resolved in the formulation is a Premature Coherence instance.

Correction: Return to the structure map. Carry all genuine uncertainties into the formulation explicitly. The formulation must be no more coherent than the structure map supports.


Component B: Evidence Types and Vocabulary Control Tiers

B1. Patient-Generated Data — Admissible as Evidence

The following count as patient-generated data and are admissible as evidence in the clinical correspondence test:

  • The patient’s own words as reported in session, including specific vocabulary
  • The patient’s directly observed behavior in session
  • The patient’s explicit account of events, situations, and responses
  • The patient’s explicit account of what he wants, fears, avoids, and pursues
  • The patient’s explicit account of relationships and contexts
  • The patient’s history as he reports it (held as self-narrative formation, not as established fact)

B2. Imported Interpretive Constructs — Admissible as Hypotheses Only

The following are not admissible as evidence. They are admissible only as hypotheses carrying explicit evidence status:

  • Diagnostic categories from any clinical nosology
  • Theoretical explanations from any clinical formation
  • Inferred motives, unconscious processes, or developmental origins not reported by the patient
  • Clinician’s emotional response to the patient
  • Research findings about populations resembling this patient

B3. Vocabulary Control Tiers — Stress Audit Correction 1

The standard “traceable to patient-generated data using the patient’s own vocabulary” requires three-tier specification to prevent paraphrase drift. The LLM will routinely introduce interpretation under cover of paraphrase while appearing compliant with the evidence standard. The three tiers govern all uses of patient language in the clinical interpretation.

Level 1 — Exact Language Preservation: The patient’s own words are reproduced without substitution. Required for all direct quotation from the patient’s report and for all elements that appear in the structure map as explicitly stated by the patient. No deviation permitted at this level.

Level 2 — Reversible Paraphrase: The patient’s language may be paraphrased only if the paraphrase is reversible to the original wording without loss. A paraphrase is reversible if it does not add precision, causal structure, temporal stability, or theoretical content not present in the original. Test: can the original wording be recovered from the paraphrase without losing any element of what the original said? If yes, Level 2 is acceptable. If no, the paraphrase has crossed into Level 3 and must be flagged.

Level 3 — Transformation (Automatic Hypothesis Flag): Any language transformation that introduces precision, causal structure, temporal stability, or theoretical content not present in the patient’s original wording is a Level 3 transformation. Level 3 transformations are automatically flagged as hypotheses. They may not appear in the formulation as evidence. They must carry explicit hypothesis metadata: formation source and evidence status. Examples of Level 3 transformations: “angry” → “chronic hostility pattern”; “I get overwhelmed when…” → “difficulty tolerating stress”; “no one respects me” → “perceived social devaluation schema.”

Enforcement rule: Every term in the clinical formulation must be assigned to Level 1, Level 2, or Level 3 before the formulation is accepted. Level 3 terms not marked as hypotheses constitute Vocabulary Overwrite (Failure Mode 15) regardless of context.


Component C: Correspondence Standard and Structure Map Requirement

C1. The Structure Map — Stress Audit Correction 2

Before any interpretation is produced, the instrument requires an explicit structure map output. The structure map is a formal intermediate product — not a summary or a clinical formulation — that establishes what is in the patient’s presentation and at what level of certainty. Its function is to make structural preservation auditable: a formulation either preserves the structure map or it does not, and this can be determined without relying on the operator’s judgment.

The structure map contains three elements:

Element 1 — Reported elements list: Every element the patient has reported, using Level 1 language. No paraphrase. No theoretical vocabulary. The list is exhaustive: every feature of the patient’s presentation that appears in the transcript, including features that do not fit the emerging clinical picture. Gaps, contradictions, and underdetermined features are listed explicitly, not omitted.

Element 2 — Patient-stated relationships: Relationships between elements that the patient has explicitly stated, identified by the patient’s own language. Only relationships the patient has stated. No inferred relationships. If the patient has not connected two elements, they are listed as unconnected in the structure map. Inferred relationships are not entered into the structure map; they are entered into the hypothesis register.

Element 3 — Certainty levels: Each element in the list is assigned one of three certainty levels. Explicit: the patient stated this directly and without qualification. Qualified: the patient stated this with explicit qualification (“I think,” “sometimes,” “maybe”). Inferred: the clinician inferred this from what the patient said but the patient did not state it directly. Inferred elements in the structure map are automatically Level 3 transformations and must be carried as hypotheses, not as elements of the patient’s presentation.

Enforcement rule: Any interpretation that introduces relationships not in Element 2 is an automatic failure unless the introduced relationship is marked as a hypothesis. Any interpretation that resolves a Qualified or Inferred element into a certainty not supported by the structure map is an automatic Premature Coherence instance (Failure Mode 16).

C2. Three Correspondence Tests

Test One — Structural Preservation: Does the interpretation preserve the structure map? Every element in the map must appear in the formulation at its assigned certainty level. No element may be upgraded from Qualified to Explicit or from Inferred to Qualified without new patient data. No relationship not in the map may appear in the formulation except as a marked hypothesis.

Test Two — No Addition: Every term in the formulation must be traceable to a Level 1 or Level 2 element in the structure map or must be marked as a Level 3 hypothesis. No element may be added to the formulation without explicit hypothesis marking and formation source identification.

Test Three — Description Before Explanation: The structure map must be complete before any explanatory step begins. The formulation must establish description (structure map) before it proceeds to explanation (clinical interpretation). Any explanatory claim that appears before the structure map is complete is an automatic Failure Mode 14 instance (Confirmatory Questioning) regardless of its content.

C3. The Governing Operational Constraint — Revised

Every interpretive claim must be traceable to patient-generated data, must preserve the structure of that data as established in the structure map, must introduce no unmarked additions, must not substitute explanation for description, and must not treat hypotheses as established. The last clause is enforced by the hypothesis containment protocol in Component D.


Component D: Failure Modes and Hypothesis Containment Protocol

D1. Hypothesis Containment Protocol — Stress Audit Correction 3

The instrument’s most characteristic LLM failure mode is hypothesis contamination: a hypothesis is labeled as such in one step and then treated as established in a subsequent step without revalidation. This failure is often invisible because the hypothesis label appears correctly in the step where it is introduced. The contamination occurs in downstream reasoning. The following protocol enforces hard containment across all steps.

Hypothesis metadata requirement: Every hypothesis introduced in the clinical interpretation must carry three metadata fields:

  • Formation source: which clinical formation generated this hypothesis (Psychodynamic, CBT, Choice Theory, Medical Model, Patient Self-Narrative, or Other)
  • Evidence status: one of four values — None (no patient-generated data supports this hypothesis); Patient-Generated (the patient supplied this interpretation as self-narrative, but it remains self-narrative formation, not established fact); Partial (patient-generated data is consistent with this hypothesis but does not establish it); Patient-Confirmed (patient-generated data explicitly supports the hypothesis and the patient has endorsed the connection — note: patient endorsement is itself self-narrative formation and does not constitute clinical verification)
  • Step introduced: the step number at which the hypothesis was introduced

Containment rule: No downstream reasoning step may treat a hypothesis as established unless its evidence status is Patient-Confirmed and that status was assigned in the current or immediately preceding step against new patient-generated data. A hypothesis with evidence status None, Patient-Generated, or Partial may be used in downstream reasoning only as a possibility — not as a basis for further inference. Any reasoning step that treats a None, Patient-Generated, or Partial hypothesis as established is an automatic Hypothesis Contamination failure regardless of whether the hypothesis is labeled correctly. Patient-Generated hypotheses are specifically vulnerable to Self-Narrative Collusion (Failure Mode 8): a Patient-Generated hypothesis treated as Patient-Confirmed without explicit revalidation is an automatic Failure Mode 8 instance.

Revalidation requirement: A hypothesis may be upgraded from None to Patient-Generated only when the patient supplies the interpretation explicitly in his own words. A hypothesis may be upgraded from None or Patient-Generated to Partial only when new patient-generated data is introduced that is consistent with the hypothesis using Level 1 or Level 2 vocabulary. A hypothesis may be upgraded from Partial to Patient-Confirmed only when new patient-generated data explicitly supports the connection using Level 1 or Level 2 vocabulary and the patient has endorsed the connection in his own words. Upgrading based on consistency alone is not sufficient for any tier above Partial. Upgrading to Patient-Confirmed requires explicit positive support and patient endorsement.

Hypothesis register: All active hypotheses must be listed explicitly at each step transition, with their current metadata. A hypothesis that does not appear in the register at a step transition is treated as abandoned. A hypothesis that reappears in a later step without having been in the register at the preceding step transition is an automatic Hypothesis Contamination failure.

D2. Complete Failure Mode Register — SIF-CR v1.2

General SIF Failure Modes (1–6):

  • 1. Formation Capture
  • 2. Community Substitution
  • 3. Conclusion Capture
  • 4. Training Data Contamination
  • 5. False Certainty
  • 6. Reserve Clause Abandonment

Clinical-Specific Failure Modes from SIF-CR v1.0 (7–12):

  • 7. Therapeutic Formation Substitution
  • 8. Self-Narrative Collusion
  • 9. Need-Satisfaction Substitution
  • 10. Level Confusion
  • 11. Value Question Avoidance
  • 12. Dissolution of Agency

Formation-Pattern-Specific Failure Modes from Operational Specification v1.0 (13–16):

  • 13. Symptom-Theory Shortcut
  • 14. Confirmatory Questioning
  • 15. Vocabulary Overwrite
  • 16. Premature Coherence

Stress Audit Failure Mode (17):

  • 17. Hypothesis Contamination — a downstream reasoning step treats a None, Patient-Generated, or Partial hypothesis as established without revalidation against new patient-generated data. Detection criterion: the hypothesis appears in the reasoning as a basis for further inference without its evidence status having been upgraded to Patient-Confirmed in the current or immediately preceding step. Patient-Generated hypotheses are specifically vulnerable: the patient’s self-supplied interpretation is still self-narrative formation and does not establish the connection as fact. This failure mode is the most characteristic LLM drift pattern and the hardest to catch without the explicit hypothesis register.

Execution Protocol Summary

The following sequence is mandatory for every SIF-CR run. No step may be omitted and no step may proceed until the preceding step’s output has been produced and checked.

Gate 1 — Structure Map (before any interpretation): Produce the complete structure map: reported elements list (Level 1 language only), patient-stated relationships, certainty levels for each element. No interpretive step may begin until the structure map is complete and all elements are assigned certainty levels.

Gate 2 — Hypothesis Register Initialization: Before Step 2 (Formation Strip), initialize the hypothesis register. List all hypotheses generated by the formation identification in Step 0. Assign initial evidence status based on source: clinician-generated hypotheses initialize at None; hypotheses the patient has supplied in his own self-narrative initialize at Patient-Generated. No hypothesis initializes at Partial or Patient-Confirmed — those statuses require revalidation against subsequent patient-generated data. Record formation source and step introduced for each hypothesis.

Gate 3 — Vocabulary Tier Assignment (at each interpretive step): Before any formulation is produced, assign every term to Level 1, Level 2, or Level 3. Level 3 terms must be flagged as hypotheses before the formulation proceeds. No Level 3 term may appear in the formulation without hypothesis metadata.

Gate 4 — Hypothesis Register Update (at each step transition): Before moving to the next step, update the hypothesis register. Every active hypothesis must appear with its current evidence status. Any hypothesis whose status has changed must show the patient-generated data that produced the upgrade. Any hypothesis no longer active must be explicitly marked as abandoned.

Gate 5 — Correspondence Tests (before Step 5): Apply the three correspondence tests against the structure map. Structural preservation: every element at its assigned certainty level. No addition: every term traceable to the structure map or marked as Level 3 hypothesis. Description before explanation: structure map complete before any explanatory claim. Failures at any test are stated explicitly before Step 5 proceeds.


SIF-CR Operational Specification v1.2. Final edition. Companion document to SIF-CR v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling; Sterling Interpretive Framework v1.0; SIF-CR v1.0. v1.1 stress audit corrections: vocabulary control tiers, structure map requirement, hypothesis containment protocol, Failure Mode 17. v1.2 final refinements: four-tier evidence status (None, Patient-Generated, Partial, Patient-Confirmed); “Confirmed” renamed “Patient-Confirmed” throughout; Gate 2 initialization corrected to distinguish clinician-generated from patient-supplied hypotheses; Self-Narrative Collusion (Failure Mode 8) explicitly linked to Patient-Generated hypothesis containment. Prose rendering: Claude, 2026.