C3 — Moral Realism (Objective Value Structure)
Within Sterling’s Stoicism, moral realism is the claim that the Stoic corrective project is a truth-seeking procedure rather than a preference-adjustment exercise. When the framework says that most human impressions about good and evil are false, when it says that unhappiness is caused by false belief, when it says that right assent guarantees eudaimonia — each of these terms requires that value be an objective feature of reality. The corpus-governed dimensions of C3 are not derived from the metaethics literature. They are derived from the arguments Sterling actually makes in his ISF messages: the arguments that turn on desire-independence, the collapse of instrumental accounts, the challenge to the total amoralist, the anger test, and the necessity formulation. These are the concepts without which Sterling’s own arguments cannot proceed.
Desire-Independence
The pivot of Sterling’s January 2015 moral realism message is the Wanda case. He imagines an agent who cares about his daughter and therefore has a desire-based reason to avoid harming her. He then introduces Wanda: an agent toward whom he has no desires at all. If moral reasons were desire-based, the fact that an action would harm Wanda would give him no reason not to perform it — because he has no desire involving Wanda. But Sterling holds that the Stoics think the fact that he would be harming his parents is a reason not to do something whether he cares about them or not. There must be some kind of reason utterly independent of contingent desires. Desire-independence is the first and most fundamental dimension of moral realism in Sterling’s framework: moral reasons are not grounded in the agent’s desires, preferences, or emotional investments. They hold regardless of whether the agent has any relevant desire at all.
Inherent Moral Consideration (Type A)
Sterling distinguishes Type A moral rules — rules that describe inherent moral considerations — from Type C rules of thumb. A Type A rule tells you that a moral consideration is present that must be included in your weighing. The fact that an action counts as breaking a promise is, in itself, a reason not to do it. At least one weight is placed in the against pan, regardless of other considerations. This is not a rule that says the against side will always win — it is a rule that says the against side is never empty when a promise is at stake. The inherent character of these considerations is what moral realism asserts: the consideration is present in the moral structure of the situation, not generated by the agent’s desires or the community’s conventions. Inherent moral consideration is the practical unit of moral realism at the level of action guidance.
Project-Failure Condition
Sterling states the necessity of moral realism for the Stoic framework in its starkest form: if there are no objective moral facts, the Stoic project fails utterly. This is not a cautious hedge. It is a precise claim about structural dependency. The Stoic project requires that externals are genuinely neither good nor evil — that this is a fact about the universe, not a Stoic preference. It requires that the agent’s false value judgments are genuinely false — not merely unconventional or unhelpful. It requires that virtue is genuinely the only good — not merely the most useful orientation to adopt. Remove objective moral facts and each of these claims loses its load-bearing character: “false” becomes “unhelpful,” “genuine” becomes “from a Stoic perspective,” and the entire framework softens into a life-strategy rather than a truth-governed practice. The project-failure condition is Sterling’s own formulation and does not appear in the philosophical literature on moral realism.
Non-Sensory Access
Sterling closes the 2015 message with a question that directly joins moral realism to ethical intuitionism: if there are objective moral facts of this sort, then we must have some means of knowing them. They cannot be sensed. How do we know them? The non-sensory access dimension is the link between C3 and C5. Moral realism posits the facts; intuitionism specifies the epistemic operation that reaches them. But the connection appears within C3 itself: moral realism is only philosophically viable if the moral facts it posits are accessible, and they are only accessible through a non-sensory operation. If moral facts existed but were in principle inaccessible, moral realism would be an empty metaphysical thesis. Non-sensory access is the dimension that makes moral realism actionable within the framework.
Necessity
Sterling states in the May 2021 message that moral facts are fundamental, necessary, and unalterable facts about the universe. The necessity formulation is explicit: 2+2 could not possibly have been anything other than 4, and the claim that one should, all other things equal, maximise preferred indifferents is necessary in the same sense. These are not truths that happen to hold given the current structure of the universe. They are truths that could not have been otherwise. The necessity of moral facts is what prevents moral realism from collapsing into a contingent cultural orientation: if moral truths are necessary, as Sterling holds, they cannot vary with changing circumstances, evolving social norms, or differences in human nature. They hold in every possible circumstance in which there is rational agency.
Sourcelessness
Sterling states that the fundamental moral truths have no “source,” just as “2+2=4” has no source. This formulation is unique to the corpus and does not appear in the philosophical literature on moral realism. Sourcelessness means that the moral facts do not derive their authority from any further fact: not from God’s decree, not from social agreement, not from evolutionary pressure, not from rational procedure. They simply are, as necessary features of reality, in the same way that mathematical truths simply are. The sourcelessness dimension closes three options simultaneously: theological grounding (Euthyphro), social constructivism (agreement), and naturalistic reduction (evolution). None of these can be the source of the moral facts, because the facts have no source. They are primitive necessary truths.
Unalterability
Sterling describes moral facts as fundamental, necessary, and unalterable. Unalterability is the temporal dimension of necessity: not only could the moral facts not have been otherwise, they cannot change. No future development — in science, in culture, in social organisation — can alter the fact that virtue is the only genuine good. This dimension is directly load-bearing for the guarantee of Foundation Three: the guarantee holds permanently because the evaluative structure of reality is permanently fixed. An agent who achieves right assent in any century and any culture has aligned with the same unalterable evaluative structure as any other agent who achieves right assent. Unalterability is also what gives the framework its authority to issue verdicts rather than recommendations: the verdicts are not contingently correct — they track facts that cannot change.
Rational Access
Sterling states that we know moral facts by using our Reason, in the same way we know that 2+2=4 and that modus ponens is valid. Rational access is the positive epistemological claim that completes non-sensory access: it is not merely that moral facts cannot be sensed, but that they can be reached by a specific epistemic operation — rational perception of self-evidence. This is what makes moral realism a live philosophical position rather than a plea for inaccessible truths. The rational faculty that recognises logical necessity is the same faculty that recognises moral necessity. Rational access is the operational bridge between the fact that moral truths exist (moral realism) and the fact that the agent can reach them (ethical intuitionism).
Intrinsic Goodness
The self-interest document establishes the intrinsic goodness dimension through elimination. Sterling imagines “Grant,” who holds that virtue is intrinsically good — good in itself, not as a means to pleasure or preferred indifferents. The Epicurean makes virtue instrumentally good: a generally reliable method for producing the non-moral good of pleasure. Sterling then runs three cases designed to strip away the instrumental account: Smith and Jones, the Ring of Gyges, and the dying molester. Each case eliminates one layer of the causal generalisations the Epicurean relies on. What survives all three cases is only “Grant’s” position: virtue is intrinsically and definitionally the only good. Intrinsic goodness is the dimension that survives the elimination — the only account of virtue’s value that does not collapse under unusual circumstances.
Constitutive Relation
The distinction between the Epicurean and “Grant’s” position is stated with precision in the self-interest document: eudaimonia requires virtue for the Epicurean as a causal fact, while it requires virtue for “Grant” as a matter of definition. This is the constitutive relation dimension: virtue is not causally conducive to eudaimonia — it constitutes eudaimonia. The difference is architecturally decisive. A causal relation between virtue and eudaimonia means that there are unusual circumstances where virtue does not cause eudaimonia — and in those circumstances virtue is not good. A constitutive relation means that virtue just is what eudaimonia consists in — and the unusual circumstances cannot change this because they cannot change what eudaimonia is. The constitutive relation is the precise form that moral realism takes in Sterling’s framework: not that virtue causes good outcomes but that virtue is the only genuine good.
Instrumental Collapse
The three test cases in the self-interest document are designed to demonstrate that every instrumental account of virtue’s value collapses under unusual circumstances. Smith and Jones show that the non-moral account cannot explain the Stoic verdict that the virtuous poor man is better off than the vicious rich man: Smith has more pleasure, peace of mind, and material goods, yet Jones is closer to a good life. The Ring of Gyges eliminates social enforcement: Jones can commit any vice without detection or social consequence, removing the Epicurean’s usual reasons for virtue. The dying molester eliminates long-term consequences: Smith will be dead before the social costs of his vicious acts accrue. Once all causal generalisations are stripped away, the instrumental account has no resources left. Instrumental collapse is the argumentative device that forces the conclusion: intrinsic goodness is the only account of virtue’s value that survives.
Total Amoralist Exclusion
Sterling closes the self-interest document with a challenge that goes to the heart of moral realism: is there any reason a total amoralist could not accept everything in the non-moral account? The total amoralist is a person who believes there is no such thing as moral truth, goodness, or virtue, while acknowledging that most people believe in these things and act on their beliefs. Sterling argues that the total amoralist can accept the Epicurean account without remainder: behave prudently, take account of others’ moral beliefs as social facts that affect your well-being, and act accordingly. The non-moral account cannot exclude the total amoralist because it does not require the agent to recognise any genuine moral obligation. Moral realism excludes the total amoralist because it posits objective moral facts that bind the agent regardless of whether he acknowledges them — the same way mathematical facts bind the agent regardless of whether he acknowledges them.
Falsity Condition
The word “falsely” in Foundation Two — unhappiness is caused by falsely believing externals are good or evil — is the most load-bearing single word in the framework. It requires that there be objective moral facts against which the belief fails. Without moral realism, “falsely” cannot mean what it must mean. It softens into “unhelpfully,” or “irrationally relative to a chosen framework,” or “inconsistently with other beliefs.” Moral realism fixes the meaning: the belief that a loss is a genuine evil is false because it fails to correspond to the actual evaluative structure of reality — a structure in which loss, as an external, is genuinely neither good nor evil. The falsity condition is what makes the corrective project a truth-seeking procedure rather than a therapeutic technique.
Type A/C Dependency
Sterling’s Type A/C distinction in the 2015 message establishes the foundational dependency structure of moral knowledge. Type C rules — empirically built rules of thumb about what usually works morally — presuppose Type A rules — inherent moral considerations that determine what counts as a moral weight in the first place. I can only build a rule of thumb by already knowing what things count as weights. That prior knowledge is not itself built from experience. It is the non-empirical foundational moral knowledge that moral realism posits: the objective moral facts that make certain considerations inherently morally significant. Type A/C dependency is the argument that the empirical dimension of practical wisdom cannot get started without the moral realist foundation.
Single Right Action
Sterling states in the May 2021 message that while there is not a single type of thing that is right, in each situation there is a single action which is right (barring rare ties). This is the moral realist claim at the level of applied ethics: moral facts determine a unique correct answer in each situation, not a range of equally valid options. The agent who examines an impression correctly and identifies the appropriate object of aim is not choosing between equivalent options — he is identifying what is actually correct in this situation. The single-right-action dimension is what gives the SDF its authority to issue verdicts: the procedure does not generate a range of defensible options. It identifies the one action that the objective moral structure of the situation requires.
Role-Duty Reality
Sterling holds that role-duties are genuine moral facts. The fact that he would be harming his parents is a reason not to act whether he cares about them or not. The role-duty — the obligation generated by his relationship to his parents — exists independently of his desire or care. This is moral realism stated at the level of role-relations: the duties generated by being a parent, a judge, a colleague, or a citizen are objective moral facts, not constructions of social agreement or expressions of the agent’s values. Role-duty reality is what makes the Action Proposition Set of the SLE philosophically grounded: Props 64–67 identify role-duties as real constraints on action because the duties they identify are genuine moral facts, not conventional guidelines.
Exclusive Identification
Theorem 10 of Core Stoicism states the exclusive identification: only virtue is genuinely good, only vice is genuinely evil. The “only” is the load-bearing word. It is not that virtue is the most important good among several goods. It is not that virtue is a necessary component of a good life that also includes health, wealth, and relationships. Virtue is the only genuine good — and everything else falls outside the good/evil axis entirely. This exclusive identification is what makes the value asymmetry of Sterling’s framework precise: the entire evaluative structure of reality is organised around a single axis, with virtue on one side, vice on the other, and all externals excluded from the axis completely. The exclusive identification is Theorem 10 as a moral fact, not a preference or a framework choice.
Bad Habit Obstruction
Sterling observes in the May 2021 message that bad habits — developed since childhood of believing that things that seem to benefit us are good — lead us to try to deny obvious moral truths when they are inconvenient. The bad habit obstruction dimension is unique to the corpus. It names a specific mechanism by which agents fail to recognise moral facts that are, in principle, available to them: not epistemic incapacity, not the absence of moral facts, but the habituated tendency to treat apparent benefit as genuine goodness. The bad habits do not create moral uncertainty. They create practical resistance to moral truths that the rational faculty could apprehend clearly if the habits were cleared. This is moral realism stated with psychological precision: the facts are there to be seen; the bad habits are why they are not always seen.
Anger Test
Sterling’s diagnostic in the May 2021 message is entirely his own and appears nowhere in the philosophical literature on moral realism: the man who does not repay a debt and pretends he has no obligation to do so gets furious when someone else does not repay a debt to him. This anger is self-revealing. It demonstrates that the debt-denier has rational access to the moral truth he is theoretically denying. He knows that obligations are real, that failing to meet them is a genuine failure, and that the agent who fails is genuinely responsible — when he is the creditor. He cannot sustain the denial practically even while maintaining it theoretically. The anger test is not merely a rhetorical device. It is evidence that moral facts announce themselves even to those who deny them — that the rational access to moral truth is present and operational even when theoretically disavowed.
Amoralist Challenge Closure
Sterling’s closing challenge in the self-interest document is addressed to anyone who holds a non-moral account of eudaimonia: is there any inherent reason to be moral on your view, or is morality only a means? Sterling’s argument is that the non-moral account cannot exclude the total amoralist — the person who acknowledges no genuine moral obligation while navigating other people’s moral beliefs as social facts. The Epicurean who keeps promises only because it generally produces better long-term outcomes for him does not genuinely respect promises any more than the thief who does not steal only when a police officer is watching genuinely respects property. Morality on the non-moral account is a conditional commitment — conditional on its producing the right non-moral outcomes. Moral realism closes this: moral facts bind unconditionally, as 2+2=4 binds unconditionally. The total amoralist cannot accept moral realism without contradiction.
The Three Foundations
Foundation One — only internal things are in our control — is supported by moral realism through the exclusive identification. The claim that externals are indifferent is a moral fact: not merely a Stoic preference, not a useful reframing, but a necessary truth about the evaluative structure of reality. Moral realism makes the control dichotomy more than a practical distinction: it is an ontological claim about where genuine value lies, and the answer — only in virtue, never in externals — is a moral fact that holds regardless of the agent’s desires or cultural formation.
Foundation Two — unhappiness is caused by falsely believing externals are good or evil — is the foundation most directly dependent on moral realism. The falsity condition is the hinge: the belief that an external is a genuine good is false in the objective sense — it fails to correspond to the actual evaluative structure of reality. Without moral realism, the corrective project has no objective standard to appeal to. The agent can note that the belief produces unhappiness, but he cannot say it is false. Moral realism supplies the objective standard that makes “falsely” mean what the framework requires it to mean.
Foundation Three — right assent guarantees eudaimonia — depends on moral realism for the guarantee to be non-vacuous. The guarantee holds because aligning with the objective evaluative structure of reality produces the state that is genuinely good. If value were subjective or constructed, the guarantee would reduce to: correct assent produces the state the agent prefers, or the state a rational procedure endorses. That is not a guarantee of eudaimonia. It is a guarantee of preference satisfaction. Moral realism ensures that the state produced by right assent is objectively superior — not comparatively preferred but genuinely the only good — and therefore that the guarantee tracks something real.
Integration with the Other Commitments
Moral realism requires substance dualism (C1) for the ontological resources to accommodate objective evaluative properties in the world. A framework that already accepts that the rational faculty is a non-physical substance capable of genuine moral perception has the resources to accept that evaluative properties are real features of the world. A purely physicalist framework has no principled basis for accepting objective moral facts alongside purely physical facts.
Moral realism requires libertarian free will (C2) for the rational requirement and the obligation dimensions to be genuinely binding on the specific agent. If the agent does not genuinely originate his assents, then the obligation to correct false value judgments cannot be genuinely addressed to him as an obligated party. A determined output cannot be obligated. Libertarian free will makes the agent the genuine subject of moral realism’s demands.
Moral realism requires correspondence theory (C4) to specify what it means for a moral judgment to be true or false. Moral realism posits the moral facts; correspondence theory specifies that a judgment is true when it corresponds to those facts and false when it fails to. Without correspondence theory, moral realism has no account of what makes a moral judgment correct rather than merely sincere.
Moral realism requires ethical intuitionism (C5) to give the agent access to the moral facts it posits. If moral facts existed but were in principle inaccessible, moral realism would be philosophically inert. Intuitionism specifies the epistemic operation by which the agent reaches the foundational moral facts: rational perception of self-evidence, requiring no sensory input, non-variable between rational persons, yielding knowledge of necessary truths.
Moral realism requires foundationalism (C6) to organise the moral facts into a structured hierarchy the agent can navigate. Theorem 10 is foundational; Theorem 12 derives from it; role-duties derive from the conjunction of Theorem 10 with the agent’s specific circumstances. Without foundationalism, the moral facts are available but unstructured, and the correction of false judgments remains case-by-case rather than systematic.
The Discriminatives
Epicureanism and instrumentalism hold that virtue is a generally reliable means to the genuine good of pleasure or preferred indifferents. They fail on the intrinsic-goodness, constitutive-relation, and instrumental-collapse dimensions. Sterling’s three test cases strip away, one by one, the causal generalisations on which the instrumental account relies. Once all causal generalisations are eliminated — in the Ring of Gyges case and the dying molester case — the instrumental account has no resources left. The only account of virtue’s value that survives all three cases is intrinsic goodness: virtue is good in itself, constitutively of eudaimonia, not causally productive of it under normal circumstances.
Desire-based accounts hold that moral reasons are grounded in the agent’s contingent desires, preferences, or emotional investments. They fail on the desire-independence and total-amoralist-exclusion dimensions. The Wanda case establishes desire-independence directly: if moral reasons were desire-based, there would be no reason not to harm Wanda when the agent has no relevant desire. The total amoralist challenge closes the discriminative argument: the desire-based account cannot exclude the agent who has no moral desires at all. He can accept the entire desire-based account while remaining a total amoralist, because the account never requires him to recognise any genuine moral obligation.
Constructivism and social grounding hold that moral facts are produced by rational procedures, social agreements, or divine decree. They fail on the sourcelessness, necessity, and unalterability dimensions. Sterling states that moral facts have no source, just as 2+2=4 has no source: there is no need for God to decree these things, nor for human society to adopt them. The necessity formulation closes the constructivist option: a constructed moral fact is contingent on the procedure that generates it. A necessary moral fact could not have been otherwise — and therefore could not have been constructed by any procedure that might have produced a different output. The anger test provides additional evidence: the debt-denier’s fury reveals that he knows moral obligations are real, not constructed, not contingent on his acceptance.
Sterling/Kelly Philosophical System. C3 — Moral Realism (Objective Value Structure). Corpus-governed recovery essay. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Analytical judgments and architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.