Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Thursday, May 28, 2026

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

 

The Classical Action Audit (CAA) — Version 1.0

Audit Run: Immigration Enforcement Actions of President Donald Trump

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


Epistemic Constraint Declaration

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

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


Step 1 — Action Identification

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

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

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

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

Self-Audit — Step 1:

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

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 2.


Step 2 — Appropriate Object of Aim: Frame

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

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

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

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

Self-Audit — Step 2:

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

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 3.


Step 3 — Apparent Object of Desire: Frame

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

Several candidates are identifiable from observable behavior and public statements:

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

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

Self-Audit — Step 3:

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

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 4.


Step 4 — Evidentiary Assessment

Indicator 1 — Response to Failure

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

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

Indicator 2 — Proportionality of Means

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

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

Indicator 3 — Stated Justification

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

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

Indicator 4 — Pattern Consistency

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

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

Indicator 5 — Role Test

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

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

Self-Audit — Step 4:

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

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 5.


Step 5 — Evidentiary Record Summary

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

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

Indicator summary:

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

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

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

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

Self-Audit — Step 5:

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

Self-Audit Complete.


Step 6 — Operator Assessment Zone

The instrument stops here.

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


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

The Classical Action Audit (CAA) — Version 1.0

 

The Classical Action Audit (CAA) — Version 1.0

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


Purpose

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

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

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


Epistemic Constraint Declaration

This declaration is mandatory and appears in every audit run.

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

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

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


Propositional Grounding

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Step 1 — Action Identification

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

State the following without evaluative framing:

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

Self-Audit — Step 1:

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

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 2.


Step 2 — Appropriate Object of Aim: Frame

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

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

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

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

Self-Audit — Step 2:

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

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 3.


Step 3 — Apparent Object of Desire: Frame

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

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

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

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

Self-Audit — Step 3:

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

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 4.


Step 4 — Evidentiary Assessment

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

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

Indicator 1 — Response to Failure

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

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

Indicator 2 — Proportionality of Means

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

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

Indicator 3 — Stated Justification

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

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

Indicator 4 — Pattern Consistency

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

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

Indicator 5 — Role Test

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

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

Self-Audit — Step 4:

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

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 5.


Step 5 — Evidentiary Record Summary

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

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

State the following:

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

Self-Audit — Step 5:

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

Self-Audit Complete.


Step 6 — Operator Assessment Zone

The instrument stops here.

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

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


Instrument Failure Modes

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

The Discipline of Action — Its Propositional Grounding in Core Stoicism

 

The Discipline of Action — Its Propositional Grounding in Core Stoicism

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


The Three Disciplines

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

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


The Discipline of Desire as Entry Point

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

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

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


Theorem 14 — The Pivot

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

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


Theorems 15–17 — The Positive Direction

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

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

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


The Virtue Theorems: Theorems 24–29

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


The Two Clusters Together

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

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

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


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

Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v3.0 — Run 8 Subject: Catholic Social Doctrine as expressed in Magnifica Humanitas (Leo XIV, 2026)

 

Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v3.0 — Run 8

Subject: Catholic Social Doctrine as expressed in Magnifica Humanitas (Leo XIV, 2026)

Part 2 of 2. Continues from Part 1 (Steps 0–2) Corpus in use: as stated in Part 1.


Step 3 — Stage Two Variant Differential

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

Two variants were identified in Step 1: Variant A (Theological CSD, grounded in Trinitarian theology and revelation) and Variant B (Natural Law CSD, relying on reason accessible to all people of goodwill). The question is whether the distinguishing presuppositions of either variant shift any of the six commitment-level findings.

Variant A — Theological CSD

Variant A adds to the core presuppositions: the Trinitarian character of the God whose image the person bears (CP1 is grounded in imago Trinitatis, not merely imago Dei); the Incarnation as the definitive disclosure of human dignity (“only in the mystery of the Word made flesh that the mystery of humanity truly becomes clear”); grace as the mode of genuine transcendence that distinguishes CSD’s “more than human” from transhumanism’s technological version.

  • C1: No shift. The Trinitarian grounding deepens the non-material anthropology (the person bears the image of a God who is himself communion of persons) but does not alter the structural or content finding. Convergent remains.
  • C2: No shift. The theological account of grace as cooperating with rather than replacing freedom preserves genuine origination. The Incarnation itself models the divine entering freely into history — which presupposes, rather than undermines, genuine freedom. Convergent remains.
  • C3: No shift. The Trinitarian grounding of moral reality does not alter the content divergence. CSD’s classification of externals as genuine goods remains in the theological variant — indeed it is most explicit here, where the common good and human dignity are grounded in God’s own relational nature. Structural Imitation remains.
  • C4: No shift. Revelation is treated as disclosing truth that corresponds to a reality God both constitutes and governs — the deepest ground of correspondence theory, not its competitor. Convergent remains.
  • C5: Slight structural movement but no composite shift. The theological variant grounds conscience in the person’s participation in God’s own knowledge of moral reality, which deepens the direct-apprehension element. However, it simultaneously strengthens the role of revealed authority (Magisterium, Scripture, Tradition) as an additional epistemic source alongside conscience, which preserves the mixed epistemological framework. Partial Convergence remains.
  • C6: No shift. The theological grounding of the foundationalist structure deepens it (God’s own nature as the ultimate foundation) but does not alter the structural or content finding. Convergent remains.

Variant A differential: No commitment-level findings shift.

Variant B — Natural Law CSD

Variant B brackets the specifically theological presuppositions and relies on natural law reasoning accessible through unaided reason. The distinguishing presuppositions: moral truth is accessible through reason reflecting on human nature; dignity is grounded in the rational nature of the person rather than in divine creative love; the social principles derive from the requirements of rational social life rather than from the Trinitarian economy of love.

  • C1: No shift. Natural law CSD requires the same non-material rational faculty as theological CSD. The soul may be grounded in rational nature rather than Trinitarian image, but it remains genuinely non-material, the seat of freedom and conscience, and irreducible to physical causation. Convergent remains.
  • C2: No shift. Natural law reasoning from human nature presupposes free origination of choice as a constitutive feature of rationality. Convergent remains.
  • C3: No shift. Natural law CSD holds moral realism no less firmly than theological CSD; it simply grounds it in reason’s access to human nature rather than in divine command. The content divergence from the corpus — externals classified as genuine goods — persists. Structural Imitation remains.
  • C4: No shift. Natural law reasoning is explicitly a process of correspondence — aligning judgment with how things actually are, morally and factually. Convergent remains.
  • C5: Marginal structural strengthening. The synderesis (self-evident first principles of practical reason in the Thomistic natural law tradition) is more structurally prominent in Variant B than in Variant A, where revelation supplements and authorizes what reason can access. In Variant B, the direct-apprehension element — that the rational faculty grasps the first principles of practical reason immediately, without inference — is more central and less embedded in a framework of magisterial authority. This slightly strengthens the structural alignment with C5. However, the content of what is directly apprehended still diverges from C5’s specific claim. Partial Convergence remains; the structural sub-finding moves marginally toward Aligned without crossing the threshold.
  • C6: No shift. Natural law foundationalism is no less foundationalist than theological foundationalism — the structure of practical reason generates the same hierarchical architecture of principles. Convergent remains.

Variant B differential: No commitment-level findings shift. C5 structural alignment marginally strengthened in Variant B without altering the Partial Convergence composite verdict.

Self-Audit — Step 3:

  • Have I examined the variant-specific presuppositions or merely the variant’s surface differences? The distinguishing presuppositions (Trinitarian grounding vs. natural law grounding) are the actual load-bearing differences between the variants and are directly assessed. ✓
  • Have I identified philosophically significant differentials, or found differentials where none exist to soften the baseline finding? The absence of significant differential is itself the finding. The marginal C5 movement in Variant B is noted accurately but does not produce a composite shift. ✓
  • Have I stated clearly which variant-specific presuppositions are load-bearing? Yes. ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. Proceeding to Step 4.


Step 4 — Dissolution Finding

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

The dissolution finding is governed exclusively by the content findings on C1 and C2.

C1 content finding: Aligned (composite: Convergent).

C2 content finding: Aligned (composite: Convergent).

Neither C1 nor C2 content is Divergent. The mechanical rule yields: No Dissolution.

This finding requires statement of what the ideology preserves in terms of individual agency, precisely because it fails on C3 (Structural Imitation) and produces Partial Convergence on C5.

CSD preserves, in full, the ontological priority of the rational faculty over external conditions (C1 Convergent) and the genuine origination of choice as the seat of moral responsibility (C2 Convergent). An agent who adopts CSD’s framework is not structurally required to understand himself as constituted by social, economic, or material conditions, or to understand his behavior as a determined output of forces outside his control. On the contrary: the encyclical insists that the “construction of Babel or the rebuilding of Jerusalem begins within each one of us” (§130) — placing the decisive locus of agency precisely where the corpus places it, in the individual’s own faculty of choice. The ideology’s account of conscience, conversion, and personal responsibility is incompatible with dissolution. An agent who fully adopts CSD is committed to understanding himself as a genuinely free being whose inner life is prior to and irreducible by all external conditions. The No Dissolution finding is strong.

Variant differential applied to dissolution finding: No variant shifts the dissolution finding. Both Variant A and Variant B preserve C1 and C2 content at the Convergent level. No Dissolution holds across all variants.

Self-Audit — Step 4:

  • Does the dissolution finding follow mechanically from the commitment-level findings, or have I adjusted it? Follows mechanically from C1 Convergent and C2 Convergent content findings. No adjustment. ✓
  • Have I stated the dissolution finding as a philosophical finding, not as a political verdict? The finding is stated at the level of the agent’s self-description, not as endorsement or condemnation of CSD’s political positions. ✓
  • Have I applied the variant differential correctly? Yes; no variant shifts the finding. ✓
  • Failure Mode 8 check (Structural Dissolution): Structural findings on C1 and C2 are noted in passing only; the dissolution finding rests exclusively on content findings. ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. Proceeding to Step 5.


Step 5 — Summary Finding

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

Part A — Commitment Pattern

  • C1 — Substance Dualism: Convergent
  • C2 — Libertarian Free Will: Convergent
  • C3 — Moral Realism: Structural Imitation
  • C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: Convergent
  • C5 — Ethical Intuitionism: Partial Convergence
  • C6 — Foundationalism: Convergent

Pattern summary: Four Convergent; one Structural Imitation (C3); one Partial Convergence (C5). No Orthogonal; no Divergent.

Strongest convergence: C1, C2, and C6. CSD and the corpus share an anthropology (the person has a non-material rational faculty that is the seat of genuine agency), a freedom doctrine (the will genuinely originates its choices), and a foundationalist epistemology (moral knowledge has a hierarchical structure with genuine foundations). On these three commitments, the content correspondence is tight and load-bearing.

Deepest divergence: C3. The Structural Imitation finding on moral realism is the most philosophically significant finding of this run. CSD correctly apprehends that moral facts are real, objective, and mind-independent — and this is not a trivial alignment. CSD is one of the most developed and consistent defenses of moral realism in contemporary thought, and the corpus agrees with its anti-relativist and anti-constructivist arguments throughout. But the content of what CSD identifies as genuinely good — the entire range of conditions for human flourishing, from dignity to labor rights to environmental integrity to peace — directly contradicts the corpus’s foundational axiom that only the inner condition of the rational faculty constitutes genuine value. This is not a peripheral divergence. It is the entire social doctrine of the Church, which exists precisely to promote these externals as genuine goods requiring genuine protection. The Structural Imitation pattern holds: CSD has the right frame and the wrong content filling it, in exactly the way the corpus’s series of runs has identified as the dominant ideological failure mode of modernity.

Part B — Dissolution Finding

Finding: No Dissolution. Grounds: C1 and C2 content findings are both Aligned. The ideology does not structurally require the agent to dissolve himself into an external system. CSD’s strong accounts of the non-material rational faculty and of genuine freedom of the will preserve the ontological space the corpus identifies as the agent’s genuine identity. This finding holds across both variants and is not qualified by any variant differential.

The No Dissolution finding is itself philosophically significant. CSD is among the minority of contemporary ideological frameworks whose presuppositions genuinely preserve the agent’s ontological priority and causal power over his own assents. The corpus does not grant this finding lightly; it has issued Full Dissolution findings on ideological frameworks that are less thoroughly committed to naturalism than CSD is allergic to it. An agent who adopts CSD is committed, at the level of philosophical presupposition, to understanding himself as a free rational being whose inner life is prior to all external conditions. This is exactly the self-description the corpus identifies as the precondition for all genuine progress in the training.

Part C — Agent-Level Implication and Gap Declaration

The gap between CSD and the corpus is not located in the commitments where one might expect it. The two frameworks share an anthropology: both hold that the human person has a non-material rational faculty that is irreducible to physical or social conditions, that this faculty genuinely originates its choices, that truth is a matter of correspondence to reality, and that moral and epistemic knowledge has a hierarchical structure. These shared commitments represent a rare and deep alignment; they constitute what CSD and the Stoic tradition have in common, which is more than either has in common with the materialist, determinist, and relativist currents that dominate the contemporary intellectual landscape.

The gap is located precisely at C3 — and it is fundamental. Both frameworks hold that moral facts are objectively real. They disagree radically about what those facts are.

For CSD, the objectively real moral facts include the dignity of every person, the requirements of the common good, the rights of workers to just wages and dignified conditions, the claims of the poor on the resources of the wealthy, the moral weight of peace and environmental integrity, and the social conditions necessary for human flourishing. These are not preferences; they are genuine goods that genuinely matter and must genuinely be promoted. An agent who adopts CSD is committed to understanding himself as embedded in a network of genuine obligations toward other persons and toward the social and material conditions that enable their flourishing. His prohairesis is not the only thing with moral weight; the conditions of other people’s lives have moral weight independently of what he makes of them.

For the corpus, the objectively real moral facts are about virtue and vice — the inner condition of the rational faculty in relation to the genuine good. The common good, the dignity of labor, the claims of the poor — these are preferred indifferents: genuine objects of appropriate action, worth aiming at with care and skill, but not genuine goods or genuine evils. The agent who pursues them with reservation, who aims at them without desire for their achievement, who maintains the correct value judgment throughout, is the agent the corpus commends. The one who classifies them as genuine goods — and experiences genuine pathos at their absence or violation — has made the foundational false value judgment that the entire Stoic program exists to correct.

The agent who holds CSD and encounters the corpus faces a specific question: the two frameworks agree on almost all the philosophical architecture of genuine agency; they disagree fundamentally on what the agent’s correctly functioning faculty will see when it looks at the world. CSD says it will see genuine goods and genuine evils distributed across social, material, and relational conditions. The corpus says it will see preferred and dispreferred indifferents, and that the pathology the agent experiences when he sees genuine goods where there are only indifferents is exactly what the training aims to dissolve.

This finding is not a political verdict. The corpus does not address whether CSD’s social prescriptions are strategically correct, historically vindicated, or institutionally just. Those are outside its domain. The finding is at the level of what the agent is implicitly committed to believing about the structure of value when he adopts CSD. He is implicitly committed to a theory of genuine goods that the corpus identifies as the foundational false value judgment.

Mandatory gap declaration positive account: What CSD offers that the corpus does not is a theory of social obligation grounded in genuine goods. CSD can say, and means, that the suffering of the poor is genuinely evil — not merely dispreferred, not merely unfortunate, not merely the appropriate object of remedial action, but a real moral wrong requiring real moral response. The corpus cannot say this in the same register: for the corpus, the suffering of the poor is a dispreferred indifferent, and the agent who responds to it does so from virtue (the inner good), not from recognition of the suffering itself as a genuine evil. An agent for whom this matters — for whom the difference between genuine evil and dispreferred indifferent is itself morally significant — will find CSD’s framework giving him something the corpus does not: a language for the genuine moral weight of other people’s conditions.

Self-Audit — Step 5:

  • Does the summary follow from the preceding steps without introducing new material? All summary content traces to Steps 1–4. The gap declaration positive account is drawn from the C3 Structural Imitation analysis. ✓
  • Have I stated the agent-level implication without converting it into a political verdict? The implication is stated at the level of what the agent is committed to believing about the structure of value. No endorsement or condemnation of CSD’s political positions is issued. ✓
  • Is the summary self-contained? It can be read without the preceding steps, though it references them. ✓
  • Failure Mode 3 check (Political Verdict Substitution): The No Dissolution finding is not a commendation of CSD; the C3 Structural Imitation finding is not a condemnation of Catholic social teaching. Both findings are philosophical. ✓
  • Failure Mode 10 check (Charitable Extraction Contamination): Have I imported corpus-compatible content into the presupposition extraction that CSD does not actually carry? The C3 Structural Imitation finding depends on CSD actually holding that externals are genuine goods — which it explicitly does, in load-bearing terms. No contamination detected. ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. CIA v3.0 Run 8 Complete.


Run Summary

Subject: Catholic Social Doctrine as expressed in Magnifica Humanitas (Leo XIV, 2026).

Findings: C1 Convergent; C2 Convergent; C3 Structural Imitation; C4 Convergent; C5 Partial Convergence; C6 Convergent.

Dissolution: No Dissolution.

Central finding: CSD and the corpus share more philosophical architecture than either shares with the dominant currents of contemporary thought. The frameworks agree on the ontological reality of the non-material rational faculty, the genuine origination of choice, the correspondence standard for truth, and the hierarchical structure of moral and social knowledge. The decisive divergence is at C3: CSD correctly apprehends that moral facts are objectively real, but identifies genuine goods where the corpus identifies preferred indifferents. This Structural Imitation finding is the most philosophically significant output of the run. An agent who holds CSD is not required by its presuppositions to dissolve himself into any external system; on the contrary, CSD’s anthropology and freedom doctrine preserve the agent’s ontological priority in exactly the terms the corpus demands. The gap between the frameworks is not about the architecture of genuine agency; it is about what the correctly functioning rational faculty will find when it looks at the world with that agency intact.


CIA v3.0. Run 8. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude. 2026.

Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v3.0 — Run 8 Subject: Catholic Social Doctrine as expressed in Magnifica Humanitas (Leo XIV, 2026)

 

Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v3.0 — Run 8

Subject: Catholic Social Doctrine as expressed in Magnifica Humanitas (Leo XIV, 2026)

Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling’s corpus. Prose rendering: Claude. Corpus in use: Core Stoicism, Sterling Logic Engine v4.0, Nine Excerpts, Two and One-Half Ethical Systems, Dogmata and the Six Commitments, The Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism, C1–C6 commitment essays (Substance Dualism, Libertarian Free Will, Moral Realism, Correspondence Theory of Truth, Ethical Intuitionism, Foundationalism), 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, Free Will and Causation, Stoicism Is Not Therapy But Training.

Political Application Constraint active. This run addresses the philosophical-presupposition layer of Catholic Social Doctrine (CSD) as expressed in the encyclical. It does not issue findings on the political, policy, or strategic content of the document. Sterling’s name is attributed to the theoretical test criteria; it is not associated with any political position examined herein.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

The full corpus list is in view. The instrument is not proceeding from memory on commitment content. The ideology under examination is Catholic Social Doctrine (CSD) as expressed in Magnifica Humanitas (Leo XIV, 15 May 2026), a papal encyclical addressed to all people of goodwill on the subject of safeguarding the human person in the age of artificial intelligence. The document is available in full as an uploaded source document. Presuppositions will be stated explicitly before the audit begins. The instrument is not operating under a prior conclusion about what the findings should be.

No prior conclusion stated. Proceed to Step 1.


Step 1 — Ideology Statement and Variant Identification

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

Subject Identification

The subject of this run is not Leo XIV as a person (that would trigger the CPA) but Catholic Social Doctrine as a system of ideas given its most recent systematic expression in Magnifica Humanitas. CSD is the Church’s body of normative teaching on society, economy, technology, and political life, developed from Leo XIII’s Rerum Novarum (1891) through the present encyclical. It constitutes an identifiable ideology in the CIA’s sense: a coherent system of presuppositions that an advocate must hold in order to argue as the ideology argues.

The encyclical makes CSD’s presuppositions unusually explicit, presenting them in systematic form across five chapters. This makes presupposition extraction unusually tractable. The encyclical also explicitly argues against competing positions, which assists in identifying what CSD must presuppose by contrast.

Core Presuppositions

These are the presuppositions any version of CSD must hold to argue as it does. An advocate who abandons any of these ceases to hold CSD at all.

CP1 — Non-material personhood. The human person has a genuine non-material dimension — the soul, the rational faculty, the conscience — that is genuinely distinct from body, brain, and material conditions and is the seat of freedom, dignity, and moral responsibility. This grounds the explicit rejection of AI systems as equivalent to human persons (§99: “So-called artificial intelligences do not undergo experiences, do not possess a body, do not feel joy or pain… Nor do they have a moral conscience”) and the claim that “no computational system, however sophisticated, can create a heart that gives itself, or a conscience that discerns good from evil” (§233).

CP2 — Genuine freedom of the will. The human person possesses genuine freedom — the will is capable of originating choices, not merely executing determined outputs of prior physical causes. This grounds the entire moral architecture of the encyclical: the calls to choose the “way of Nehemiah” over the “Babel syndrome,” to “remain human,” to assume responsibility, to convert. §130: “The construction of Babel or the rebuilding of Jerusalem begins within each one of us.” Moral responsibility, conversion, and virtue are possible only if the will genuinely originates its acts.

CP3 — Objective moral reality. Moral truths are objectively real — dignity, justice, solidarity, and the common good are genuine moral facts holding independently of individual preference, cultural construction, or power. The encyclical explicitly identifies the abandonment of this claim as a crisis: “Once the idea of a universal truth about the good, knowable by human reason, is lost, inevitably the notion of conscience also changes” (§133). Human dignity is asserted as “inalienably grounded in his or her very being, which prevails in and beyond every circumstance” (§53) — not a constructed norm but an ontological fact.

CP4 — Truth as correspondence to reality. Truth is a matter of correspondence to how things actually are, prior to and independent of human preference, power, or construction. The encyclical devotes extended attention to the “crisis of truth” as the abandonment of this standard: “truth is a common good and not the property of those with power or influence” (§137). Disinformation is wrong because it substitutes false correspondence for genuine correspondence, not merely because it is harmful.

CP5 — Direct moral accessibility through conscience. The human conscience is capable of directly recognizing fundamental moral requirements — not merely inferring them from prior premises or receiving them only through external authority. The encyclical states: “This is a non-negotiable truth attained by the use of reason and accepted in conscience” (§134). Natural law reasoning, which grounds CSD’s appeal to all people of goodwill, presupposes that moral truth is accessible through the exercise of reason without requiring prior theological commitment.

CP6 — Hierarchical structure of moral knowledge. Moral and social truths stand in structured dependency relations: foundational truths (human dignity as imago Dei) generate derived principles (common good, subsidiarity, solidarity, social justice), which generate specific applications. The encyclical makes this architecture explicit: “I am convinced that a harmonious relationship between these principles requires that they be considered collectively, so that it becomes clear how they relate to and complement each other” (§46). The Social Doctrine is “not a handbook of principles and norms to be applied, but a process of shared discernment” grounded in “the eternal truth of the Gospel and the questions of history” (§27) — the eternal truth is foundational; all else derives from it.

Variants

Variant A — Theological CSD. CSD grounded fully in Trinitarian theology, the Incarnation, and revealed truth (Scripture and Tradition). The foundation is the mystery of God as Trinity; the human person is imago Dei specifically as image of the Triune God; the dignity of persons is ultimately grounded in being loved by an infinite God. This is the governing frame of Magnifica Humanitas itself.

Variant B — Natural Law CSD. CSD bracketing the specifically theological grounding and relying on natural law reasoning accessible to all people through unaided reason. Dignity, moral realism, and foundationalism remain; the Trinitarian grounding is held in reserve. This is CSD’s mode of address to non-believers and to pluralist public discourse. The encyclical itself employs both variants, addressing “all men and women of goodwill” alongside the Catholic faithful.

Self-Audit — Step 1:

  • Have I stated the ideology’s presuppositions or merely its surface claims and slogans? The six core presuppositions are stated at the level of embedded assumption, not surface slogan. ✓
  • Have I identified the core presuppositions shared across variants, or the presuppositions of the most favorable variant? CP1–CP6 are shared across both Theological and Natural Law variants. Neither variant can abandon any of them without ceasing to hold CSD. ✓
  • Have I identified the variants that will be examined in Stage Two? Two variants identified and distinguished. ✓
  • Have I stated any prior conclusion about what the findings will be? No. ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. Proceeding to Step 2.


Step 2 — Stage One Core Audit

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

Each commitment is assessed in two layers: structural (does the ideology’s formal architecture align with the commitment?) and content (do the specific claims placed on that structure align with the commitment’s content?). A single composite verdict is issued per commitment.


C1 — Substance Dualism

Governing question for C1: Does the ideology treat the inner life of the individual — his rational faculty, will, and conscience — as genuinely distinct from and prior to all external material conditions? Or does it reduce persons to products of physical, social, or structural forces?

Structural finding: Aligned. CP1 is the most explicitly and elaborately developed presupposition in the encyclical. The document constructs its entire account of AI’s limitations around the contrast between the human person (possessing soul, conscience, freedom, relational depth, moral responsibility) and artificial systems (possessing none of these). §99: AI systems “do not undergo experiences, do not possess a body, do not feel joy or pain, do not mature through relationships and do not know from within what love, work, friendship or responsibility mean. Nor do they have a moral conscience.” The formal architecture of CSD requires a non-material dimension of the person that is irreducible to physical or computational processes. The line between person and machine is drawn at exactly the point C1 draws the line between the rational faculty and everything external to it.

Content finding: Aligned. C1 holds that the rational faculty (prohairesis) is a genuine substance distinct from body and external conditions, and is the seat of genuine agency. CSD holds that the soul is a genuine subsistent form — in the Thomistic tradition that governs the encyclical, the rational soul is capable of existing apart from the body (immortality), is the seat of freedom and conscience, and is not reducible to physical causation. The content corresponds: both C1 and CSD affirm a real ontological boundary between the non-material rational faculty and everything external to it, and identify the rational faculty as the seat of genuine agency and moral responsibility. The Thomistic account is not Cartesian (soul and body as two separate substances) but it is dualist in the relevant sense: the soul is genuinely distinct, genuinely non-material, and genuinely prior as the seat of agency. No load-bearing content divergence from C1 is detected.

Composite verdict: Convergent.


C2 — Libertarian Free Will

Governing question for C2: Does the ideology presuppose that the agent genuinely originates his assents — that he is the genuine first cause of his choices, not a determined output of prior physical causes?

Structural finding: Aligned. The moral architecture of Magnifica Humanitas is unintelligible without genuine origination of choice. The encyclical calls every person to choose between Babel and Jerusalem, to assume responsibility for what is built, to convert, to “remain human” in the face of dehumanizing pressures. It explicitly rejects the view that history is a predetermined fate: “We do not consider the present as a predetermined fate, but an opportunity for personal and collective conversion” (§210). The distinction between the “culture of power” and the “civilization of love” is a distinction between two possible choices, not two possible outcomes of a causal process. The structural requirement is clear: agents genuinely originate their choices.

Content finding: Aligned. C2 holds that the agent is the genuine first cause of his assents — genuine origination, not compatibilist freedom. CSD’s operative account of freedom is non-determinist: the human person is described as genuinely capable of choosing between paths that are genuinely open. The encyclical does not resolve the technical theological debate about the relationship of grace and free will (Molinist vs. Thomistic accounts), but its operative account functions as libertarian: “the construction of Babel or the rebuilding of Jerusalem begins within each one of us” (§130). Grace enables but does not determine; cooperation is genuine cooperation, not a determined output with a theological label. The standard Thomistic formulation — that God moves the will through its nature as free, preserving rather than replacing freedom — is compatible with C2. No load-bearing content divergence is detected.

Composite verdict: Convergent.


C3 — Moral Realism

Governing question for C3: Does the ideology presuppose that moral facts are objectively real, mind-independent, and universally valid? Does it hold that there is a fact of the matter about what is genuinely good or genuinely evil?

Structural finding: Aligned. CP3 is one of the most explicitly stated presuppositions in the encyclical. The document identifies the abandonment of moral realism as the philosophical root of multiple contemporary pathologies: the crisis of truth, the normalization of war, the reduction of persons to data, the instrumentalization of the vulnerable. The encyclical explicitly affirms that “once the idea of a universal truth about the good, knowable by human reason, is lost, inevitably the notion of conscience also changes” (§133). Human dignity is declared “inalienable” — not a constructed norm, not a useful social fiction, but a real property of persons preceding and exceeding all circumstances. The formal architecture presupposes that moral facts are real and that their denial is a factual error with real consequences.

Content finding: Divergent. This is the decisive finding of the run. C3 in Sterling’s framework holds that virtue is the only genuine good and vice the only genuine evil. All externals — health, wealth, social conditions, material wellbeing, political arrangements, family stability, environmental conditions — are neither good nor evil but indifferent. They are preferred or dispreferred, but their classification as genuine goods or genuine evils is the foundational false value judgment the entire Stoic framework exists to correct. The corpus makes this specific and non-negotiable (Nine Excerpts, Theorem 10: “The only thing actually good is virtue, the only thing actually evil is vice”). CSD holds something structurally identical — that moral facts are objectively real — but places radically different content on this structure. The encyclical explicitly classifies human dignity as a genuine good, the common good as a genuine good, dignified labor as a genuine good, peace as a genuine good, and the environmental conditions for human flourishing as genuine goods. §59: “Going beyond the narrow confines of one’s own interests and committing oneself, within the limits of one’s ability, to the common good is a non-negotiable value.” The specific content of what counts as genuinely good — extensive externals — directly contradicts C3’s claim that only the inner condition of the rational faculty constitutes genuine value. This divergence is load-bearing: CSD cannot abandon its classification of externals as genuine goods without ceasing to have any social doctrine at all. The entire framework — its account of human rights, the common good, solidarity, social justice, the dignity of labor, care for creation — presupposes that these are genuine goods requiring genuine promotion, not preferred indifferents to be aimed at with reservation.

Composite verdict: Structural Imitation. CSD correctly apprehends the form of C3 — that moral facts are real, objective, and mind-independent; that relativism and constructivism are false; that the denial of moral realism has catastrophic consequences. It places on this correct form a content that is divergent from the corpus at the most fundamental point: the identity of what is genuinely good. The right frame; different content filling it.


C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth

Governing question for C4: Does the ideology presuppose that truth is a matter of correspondence to reality — that a claim is true when it aligns with how things actually are, and false when it does not?

Structural finding: Aligned. The encyclical devotes an entire major section to the correspondence theory as a social and political necessity. §132: “Truthful information does not arise from centralized or automated control. In public discourse, the truth of facts has a rational dimension, as it requires verification, cross-checking of sources and responsible argumentation.” The framing of disinformation as a genuine pathology — not merely a different narrative but an actual falsification of how things are — presupposes correspondence. §137: “Truth is a common good and not the property of those with power or influence.” The structural presupposition is unambiguous: there is a fact of the matter, and correspondence to that fact is what makes a claim true.

Content finding: Aligned. C4 holds that truth is correspondence between claim and reality — a claim is true when it aligns with how things actually are. CSD holds exactly this: the encyclical explicitly contrasts genuine truth (correspondence) with power-driven narrative (non-correspondence), identifies the confusion of the two as a crisis, and calls for restoration of correspondence as the standard of public discourse. §133: “people believe that they can construct reality, and that whatever best suits their claims corresponds to what is true” — stated as a description of the “crisis of truth,” not as a position CSD endorses. The encyclical’s own claim is the opposite: reality precedes and governs its representation. The content corresponds at every load-bearing point.

Composite verdict: Convergent.


C5 — Ethical Intuitionism

Governing question for C5: Does the ideology presuppose that moral truth is directly accessible to the rational faculty — that the agent can apprehend fundamental moral requirements directly, without merely deriving them from prior premises or receiving them only through external authority?

Structural finding: Partially aligned. CSD operates within an epistemology of moral knowledge that includes a genuine direct-apprehension element in the role of conscience. §134: “This is a non-negotiable truth attained by the use of reason and accepted in conscience.” The appeal to “all people of goodwill” as capable of recognizing the moral requirements of dignity and justice through unaided reason presupposes that moral truth is accessible through the rational faculty without prior theological commitment. The Thomistic natural law tradition, which governs CSD, includes the synderesis — the self-evident first principles of practical reason (the most fundamental being “do good and avoid evil”) that the rational faculty grasps directly, not inferentially. This is structurally adjacent to intuitionism.

However, the broader epistemological framework of CSD is not straightforwardly intuitionist. The Magisterium functions as an authoritative interpreter of moral truth, and the encyclical repeatedly cites magisterial documents as governing sources. The structure includes inferential elements (natural law reasoning from human nature to moral requirements) alongside direct-apprehension elements (conscience recognizing fundamental truths). The direct-apprehension element is real and load-bearing, but it is embedded within a broader framework that also includes authoritative and inferential elements that C5 does not require. The structural finding is therefore partially aligned rather than cleanly aligned.

Content finding: Divergent from C5’s specific content. C5 holds that the rational faculty directly apprehends that virtue is the only genuine good — a specific first-order moral fact about the structure of value. This is the self-evident moral truth that the correctly functioning rational faculty sees directly. CSD’s account of what conscience directly apprehends is different in content: conscience recognizes the dignity of every human person, the moral requirements of justice and solidarity, the wrongness of specific acts (abortion, euthanasia, trafficking, slavery). These are primarily other-directed moral facts about how persons must be treated and what conditions must be maintained — not the self-directed recognition that virtue (the inner condition of the rational faculty) is the sole genuine good. The intuitionist structure is present in CSD; the content of what is directly apprehended diverges from C5.

Composite verdict: Partial Convergence. The structural element (conscience directly recognizing fundamental moral truth; natural law as directly accessible through reason) aligns with C5’s formal architecture. The content of what is directly apprehended diverges from C5’s specific first-order claim. The broader epistemological framework, which includes non-intuitionist elements, prevents full structural alignment. Neither Convergent (the content diverges and the structure is only partially aligned) nor Divergent (the direct-apprehension element is genuinely present and load-bearing).


C6 — Foundationalism

Governing question for C6: Does the ideology presuppose that moral and epistemic truths stand in real dependency relations — that some truths are foundational and others derived from them, and that these relations are matters of genuine epistemic necessity rather than organizational convenience?

Structural finding: Aligned. The architecture of CSD as expressed in the encyclical is explicitly hierarchical and foundationalist. Chapter Two presents the foundations first (human person as imago Dei; equal dignity; human rights) and derives the principles from them (common good, universal destination of goods, subsidiarity, solidarity, social justice). §46: “I am convinced that a harmonious relationship between these principles requires that they be considered collectively, so that it becomes clear how they relate to and complement each other.” The Social Doctrine is described as having emerged from “the encounter between the eternal truth of the Gospel and the questions of history” (§27) — the eternal truth is foundational; the derived principles apply it to historical conditions. This is not a list of independent norms but a structured derivation.

Content finding: Aligned. C6 holds that knowledge has a hierarchical structure with genuine foundations from which other truths derive, and that these dependency relations are matters of epistemic necessity. CSD’s foundationalism is genuine in exactly this sense: the derived social principles do not stand independently but are grounded in the foundational truth of human dignity as imago Dei, and abandoning the foundation would collapse the derived structure. The common good is not an independent value that happens to be listed alongside dignity; it is the social expression of dignity, and it requires dignity as its ground. The encyclical makes the epistemic relations explicit: the principles “relate to and complement each other” in ways that require the foundational structure to be seen. This is foundationalism both in structure and in the treatment of the dependency relations as genuine epistemic necessities.

Composite verdict: Convergent.


Self-Audit — Step 2:

  • Have I audited all six core presuppositions, or selectively addressed the easier ones? All six addressed. The C3 Structural Imitation finding required the most difficult analysis and is stated without softening. ✓
  • Have I used Orthogonal to avoid a Divergent finding the analysis requires? No Orthogonal findings issued. C5 Partial Convergence is not Orthogonal evasion — the direct-apprehension element is genuinely present and requires acknowledgment rather than Divergent override. ✓
  • Have I distributed findings to achieve apparent balance rather than following the analysis? The pattern (four Convergent, one Structural Imitation, one Partial Convergence) follows the analysis. The C3 finding is the central divergence and is stated as such. ✓
  • Have I issued findings on questions outside the corpus’s domain? No political, strategic, or institutional findings are issued. ✓
  • Would I issue the same findings for an ideology I find politically sympathetic as for one I find politically unsympathetic, given identical presuppositions? The C3 Structural Imitation finding applies to any ideology that classifies externals as genuine goods — regardless of whether those goods are material, spiritual, social, or environmental. The finding is not softened here. ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. Proceeding to Step 3.


Part 1 of 2. Continues in Part 2: Steps 3–5.


CIA v3.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude. 2026.

Scholar Field Instrument — Robert Audi and Ethical Intuitionism

 

Scholar Field Instrument — Robert Audi and Ethical Intuitionism

Instrument: Scholar Field Instrument (SFI) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling’s corpus. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Target philosopher: Robert Audi, John A. O’Brien Professor of Philosophy, University of Notre Dame. Past president of the American Philosophical Association and the Society of Christian Philosophers.

Target commitment: Ethical Intuitionism — the claim that some moral truths are known through direct rational apprehension, not inferred from prior premises or derived from empirical observation.

Audience: Non-professional philosophers engaging the contemporary philosophical landscape.

CPA context: No CPA has been run on Audi. None governs this run.

Field Synthesis note: A Field Synthesis on Ethical Intuitionism was produced in the prior SFI run on Michael Huemer. The target commitment and field are identical. The Field Synthesis is carried forward from that run without modification. Independence is preserved: the Huemer Philosopher Record Layer did not contaminate the Field Synthesis, which ranged the contemporary field as a whole before consulting Huemer’s specific arguments. Carrying it forward for Audi is architecturally sound. The Philosopher Record Layer and Juxtaposition produced here are new.

Political Application Constraint: Confirmed.

Self-Audit — Step 0: Target philosopher named. Target commitment specified. Audience confirmed. CPA context noted as absent. Field Synthesis carry-forward noted and its independence confirmed. Political Application Constraint confirmed.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 1.


Step 1 — Target Specification

Propositional form: Some moral truths are known through direct rational apprehension — not inferred from prior premises, not derived from empirical observation, but grasped non-inferentially by the rational faculty.

Scope: Audi’s published record spans ethical intuitionism, epistemological foundationalism, moral perception, moral psychology, philosophy of action, and political philosophy. This run is scoped to his ethical intuitionism and its epistemological foundations, which constitute his primary contribution to the target commitment. His political philosophy (religion in public life) falls outside scope.

Self-Audit — Step 1: Target stated in propositional form. Scope boundaries stated. Audi’s specific work not consulted at this step beyond general record identification.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 2.


Step 2 — Field Synthesis

The Field Synthesis is carried forward from the prior SFI run on Michael Huemer. It is reproduced here in full for this document’s integrity as a standalone output.

Part A — State of the Field

Ethical intuitionism is a minority position in contemporary analytic moral philosophy. The field is dominated by two large camps that agree on almost nothing except their rejection of intuitionism as typically understood. The first is moral anti-realism in its various forms — expressivism, non-cognitivism, and their sophisticated descendants. The second is ethical naturalism, which holds that moral facts are real but are ultimately facts about natural states of affairs. Both camps reject the intuitionist’s central epistemological claim: that the rational faculty has direct, non-inferential access to irreducible moral truths.

The minority defending something like ethical intuitionism is real and has been growing since the 1990s. Philosophers including Robert Audi, Michael Huemer, David Enoch, Russ Shafer-Landau, Ralph Wedgwood, and David McNaughton have defended non-naturalist moral realism in forms that require intuitionism at the epistemological level. The revival is sometimes called “third wave” intuitionism to distinguish it from the classical British intuitionism of the early twentieth century. But the revival remains a minority against a large and well-resourced opposition.

Part B — Argument Inventory

The historical foundation. G.E. Moore’s Principia Ethica (1903) established the core non-naturalist claim through the open question argument. H.A. Prichard argued in “Does Moral Philosophy Rest on a Mistake?” (1912) that our knowledge of moral obligations is immediate and non-inferential. W.D. Ross’s The Right and the Good (1930) developed the most influential intuitionist system of the period: a set of prima facie duties each of which is self-evidently obligating, with actual duty in any situation determined by the balance of prima facie duties in play.

The fall. A.J. Ayer’s Language, Truth and Logic (1936) applied the verificationist criterion of meaning to moral claims and declared them meaningless as genuine propositions. C.L. Stevenson developed emotivism; R.M. Hare developed prescriptivism. John Mackie’s Ethics: Inventing Right and Wrong (1977) pressed the “queerness” argument: objective moral facts of the intuitionist kind would be metaphysically unprecedented, and the faculty required to perceive them correspondingly mysterious.

The contemporary opposition. Simon Blackburn’s quasi-realism and Allan Gibbard’s norm expressivism are the most philosophically sophisticated anti-realist positions. Mark Schroeder defends a Humean theory of reasons. Sharon Street’s evolutionary debunking argument (2006) is the most significant contemporary challenge: natural selection shaped evaluative attitudes to track reproductive fitness, not moral truth; if moral facts are mind-independent, there is no reason to expect evolution-produced attitudes to track them.

Arguments for the commitment. The companions-in-guilt argument: if moral intuitions are unreliable because non-empirical, then mathematical and logical intuitions face the same problem, but no one abandons mathematics. The indispensability argument: moral reasoning cannot begin without some non-inferential moral premises; intuitionism makes this dependence explicit. The self-defeat argument: every alternative epistemology of morals either relies on intuitions covertly or collapses into skepticism.

Part C — Pressure Points and Open Questions

The evolutionary debunking challenge is the most sustained contemporary pressure. Street’s argument forces a dilemma: either our evaluative attitudes were shaped to track moral truth (requiring a mysterious explanatory connection) or they were not (massively deflating confidence in moral intuitions). The selection problem is an internal pressure: if not all intuitions are reliable, which ones are, and by what criterion? The supervenience problem remains open: moral properties supervene on natural properties, but if moral properties are non-natural, what explains this dependence?

Part D — Historical Development

The cultural displacement of intuitionism was rapid and almost total. In the 1920s, intuitionism was the dominant position in British moral philosophy. By the 1950s, the verificationist weapon had redrawn the map of what counted as a philosophically serious position, and intuitionism fell from the new map not through philosophical defeat but through a change in standards. The verificationist criterion later collapsed — it failed to satisfy its own standard of meaning — but the collapse of the weapon did not automatically restore the position it had displaced. The inertia of the new professional consensus was itself the continuing mechanism of marginalization.

Self-Audit — Step 2: Field Synthesis carried forward from prior run. Independence confirmed. Minority status of intuitionism represented accurately. No verdicts on the commitment issued.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 3.


Step 3 — Philosopher Record Layer

Sources consulted: The Good in the Right: A Theory of Intuition and Intrinsic Value (Princeton University Press, 2004); Moral Knowledge and Ethical Character (Oxford University Press, 1997); Moral Perception (Princeton University Press, 2013); The Structure of Justification (Cambridge University Press, 1993); Epistemology: A Contemporary Introduction to the Theory of Knowledge (Routledge, multiple editions); “Intuition and Its Place in Ethics,” Journal of the American Philosophical Association (2015); “The Phenomenology of Moral Intuition,” Ethical Theory and Moral Practice (2022); “Moderate Intuitionism and the Epistemology of Moral Judgment,” Ethical Theory and Moral Practice (1998); “Intuition, Inference, and Rational Disagreement in Ethics,” Ethical Theory and Moral Practice (2008); secondary sources: Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews symposium and Rationality and the Good: Critical Essays on the Ethics and Epistemology of Robert Audi (Oxford University Press, 2007).

Coverage gap: Audi’s full book-length treatment in The Good in the Right was ranged through secondary sources and the critical essays volume rather than directly in full. Individual chapter-level arguments may not be fully captured.

Mapping:

Convergence — The Rossian framework as foundation. The Field Synthesis identifies W.D. Ross’s The Right and the Good as the most influential intuitionist system of the classical period. Audi’s primary project in The Good in the Right is explicitly framed as updating and strengthening Rossian intuitionism for the contemporary debate. He retains Ross’s structure of prima facie duties, self-evidence, and the claim that moral judgments can be non-inferentially justified, while extending, refining, and partially revising the framework. The convergence with the Field Synthesis’s historical account is direct: Audi is explicitly working within and from the same classical tradition the Field Synthesis identifies as the foundation of the contemporary revival.

Convergence — Self-evidence as the epistemological core. The Field Synthesis maps self-evidence as the central epistemological claim of classical intuitionism: moral principles are self-evident to careful reflection. Audi’s documented treatment of self-evidence converges with the field’s mapping of this concept while adding significant precision: he distinguishes different grades or levels of self-evidence, argues that self-evident propositions need not be immediately obvious to everyone, and holds that self-evidence is a property that reveals itself only under appropriate reflection. This is convergence with elaboration, not simple repetition.

Convergence — Foundationalism as the structural account of moral knowledge. The Field Synthesis maps foundationalism as the epistemological architecture within which non-inferential moral knowledge functions. Audi’s documented record is one of the most sustained defenses of foundationalism in contemporary analytic epistemology, developed independently of his intuitionism in The Structure of Justification and his epistemology textbook. His foundationalism is explicitly “moderate” and “fallibilistic”: basic beliefs need not be infallible or incorrigible; they are foundational in the structural sense that they are not inferentially derived from other beliefs, while remaining open to revision by coherence considerations and defeaters. He holds that foundationalism is the only tenable response to the epistemic regress problem. The convergence between his epistemological foundationalism and his ethical intuitionism is itself an architecturally significant finding: in Audi’s record, C3 (Ethical Intuitionism) and C4 (Foundationalism) are not independently held commitments but a unified epistemological system.

Divergence — The Kantian integration. The Field Synthesis does not map a Kantian-intuitionist synthesis as a recognized position within the contemporary revival. Audi develops precisely this: a “Kantian intuitionism” that preserves the Rossian structure of prima facie duties and self-evident moral principles while integrating a Kantian account of the basis of moral obligation. Critics in the Rationality and the Good volume note that Kant and Audi differ fundamentally concerning the place of principles in their accounts. The divergence is not between Audi and the Field Synthesis on intuitionism specifically but between Audi’s hybrid project and the field’s standard understanding of what the intuitionist position requires. Audi is working at the boundary of two traditions the field has typically kept separate.

Divergence — Epistemological strategy. The Field Synthesis maps two broad epistemological strategies within the contemporary intuitionist revival: defending moral intuition on terms specific to ethics (the mainstream Rossian approach), and grounding it in a general epistemological principle applicable to all appearances (Huemer’s Phenomenal Conservatism). Audi’s documented record firmly occupies the first strategy. He defends moral intuition on terms internal to ethics: self-evidence, prima facie duties, the structure of moral perception, the phenomenology of moral seemings. He does not ground the case for moral intuition in a general thesis about appearances. This divergence from Huemer’s approach within the same commitment is a significant finding for the Juxtaposition.

Addition — Moral perception as a distinct cognitive category. The Field Synthesis did not map moral perception as a specific cognitive capacity with its own epistemological analysis. Audi’s Moral Perception (2013) develops this as a book-length contribution: a defense of the claim that we can perceive moral properties in situations in a way that is analogous to, but distinct from, sensory perception and intellectual intuition. The book argues that moral perception is both rational and non-inferential, and develops its phenomenology, its epistemological status, and its relation to moral intuition across a comprehensive framework. This is the first book-length treatment of the topic in the contemporary literature, and it constitutes a genuine addition to what the Field Synthesis independently mapped.

Addition — The phenomenology of moral intuition developed in fine grain. The Field Synthesis maps moral intuition as a category without detailed phenomenological analysis. Audi’s 2022 paper in Ethical Theory and Moral Practice distinguishes multiple kinds of intuition — particularly episodic kinds called “seemings” — and examines four dimensions along which moral intuitions and moral judgments differ: content, basis, epistemic authority, and phenomenology. He compares moral intuition with moral perception as distinct cognitive types. This level of phenomenological precision was not anticipated by the Field Synthesis and constitutes a genuine contribution to the intuitionist research program.

Addition — The integration of moral epistemology with moral psychology. Audi’s documented record develops the connection between moral epistemology and moral psychology — the relation between intuition, motivation, and moral judgment — in ways the Field Synthesis did not map as a named contribution of the contemporary revival. His Moral Knowledge and Ethical Character explores the relation between reason and motivation, constructs a theory of intrinsic value and its place in moral obligation, and extends the foundationalist epistemological account to non-doxastic states including desires and intentions. A mental state is rational, on his account, if it is “well-grounded” in a source of justification — a formulation that extends foundationalism beyond belief to the full range of mental states relevant to moral action.

Extension — The modesty of “moderate” intuitionism. Audi consistently describes his position as “moderate” intuitionism, distinguishing it from stronger classical claims. His foundationalism is explicitly fallibilistic: basic beliefs can be revised. His account of self-evidence allows that self-evident propositions may not be immediately obvious. His integration of Kantian elements and his acknowledgment of coherence as a potential defeater all reflect a deliberate hedging of the classical intuitionist claims. Whether this modesty strengthens or weakens the intuitionist position — whether it represents a philosophically sound calibration or a concession to opponents that undermines the core claim — is a judgment the instrument does not issue.

Self-Audit — Step 3: All claims traceable to Audi’s documented public record with sources identified. Field Subordination has not occurred. Addition findings identified honestly. Coverage gap declared. Scope Drift has not occurred.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 4.


Step 4 — Juxtaposition

Part A — What the Field Shows

The contemporary field on ethical intuitionism is a debate conducted largely against intuitionism, by a well-resourced majority whose anti-realist and naturalist positions occupy the professional mainstream. The intuitionist minority is real and philosophically serious, but it is building uphill. The weight of sophisticated opposition — the evolutionary debunking challenge, the naturalist research program, the anti-realist tradition from emotivism through quasi-realism — creates a professional atmosphere in which defending direct, non-inferential moral knowledge requires sustained argument at multiple levels simultaneously: metaphysical (are there objective moral facts?), epistemological (can we access them non-inferentially?), and genealogical (can we account for our intuitions without invoking evolutionary debunking?).

The minority reviving intuitionism has made genuine philosophical progress since the 1990s. But the revival has not produced a single unified approach. It includes philosophers who ground intuitionism in general epistemological principles applicable across domains, philosophers who defend it on terms specific to ethics, philosophers who integrate it with Kantian elements, and philosophers who develop it through moral perception and phenomenological analysis. The field map shows a revival that is philosophically alive but internally diverse.

Part B — What Audi Shows Within the Field

Audi’s distinctive contribution within the field becomes visible against this background.

His first and most fundamental strategic choice is to stay within the ethical domain. Where Huemer grounds the case for moral intuition in a general epistemological principle — Phenomenal Conservatism, the thesis that appearing-true generates prima facie justification for any class of beliefs — Audi defends moral intuition on terms internal to ethics: self-evidence, prima facie duties, the phenomenology of moral seemings, the structure of moral perception. He does not outsource the defense to a general epistemological thesis. The advantage of this approach is that it keeps the defense of moral intuition from depending on the success of a contested general epistemological claim. The cost is that it must win the epistemological case on ethics-specific grounds, where the pressure from the evolutionary debunking challenge and the selection problem falls most directly.

His second distinctive move is the development of moral perception as an independent cognitive category. The classical intuitionist tradition distinguished moral intuition from sensory perception — intuition is rational and non-empirical, perception is sensory and empirical. Audi’s Moral Perception complicates this division by arguing that we can perceive moral properties in situations in a way that is analogous to sensory perception in structure while remaining non-empirical in character. This is philosophically significant: if moral perception is a genuine cognitive capacity, the mystery about how we access moral facts is reduced. We access them the way we access many other facts — by attending to the situation carefully. The book’s careful phenomenological analysis of what moral perceiving involves, distinguished from both sensory experience and intellectual intuition, is a major contribution the field had not previously produced at book length.

His third move is the Kantian integration. Rossian intuitionism and Kantian deontology have typically been treated as rival frameworks within the broader non-consequentialist tradition. Audi’s “Kantian intuitionism” attempts to show that the two traditions are more compatible than their standard opposition suggests. The intuitionist claim — that we have direct non-inferential access to prima facie moral duties — is integrated with a Kantian account of why those duties have the authority they do. Critics have questioned whether the integration is philosophically stable: Kant’s account of moral obligation is systematic and rationalist in a way that sits uneasily with the intuitionist’s commitment to an irreducible plurality of self-evident principles. But the attempt itself is an Addition to the field that was not anticipated by the Field Synthesis.

The fine-grained phenomenological work of the later career — the 2022 paper on the phenomenology of moral intuition, the detailed taxonomy of seemings and their epistemic dimensions — reflects a deliberate effort to make the intuitionist position more precise rather than simply more defended. Audi is not only arguing that moral intuition is epistemically legitimate; he is developing an account of what moral intuition actually is in sufficient detail that the account can be tested against philosophical and empirical challenges.

Part C — What the Juxtaposition Reveals

The SFI has now been run on two contemporary philosophers defending the same commitment: Michael Huemer and Robert Audi. The most significant finding of the juxtaposition is not what either philosopher reveals about intuitionism individually, but what the comparison between them reveals about the commitment itself.

Huemer and Audi are both active proponents of ethical intuitionism. Both are philosophically serious. Both engage the same field. And yet their argumentative strategies diverge at nearly every methodological choice.

Huemer grounds intuitionism in a general epistemological principle (Phenomenal Conservatism) that applies across all domains. Audi grounds it in ethics-specific concepts (self-evidence, prima facie duties, moral perception). Huemer’s strategy makes the case for moral intuition as strong as the case for any appearance-based belief; Audi’s strategy makes the case for moral intuition stand on its own merits within the moral domain. These are not minor tactical differences — they reflect fundamentally different views about where the weight of the argument should fall and what kind of philosophical move is most defensible.

Huemer uses moral intuition to defeat alternative epistemologies through a negative program of elimination. Audi builds a positive phenomenological and structural account of what moral intuition is and how it functions. Again, not minor differences: one approach tries to show that the alternatives all fail; the other tries to show that intuition itself has a richer structure than its critics acknowledge.

For the non-professional reader, the comparison reveals something important about philosophical commitments generally. A commitment is not a fixed position that all its defenders arrive at from the same direction. It is a claim that multiple independent philosophical approaches can reach from different starting points, using different methods, with different emphases. The fact that Huemer and Audi are both defending ethical intuitionism, while making quite different methodological choices, is evidence that the commitment has genuine philosophical depth — enough to sustain multiple serious approaches without collapsing into one. A commitment that can only be defended in one way is fragile; a commitment that multiple serious philosophers defend from independent directions is more robust.

The juxtaposition also makes visible something about what AI can and cannot contribute. The Field Synthesis mapped the contemporary landscape accurately. But it could not predict which argumentative strategies within the landscape two specific philosophers would choose, how they would diverge from each other, or what each would contribute that the field map did not independently contain. Those choices — Huemer’s Phenomenal Conservatism, Audi’s moral perception, Audi’s Kantian integration — are the product of philosophical judgment the field map cannot generate. The gap between the field and the philosophers is where the philosophical work happens.

Self-Audit — Step 4: Juxtaposition addressed to the non-professional reader. No verdicts on whether intuitionism is correct have been issued. Conclusions made available rather than imposed. Addition findings appear in Part B as evidence of the human judgment layer. Reader Condescension has not occurred.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 5.


Step 5 — Expert Validation Gap Declaration

Most consequential gap — Argumentative gap on the Kantian integration. Whether Audi’s integration of Kantian and intuitionist elements is philosophically stable is the most significant contested claim in his record that this instrument cannot evaluate. Critics in the Rationality and the Good volume argue that Kant and Audi differ fundamentally concerning the place of principles in their accounts, and that the integration may not survive close scrutiny. Whether Audi’s responses to those critics succeed requires philosophical judgment about both Kantian ethics and Rossian intuitionism that the instrument cannot supply.

Second gap — Argumentative gap on moral perception. Audi’s defense of moral perception as a genuine cognitive capacity analogous to sensory perception is a philosophically contested claim. Whether the analogy holds, whether moral perception is genuinely distinct from intellectual intuition, and whether the account successfully addresses the evolutionary debunking challenge — since moral perception faces the same genealogical pressure as moral intuition — are questions that require expert philosophical judgment. The instrument maps Audi’s position; it does not evaluate whether the position succeeds.

Third gap — Argumentative gap on moderate vs. strong intuitionism. Audi’s “moderate” and “fallibilistic” framing of intuitionism is a deliberate hedge against classical claims. Whether this modesty represents a philosophically defensible calibration or a concession that undermines the core intuitionist position is a genuine dispute within the revival. The Extension finding in Step 3 flagged this without evaluating it. Expert judgment is required to assess whether what Audi retains after the modesty qualifications is still a robust intuitionism.

Fourth gap — The Huemer-Audi comparison gap. The juxtaposition of Huemer’s and Audi’s strategies reveals that they diverge at fundamental methodological choices. The instrument has mapped those divergences but cannot evaluate which strategy is more philosophically defensible. Whether Phenomenal Conservatism or ethics-specific self-evidence provides a stronger foundation for intuitionism; whether a general or domain-specific epistemological defense is more robust against the evolutionary debunking challenge — these are questions requiring philosophical judgment neither the Field Synthesis nor the Philosopher Record Layer can settle.

Fifth gap — Coverage gap. The Good in the Right was ranged through secondary sources and the critical essays volume rather than directly in full. Chapter-level arguments may not be fully captured in the Philosopher Record Layer.

The reader should hold the juxtaposition of field, Huemer, and Audi as a structured map of the contemporary intuitionist landscape, not a settled account of it. What the two SFI runs together show is that defending a philosophical commitment is a matter of choosing among real methodological alternatives, each with costs and advantages, none of them obvious in advance. The map makes those choices visible. The reader evaluates what they find there.

Self-Audit — Step 5: Gaps are specific rather than generic. Most consequential gap (Kantian integration) identified and declared first. Declaration addressed to the reader. Gap Minimization has not occurred. Gap Inflation has not occurred.

Self-Audit Complete. SFI run complete.


Scholar Field Instrument (SFI) v1.0. Subject: Robert Audi, University of Notre Dame. Target commitment: Ethical Intuitionism. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling’s corpus. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.