Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Monday, June 22, 2026

The Divine and the Discipline: A Theology Restoration

 

The Divine and the Discipline: A Theology Restoration

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Instrument architecture and analysis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude. Layer: Field Restoration Synthesis — seventh document of this kind in the corpus, following Sociology (Document 88), Anthropology, Economics, Epistemology, Philosophy, and Ethics. Built from the complete Theology cluster: the Classical Field Audit (Theology, corrected to canonical commitment numbering), the CRI prescriptive run, and the CPA series (Swinburne, Plantinga). 2026.


I. Governing Principle and One Necessary Clarification

This synthesis is grounded directly in Core Stoicism’s own theorems (Th 1–29), not in the six philosophical commitments treated as a free-standing telos. An additional clarification is required here that has not been needed in the six prior syntheses: Sterling’s framework is not a theological system. It does not depend on theological premises; it does not affirm or deny the existence of God; it does not take a position on revelation, scripture, or the authority of any religious tradition. Sterling himself explicitly decoupled Core Stoicism from theology and cosmology by design — the control dichotomy is the sole sufficient warrant for Stoic practice; no theological grounding is required or presupposed. Providence language, where it appears in Stoic sources, is optional framing, not a load-bearing premise.

This means the restoration offered here is asymmetric in a way distinctive to Theology: Sterling’s framework does not restore the theological tradition’s specifically theological claims. What it restores is the philosophical architecture the theological tradition requires in order to make its theological claims coherently. Without a rational faculty capable of genuine knowledge (C1), without genuine freedom of the will (C2), without direct apprehension of moral truth (C3), without foundational bedrock in reason and revelation (C4), without correspondence truth as the governing standard (C5), and without objective moral facts the theological claims are answerable to (C6) — the theological tradition’s core doctrines of creation, sin, grace, redemption, and human dignity lose their philosophical intelligibility. Sterling’s framework supplies what was lost; it does not adjudicate what was never its subject.


II. Why Theology Has the Most Favorable CFA Pattern

The Theology CFA produced the most favorable capacity-loss finding in the entire sixteen-field series: Partial Capacity Loss — Philosophical Infiltration, with two Partially Aligned findings (C3 Ethical Intuitionism, C6 Moral Realism) against four Inconsistent findings (C1, C2, C4, C5) and no Contrary findings. This pattern is unique in the series. Every other field audited produced either Total Internal Contestation (Ethics), Full Capacity Loss (Anthropology), or Partial Capacity Loss with a less favorable underlying pattern. Theology alone carries two Partially Aligned findings, reflecting what the CFA correctly identified: the historic theological traditions — Catholic, Orthodox, evangelical, Protestant orthodox — did not need to recover the classical commitments. They retained them.

This is the CFA’s most consequential observation about Theology, and it requires precise statement rather than general appreciation. The historic traditions carry the classical commitments comprehensively because those commitments were constitutive of the theological tradition before they were articulated as the six classical commitments in Sterling’s reconstruction. Aquinas’s synthesis of natural and revealed theology, his account of the soul, his natural law epistemology, his correspondence theory of truth and foundationalist structure of knowledge, and his robust moral realism are not approximations of Sterling’s framework applied to theological material. They are the sources from which the philosophical tradition drew these commitments, as they existed in their most fully integrated form, before philosophy began its systematic self-displacement.

The field’s problem, named precisely by the CFA, is therefore not loss but infiltration: the historic traditions retain what the corpus requires, but modernizing programs imported from philosophy’s own self-displacement have contested those retentions from within. Schleiermacher’s experience-grounding is a theological translation of Kant’s epistemic limits. Bultmann’s demythologization is a theological translation of Heideggerian existentialism. Process theology’s dipolar God is a theological translation of Whiteheadian process metaphysics. Religious pluralism’s transcendent Real is a theological translation of post-Kantian agnosticism about the thing-in-itself. Each of these is not a development internal to theology’s own logic but an import from the philosophical tradition’s own displacement — documented and diagnosed in the Philosophy synthesis, now applied to theology by theologians who accepted the philosophical displacements as settled.


III. What the CPA Cluster Shows

The Theology CPA cluster contains two of the corpus’s four fully or near-fully clean profiles: Swinburne (6 Aligned — the first fully clean profile within the Philosophy/Epistemology/Theology cluster series) and Plantinga (5 Aligned, 1 Partially Aligned at C3). Both are achieved through routes entirely distinct from the Thomist cluster’s hylomorphic architecture and from Huemer’s phenomenological intuitionism — meaning the classical commitments have been independently reached by four distinct argumentative routes across the series. Swinburne’s theological-rationalist route and Plantinga’s Reformed-epistemological route add two more to this convergence, and the convergence is across very different methodological starting points.

Swinburne’s clean profile deserves specific note. It was checked specifically for manufactured residuals before being closed — none were found. The absence of a hylomorphic residual at C1 distinguishes him from the Thomist cluster: his account of the soul is explicitly Cartesian-adjacent rather than hylemorphic, providing the precise metaphysical architecture C1’s strongest form requires. His C2 defense in Mind, Brain, and Free Will is the most directly on-topic libertarian free will argument in the corpus, engaging the metaphysics of agency rather than presupposing it. His C3/C6 architecture is rationalist and non-naturalist, reaching moral realism through rational insight rather than through natural teleology, tradition, or evolutionary considerations. The clean profile is not a function of Swinburne’s theological commitments licensing a charitable reading of each commitment; it is a function of six independent argumentative records each earning their finding on their own terms.

Plantinga’s C3 Partially Aligned finding — the sole qualification in an otherwise fully aligned profile — is worth stating precisely. Reformed epistemology provides the architectural framework within which direct moral apprehension is possible: properly basic beliefs, warrant as proper function, the sensus divinitatis as a cognitive faculty aimed at truth. But Plantinga does not develop a systematic intuitionist metaethics and does not explicitly defend the direct-apprehension claim against the evolutionary debunking challenge. The framework licenses C3 without arguing for it, which is the structural residual the Partially Aligned finding names. The gap is exactly what Swinburne’s rationalist non-naturalism supplies; the two profiles are complementary rather than competing.


IV. Theological Anthropology and the Control Dichotomy

The CFA identified the loss of a determinate theological anthropology as the field’s most consequential specific capacity loss. The four Inconsistent findings — C1 (Substance Dualism), C2 (Libertarian Free Will), C4 (Foundationalism), C5 (Correspondence Theory of Truth) — converge on this single point: without a settled account of what a human being is, the field cannot give precise content to its central doctrines of creation, sin, grace, and redemption.

Sterling’s framework supplies that anthropology from a non-theological source, which is precisely its value for Theology: it is not a competing theological authority but a philosophical account of the human agent that is consistent with and supports the theological tradition’s own anthropological requirements. Th 6’s control dichotomy is the key: what is in our control — beliefs and will — is what Theology’s own doctrines of sin, conscience, grace, and redemption most directly address. Sin is a false judgment about good and evil (Th 7) willfully acted upon. Conscience is the direct rational recognition of moral truth (C3) prior to the act of will. Grace, in the traditions that affirm it, operates at the level of the will’s disposition and the understanding’s illumination — at exactly the level Th 6 identifies as genuinely within the human person’s interior life. Redemption, in its most philosophically precise formulation across the traditions, is the restoration of the rational faculty’s capacity to judge truly and will correctly — the restoration of the prohairesis to its proper functioning, in Sterling’s vocabulary.

None of this requires Sterling’s framework to be theological. It requires only that the philosophical account of the human agent the framework supplies be consistent with the theological anthropology the historic traditions require. The Thomistic tradition made the same connection in the opposite direction: it began with theological anthropology and derived its philosophical account of the soul from it. Sterling’s framework approaches from the philosophical side and arrives at the same requirements. The convergence confirms what both traditions have independently found: that a human being who is genuinely capable of sin and grace, genuinely responsible for his acts, and genuinely capable of redemption must have a rational faculty that is real, irreducible, free, and directly apprehending of moral truth.


V. The Specific Displacements and Their Sources

The four Inconsistent findings in Theology’s CFA are, on the CFA’s own analysis, not independent developments within the field. Each traces to a specific philosophical import:

C1’s Inconsistency reflects the entry of physicalist anthropology, process theology’s rejection of classical theism’s immutable divine substance, and liberal theology’s reduction of the soul to a function of religious experience. The historic traditions — all of them, Catholic, Orthodox, and the mainstream of Protestant orthodoxy — affirm the genuine reality of the soul and the soul-body distinction as foundational. The Inconsistency is the contested entry of philosophical physicalism and process metaphysics into the field, not an internal theological development.

C2’s Inconsistency reflects the Reformed tradition’s comprehensive divine sovereignty (which substantially qualifies libertarian freedom in some of its expressions) and the entry of deterministic anthropologies from naturalistic psychology. The majority of the historic traditions require libertarian freedom as the condition for genuine sin, genuine moral responsibility, and genuine response to grace. The Reformed qualification is internal to theology but is itself a genuine theological dispute, not an external import; the naturalistic displacement is the imported element.

C4’s Inconsistency (Foundationalism) reflects the entry of historical-critical method’s treatment of all theological foundations as historically conditioned and revisable, and of liberal theology’s replacement of foundational doctrinal authority with the foundationless authority of religious experience. The Inconsistency is not a theological dispute about which foundations are authoritative — that dispute (Scripture, Tradition, Magisterium, natural reason) is internal and genuine — but a dispute about whether theological foundations can be authoritative at all, which is an import from Philosophy’s own self-displacement documented in the Philosophy synthesis.

C5’s Inconsistency (Correspondence Theory of Truth) is the most direct theological consequence of the philosophical displacement diagnosed throughout this series. Liberal theology’s grounding of doctrinal claims in religious experience, Bultmann’s existentialist reinterpretation, religious pluralism’s treatment of competing doctrines as expressions of the same transcendent Real, and postmodern theology’s treatment of doctrinal language as community-specific narrative each replace correspondence truth for theological claims with something else — experiential adequacy, existential authenticity, cultural expression, narrative coherence. The historic traditions, by contrast, treat the doctrinal claims of the Creed, the Councils, and the scriptural witness as genuine truth-claims about theological reality. The Inconsistency is the imported displacement displacing a retention, not an internal development.


VI. What Is Restored

The CFA named four specific capacity losses. The restoration addresses each in turn.

The capacity to give a determinate theological anthropology that provides precise content to the central doctrines. Restored by C1 and C2 together: a rational faculty that is genuinely real, irreducible to physical processes or social conditions, and capable of genuine self-originating acts of will. This is the anthropological ground that sin requires (a rational faculty that can judge falsely and will wrongly), that conscience requires (a rational faculty that can directly apprehend moral truth), that grace requires (a faculty that can receive illumination at the level of understanding and strengthening at the level of will), and that redemption requires (a faculty that can be restored to correct judgment and right willing). Without these two commitments secured, the central doctrines are articulated in a vocabulary that lacks a referent within the human person. With them secured, the doctrines have a precise philosophical correlate in the human being they address.

The capacity to give a coherent account of sin, grace, and human responsibility across all the field’s traditions. Restored by C2 specifically: genuine libertarian origination of the act of will is the condition under which sin is genuinely the agent’s own act rather than a determined output of prior causes. The Reformed tradition’s internal dispute about divine sovereignty and human freedom is not resolved by Sterling’s framework; that is a theological dispute requiring theological adjudication. What is restored is the philosophical clarity about what the dispute requires: both sides of it require a human agent capable of genuine moral responsibility, and that requirement is secured by C2 in the form the corpus specifies, whatever theological account of its relationship to divine sovereignty a given tradition offers.

The capacity to treat doctrinal claims as genuine truth-claims about theological reality that can be adjudicated as correct or incorrect. Restored by C5 and C4 together: correspondence truth as the governing standard for theological claims, and foundational authority in reason and revelation as the ground from which those claims are derived and against which they are tested. A theology in which doctrinal claims are expressions of religious experience, existential address, or narrative community identity cannot adjudicate doctrinal disputes as questions of truth versus falsity — it can only prefer one expression to another on grounds of adequacy, authenticity, or coherence. A theology in which doctrinal claims correspond to theological reality, and are grounded in foundational sources whose authority is not itself historically contingent, can adjudicate disputes in the relevant sense. The modernizing programs imported this incapacity from philosophy; the restoration imports the capacity from the same philosophical source that the historic traditions drew on before philosophy changed its governing commitments.

The capacity to give a principled account of what settles theological disputes. Restored by the full set of commitments working together: a genuine rational faculty (C1) that can directly apprehend moral truth (C3) through foundational first principles (C4), answerable to correspondence truth (C5) about objective moral and theological reality (C6), in genuine freedom (C2). A theological tradition that retains all six commitments — which is precisely the description of the historic traditions the CFA found to retain them — has the philosophical resources to give a principled account of what settles its disputes: conformity to what is actually true about God and the human relationship to him, known through the rational faculty’s direct and inferential engagement with revelation and natural reason. What cannot settle theological disputes, on this account, is the community’s preferred expression of its religious experience, the existential resonance of a hermeneutical proposal, or the cultural coherence of a doctrinal narrative — none of which makes the contact with theological reality that adjudication requires.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Instrument architecture and analysis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude.

Classical Presupposition Audit — Richard Joyce

 

Classical Presupposition Audit — Richard Joyce

Instrument: Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. Instrument architecture and analysis: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude. Sterling/Kelly corpus. 2026.

Subject: Richard Joyce (1966–), Professor of Philosophy, Victoria University of Wellington; leading figure in moral error theory and evolutionary debunking of moral norms. Primary sources: The Myth of Morality (2001); The Evolution of Morality (2006); “Moral Anti-Realism” (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2015, updated 2021); “Moral Fictionalism” (2005); “Evolution, Truth-Tracking, and Moral Realism” (2019).

Relevance to corpus. Joyce is named alongside Street in the Classical Field Audit — Ethics as the primary contemporary representative of the evolutionary debunking tradition. His error-theoretic position is structurally distinct from Street’s constructivism at a load-bearing point — most critically at C5 — and this run is produced as a pair with the Street run to document that distinction precisely rather than treat the two figures as interchangeable representatives of a single anti-realist position.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Corpus in view. Sources restricted to Joyce’s own published record. No prior conclusion stated. The Street run (produced immediately prior) is referenced where relevant for distinguishing Joyce’s specific presuppositions from Street’s, but no finding is assumed from that run. The Non-Operative positive-showing requirement is in force throughout.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 1.


Step 1 — Presupposition Profile

P1 — Moral error theory: moral claims purport to describe objective, categorical, mind-independent moral facts, and no such facts exist. The Myth of Morality requires that ordinary moral discourse is committed to the existence of objective, mind-independent, categorically prescriptive moral facts, and that this commitment is systematically unsatisfied because no such facts exist. This makes all positive moral claims false — not merely unwarranted or contextually inappropriate, but false in the correspondence sense. This is maximally load-bearing: it is the definition of Joyce’s error theory and the premise from which his fictionalist practical conclusion follows.

P2 — The evolutionary debunking argument. The Evolution of Morality requires that natural selection shaped our moral faculties to produce moral judgments that enhanced reproductive fitness rather than moral judgments that tracked moral truth. Since there is no pre-established harmony between fitness enhancement and moral truth on a naturalist view, our evolved moral faculties have no credentials as guides to mind-independent moral reality. This provides independent grounds for moral anti-realism beyond P1’s metaphysical claim: even if objective moral facts existed, we could not know them via faculties calibrated by fitness rather than truth.

P3 — Moral fictionalism as the practical upshot. Joyce’s fictionalism requires that moral discourse, though literally false, serves valuable practical functions — motivating cooperation, sustaining commitment, structuring social life — that justify its continued use as a useful fiction rather than its abandonment. This is load-bearing for the practical dimension of Joyce’s position: he is not recommending that we stop talking morally, but that we do so with the understanding that we are engaging in a useful fiction rather than stating truths.

Stage B — Domain Mapping. P1 is mapped at C5 and C6: the error-theoretic claim that moral claims purport to correspondence truth (C5) but all fail because no moral facts exist (C6). P2 is mapped at C3: the evolutionary debunking of moral intuitions as guides to moral reality. P3 bears only on the practical framing of Joyce’s position and does not independently affect any commitment finding. The C1, C2, and C4 questions are examined for whether P1 or P2 bears on them, with the positive-showing requirement in force. The critical distinction from Street is flagged: Joyce’s error theory accepts correspondence truth as the standard for moral claims and concludes they fail it; Street’s constructivism rejects correspondence truth as the right standard for moral claims. This difference is load-bearing specifically at C5 and is carried into Step 2.

Self-Audit Complete: the Street distinction flagged at Stage B rather than assumed; P3 correctly identified as bearing only on practical framing, not on commitment findings; C1, C2, and C4 flagged for independent examination with positive-showing requirement in force. Proceed to Step 2.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

C1 — Substance Dualism. Non-Operative. Positive showing: Joyce’s error theory and his evolutionary debunking argument are both metaethical positions about the existence and knowability of moral facts. Neither requires a position on the metaphysics of mind or the soul. Joyce is a naturalist about mind in his broader philosophical commitments, but this naturalism is not the load-bearing premise of his moral argument: the evolutionary debunking argument works equally on physicalist, dualist, or hylomorphic accounts of the mind, so long as the mind’s moral faculties were shaped by selection for fitness rather than truth. No engagement with substance dualism, physicalism, or hylomorphism was found as load-bearing in Joyce’s moral-philosophical record.

C2 — Libertarian Free Will. Non-Operative. Positive showing: Joyce’s error theory addresses whether moral claims are true, not whether agents freely originate their choices. His fictionalism addresses whether moral discourse is practically valuable, not whether the practical reasoning it structures involves libertarian self-determination. His evolutionary argument addresses the epistemic credentials of moral faculties, not the metaphysics of the will. No engagement with libertarian free will, compatibilism, or the free will debate was found as load-bearing in his record. The absence is again architectural.

C3 — Ethical Intuitionism. Contrary. P2 is a direct, argued denial of the epistemic credentials of the faculty C3 requires. Joyce’s evolutionary debunking argument establishes that our moral faculties were shaped by selection for fitness rather than truth and therefore have no reliable purchase on mind-independent moral reality, even if such reality existed. This directly targets C3’s core claim: that the rational faculty can directly apprehend moral truth. The debunking argument does not merely raise a skeptical challenge; it provides a positive, mechanistic explanation of why our moral faculties are calibrated by something other than moral truth, which is a stronger result than generic skepticism and a direct denial of C3’s enabling presupposition.

C4 — Foundationalism. Non-Operative. Positive showing: Joyce’s error theory is a claim about whether moral facts exist, not about the structure of moral knowledge or justification. His evolutionary argument is a claim about the calibration of moral faculties, not about whether justified moral beliefs are foundationally or coherentistically structured. The foundationalism debate concerns how moral knowledge, if it exists, is organized; Joyce’s debate concerns whether it exists at all. These are distinct questions and his record addresses only the latter.

C5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth. Partially Aligned. This is the load-bearing distinction between Joyce’s profile and Street’s, and it requires precise handling. P1’s error theory explicitly presupposes correspondence truth as the standard for moral claims: Joyce’s argument is that moral discourse purports to describe objective, mind-independent moral facts — it aspires to correspondence truth — and fails because no such facts exist. This is an acceptance of correspondence as the governing standard for moral claims, not a rejection of it. Error theory is internally committed to C5: if moral claims did not purport to correspondence truth, the error-theoretic diagnosis would be unavailable — there would be no gap between what moral claims purport to do and what the world contains. The finding is Partially Aligned rather than Aligned because Joyce’s acceptance of correspondence truth as the standard is coupled with his conclusion that no moral claim successfully meets this standard — C5 is presupposed but never instantiated, within his framework, by any actual moral claim.

C6 — Moral Realism. Contrary. P1’s conclusion — no objective, mind-independent moral facts exist — is a direct, argued denial of C6’s core claim. The Myth of Morality is among the most systematic and technically sophisticated defenses of moral error theory in contemporary analytic philosophy. No qualification or residual was found: Joyce’s commitment to the non-existence of objective moral facts is uncompromising, load-bearing, and argued at book length. This is the most explicit Contrary finding at C6 produced in the Ethics/Philosophy cluster.

Self-Audit Complete: all six commitments audited; three Non-Operative findings each given a positive showing; C5 Partially Aligned finding derived precisely from the error theory’s internal presupposition of correspondence truth as the standard moral claims fail, explicitly distinguished from Street’s C5 Contrary finding; C3 Contrary derived from the specific content of the evolutionary debunking argument rather than from a general anti-realist label; no finding distributed for apparent balance. Proceed to Step 3.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

C1: Non-Operative. C2: Non-Operative. Per the instrument’s architecture: No Dissolution.

As with Street, the practical consequence requires precise statement. Joyce’s framework leaves the rational subject architecturally undisturbed while denying the objective moral ground that subject’s practical reasoning is supposed to reach. An agent who adopts Joyce’s framework is not asked to dissolve his prohairesis but is asked to accept: that his moral faculties are evolutionary byproducts calibrated for fitness rather than truth (C3 Contrary); that his moral claims, though purporting to correspondence truth, are systematically false because there is nothing for them to correspond to (C5 Partially Aligned, C6 Contrary); and that the moral discourse he continues to use, on Joyce’s fictionalist recommendation, is a useful fiction rather than a truth-tracking practice. His rational faculty remains; its moral deliverances are, on this account, reliable as fitness-enhancing outputs and unreliable as guides to moral reality.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 4.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Part A — Commitment Pattern

CommitmentFinding
C1 — Substance DualismNon-Operative
C2 — Libertarian Free WillNon-Operative
C3 — Ethical IntuitionismContrary
C4 — FoundationalismNon-Operative
C5 — Correspondence Theory of TruthPartially Aligned
C6 — Moral RealismContrary

Zero Aligned, one Partially Aligned (C5), two Contrary (C3, C6), zero Inconsistent, three Non-Operative (C1, C2, C4). No Dissolution. The profile is structurally distinct from Street’s at the one commitment that matters most for marking the internal divisions of the anti-realist tradition: C5. Street’s constructivism produces C5 Contrary because it rejects correspondence truth as the right standard for moral claims and substitutes truth relative to evaluative standpoint. Joyce’s error theory produces C5 Partially Aligned because it accepts correspondence truth as the standard moral claims purport to meet — and then concludes that all positive moral claims fail to meet it because no objective moral facts exist. This distinction is not merely verbal: it determines whether the framework is intelligible to anyone working within the corpus (error theory is, because it shares the correspondence standard; constructivism is less so, because it replaces the standard itself).

Part B — Dissolution Finding. No Dissolution. C1 and C2 both Non-Operative. The framework leaves the rational subject architecturally undisturbed while denying the objective moral ground his practical reasoning is supposed to reach.

Part C — Agent-Level Implication. An agent who adopts Joyce’s framework accepts that his moral intuitions are evolutionary byproducts calibrated for fitness, that his positive moral claims are all literally false, and that the moral discourse he continues to use in practical life is a fiction whose value is pragmatic rather than truth-tracking. What he is offered in return is a clear-eyed naturalist account of why moral discourse persists and functions despite its systematic falsity, and a fictionalist framework for continuing to use it without self-deception. Sterling’s framework supplies the direct philosophical answer to each element of this account: the faculty calibrated for fitness is, on C1’s account, not exhaustively constituted by its evolutionary history and its deliverances are not fully explained by that history; the moral claims Joyce declares false are, on C5 and C6’s account, the kinds of claims that can be true because objective moral facts exist for them to correspond to; and the fictionalist recommendation — continue the discourse while knowing it is false — is, on Th 7’s account, the precise recommendation to continue forming beliefs one knows to be false, which is the opposite of the discipline of assent the corpus requires.

Corpus boundary. The CPA issues findings on presuppositions embedded in an argumentative record. It does not evaluate the internal consistency of Joyce’s error theory, the success of his fictionalist practical recommendation, or his standing within contemporary metaethics.

Self-Audit Complete: summary follows from Steps 1–3 without new material introduced; the Street/Joyce C5 distinction stated as the structurally significant difference between the two profiles rather than as a technical observation; the fictionalist recommendation’s specific conflict with Th 7 stated precisely in Part C; corpus boundary declared; summary self-contained. CPA run complete.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Instrument architecture and analysis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude.

Classical Presupposition Audit — Sharon Street

 

Classical Presupposition Audit — Sharon Street

Instrument: Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. Instrument architecture and analysis: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude. Sterling/Kelly corpus. 2026.

Subject: Sharon Street (1974–), Professor of Philosophy, New York University; leading figure in Humean constructivism and evolutionary metaethics. Primary sources: “A Darwinian Dilemma for Realist Theories of Value” (Philosophical Studies, 2006); “Evolution and the Normativity of Epistemic Reasons” (2009); “What Is Constructivism in Ethics and Metaethics?” (2010); “Coming to Terms with Contingency: Humean Constructivism about Practical Reason” (2012).

Relevance to corpus. Street is named in the Classical Field Audit — Ethics as the primary contemporary representative of the evolutionary debunking tradition and as the architect of the Darwinian dilemma argument against moral realism. Her profile is produced here to complete the Ethics cluster’s boundary documentation, establishing the negative limit case alongside the cluster’s high-alignment figures.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Corpus in view. Sources restricted to Street’s own published record. No prior conclusion stated. The Non-Operative finding category requires a positive showing at each commitment where it is used; this requirement is in force throughout.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 1.


Step 1 — Presupposition Profile

P1 — The Darwinian dilemma. Street’s central argument requires that natural selection shaped our evaluative attitudes to track reproductive fitness rather than mind-independent evaluative facts, and that this creates a dilemma for moral realism: either there is a pre-established harmony between fitness-tracking and truth-tracking (an implausible coincidence on any naturalist view) or our evaluative attitudes are not tracking mind-independent moral facts at all. Both horns defeat moral realism. This is maximally load-bearing: it is the argument on which her entire metaethical program turns.

P2 — Humean constructivism as the positive alternative. Street’s constructivism requires that moral claims are true or false not by correspondence to mind-independent evaluative facts but by relation to the evaluative standpoint the agent brings to practical reasoning. There is no evaluative standpoint that is the right one in a mind-independent sense; moral truth is constructed from within the agent’s own evaluative commitments. This is load-bearing for her positive metaethical program and for the distinction between her position and error theory: she is not a moral nihilist but a constructivist who holds that moral claims can be true, relativized to the agent’s evaluative standpoint.

Stage B — Domain Mapping. P1 is mapped at C3 (the faculty of direct moral apprehension) and C6 (the mind-independent moral facts that faculty is supposed to apprehend). P2 is mapped at C5 (correspondence truth for moral claims) and C6 (moral realism). The C1, C2, and C4 questions are examined for whether P1 or P2 bears on them, with the positive-showing requirement for Non-Operative in force.

Self-Audit Complete: presuppositions drawn from Street’s own record; the Darwinian dilemma and the constructivist alternative mapped to the specific commitments they engage; C1, C2, and C4 flagged for independent examination with positive-showing requirement in force. Proceed to Step 2.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

C1 — Substance Dualism. Non-Operative. Positive showing: Street’s Darwinian dilemma is an argument in metaethics about the relationship between evolutionary pressures and moral epistemology. It is not an argument about the metaphysics of mind, the soul, or the relationship between mental and physical substances. Her constructivism is equally silent on these questions: it is a claim about the structure of moral truth, not about what the mind is. No engagement with substance dualism, physicalism, or hylomorphism was found as load-bearing anywhere in Street’s published record. The absence is architectural: her argument’s stated structure never reaches the question.

C2 — Libertarian Free Will. Non-Operative. Positive showing: Street’s constructivism presupposes that agents occupy an evaluative standpoint and engage in practical reasoning, but it does not require any particular account of whether that reasoning involves libertarian origination or compatibilist freedom. The Darwinian dilemma targets the epistemic credentials of moral intuitions as guides to mind-independent moral facts, not the metaphysics of the will. No engagement with libertarian free will, compatibilism, or the free will debate was found as load-bearing in her record. The absence is again architectural.

C3 — Ethical Intuitionism. Contrary. P1 is a direct, argued, sustained attack on exactly the faculty C3 requires. The Darwinian dilemma’s first horn demonstrates that if moral intuitions were reliably tracking mind-independent moral facts, the correlation between evolutionary fitness pressures and moral truth would require an implausible coincidence that no naturalist account can supply. The second horn demonstrates that if no such correlation exists, our moral intuitions are calibrated to track fitness, not moral truth, and have no credentials as guides to mind-independent moral reality. Both horns directly deny that the rational faculty’s deliverances in the moral domain constitute reliable apprehension of moral truth. This is not an undeveloped silence or an architectural non-reach: Street’s primary published contribution is precisely this argument against the epistemic credentials of the moral faculty C3 requires.

C4 — Foundationalism. Non-Operative. Positive showing: Street’s constructivism operates at the level of whether moral truth is mind-independent or constructed, not at the level of whether moral knowledge has a foundationalist or coherentist structure. Her evaluative standpoint framework does not engage the question of whether some moral propositions are epistemically basic and others derived from them, or whether moral justification is foundational or holistic. The foundationalism debate concerns the architecture of moral knowledge; Street’s debate concerns whether moral knowledge, on any architecture, tracks mind-independent fact or not. These are distinct questions and her record addresses only the latter.

C5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth. Contrary. P2’s Humean constructivism directly and explicitly replaces correspondence truth for moral claims with truth relative to the agent’s evaluative standpoint. On Street’s account, a moral claim is true not because it corresponds to a mind-independent moral fact but because it coheres with or follows from the agent’s own evaluative commitments given the Humean practical standpoint. This is a principled, argued rejection of correspondence truth as the governing standard for moral claims — not a silence or an undeveloped residual. It is the specific feature of her constructivism that distinguishes her from error theorists (who accept correspondence as the standard and conclude moral claims fail it) and from realists (who accept correspondence as the standard and conclude moral claims meet it).

C6 — Moral Realism. Contrary. P1 and P2 together constitute one of the most systematic and argued contemporary cases against moral realism. P1 demonstrates that realist moral epistemology faces a dilemma it cannot escape on naturalist grounds. P2 supplies the constructivist alternative that makes moral discourse meaningful without requiring mind-independent moral facts. Street’s entire published metaethical record is organized around establishing and defending this anti-realist conclusion.

Self-Audit Complete: all six commitments audited; three Non-Operative findings each given a positive showing establishing architectural non-reach rather than avoidance of a harder finding; C3 Contrary derived from the specific content of the Darwinian dilemma rather than from a general anti-realist label; C5 Contrary explicitly distinguished from Joyce’s different relationship to correspondence truth; no finding distributed for apparent balance. Proceed to Step 3.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

C1: Non-Operative. C2: Non-Operative. Per the instrument’s architecture, Non-Operative findings at C1 and C2 neither establish nor trigger dissolution. No Dissolution.

The practical consequence of this finding is worth stating precisely, since three Contrary findings at C3, C5, and C6 make the profile among the most divergent in the corpus despite No Dissolution. An agent who adopts Street’s framework is not asked to dissolve the self — the question of what the deliberating subject is simply does not arise within her metaethical program. What the agent is asked to accept is that none of his moral intuitions constitutes reliable apprehension of mind-independent moral truth (C3 Contrary), that moral claims are true or false only relative to his own evaluative standpoint (C5 Contrary), and that there are no objective moral facts independent of that standpoint for his moral reasoning to track (C6 Contrary). His prohairesis is architecturally untouched by Street’s framework; the moral content it is supposed to govern is denied an objective ground.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 4.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Part A — Commitment Pattern

CommitmentFinding
C1 — Substance DualismNon-Operative
C2 — Libertarian Free WillNon-Operative
C3 — Ethical IntuitionismContrary
C4 — FoundationalismNon-Operative
C5 — Correspondence Theory of TruthContrary
C6 — Moral RealismContrary

Zero Aligned, zero Partially Aligned, three Contrary (C3, C5, C6), zero Inconsistent, three Non-Operative (C1, C2, C4). No Dissolution. The profile is the most concentrated Contrary pattern in the Ethics/Philosophy cluster, unique in carrying three Contrary findings with no Aligned or Partially Aligned offsets. The three Contrary findings are not independent: C3 (direct moral apprehension denied), C5 (correspondence truth for moral claims denied), and C6 (mind-independent moral facts denied) constitute a single, unified, internally consistent anti-realist metaethical position — each entails and is entailed by the other two within Street’s own framework. The three Non-Operative findings reflect the genuine scope of Street’s metaethical project, which deliberately brackets the metaphysics of mind, the metaphysics of agency, and the architecture of moral justification in order to concentrate entirely on the relationship between evolutionary origins and moral epistemology.

Part B — Dissolution Finding. No Dissolution. C1 and C2 both Non-Operative; the dissolution condition is not met. The framework leaves the rational subject architecturally undisturbed while denying the objective ground his moral reasoning is supposed to reach.

Part C — Agent-Level Implication. An agent who adopts Street’s framework is not asked to dissolve himself but is asked to accept that his moral intuitions are evolutionary byproducts calibrated by fitness rather than truth, that the moral claims those intuitions generate are true or false only relative to his own evaluative standpoint, and that there is no mind-independent moral reality for him to be trying to track. His rational faculty is intact; the moral world it is supposed to apprehend is not there, on Street’s account, to be apprehended. Sterling’s framework supplies what Street’s explicitly denies: the faculty is not a fitness-calibrated mechanism but a genuinely rational apprehending power (C1), its deliverances are not evaluated by their fitness contribution but by their correspondence to moral reality (C5), and that moral reality is not constructed from the agent’s evaluative standpoint but discovered by his rational faculty as the objective ground his practical life answers to (C3, C6).

Corpus boundary. The CPA issues findings on presuppositions embedded in an argumentative record. It does not evaluate the internal validity of the Darwinian dilemma, the success of Street’s constructivism as a positive metaethical program, or her standing within contemporary metaethics.

Self-Audit Complete: summary follows from Steps 1–3 without new material introduced; the three-Contrary pattern explained as a unified rather than independent set of findings; the No Dissolution finding’s practical consequence stated precisely rather than left as a technical observation; Sterling’s framework’s specific answer to each of the three Contrary findings stated directly in Part C; corpus boundary declared; summary self-contained. CPA run complete.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Instrument architecture and analysis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude.

Classical Presupposition Audit — John Finnis

 

Classical Presupposition Audit — John Finnis

Instrument: Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. Instrument architecture and analysis: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude. Sterling/Kelly corpus. 2026.

Subject: John Finnis (1940–), Emeritus Professor of Law and Legal Philosophy, University of Oxford; Biolchini Family Professor of Law, University of Notre Dame. Primary sources: Natural Law and Natural Rights (1980); Fundamentals of Ethics (1983); Moral Absolutes (1991); Aquinas: Moral, Political, and Legal Theory (1998); Intention and Identity (2011); Collected Essays, 5 vols. (2011).

Prior corpus standing. Named in the CRI as one of the most fully aligned contemporary philosophers.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Corpus in view. Sources restricted to Finnis’s own argumentative record. No prior conclusion stated. Subject is a professional philosopher and legal theorist; the Political Application Constraint does not apply.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 1.


Step 1 — Presupposition Profile

P1 — Persons as rational agents irreducible to physical systems. Finnis’s natural law framework requires that the basic goods — life, knowledge, play, aesthetic experience, sociability, practical reasonableness, religion — are goods of persons, not of organisms considered purely as physical systems. His argument against consequentialism requires that persons cannot be reduced to bundles of physical states whose outcomes are to be aggregated: persons have a dignity that cannot be traded off, which presupposes they are not merely physical systems. His Thomistic inheritance provides the hylomorphic account of the soul as form of the body: not Cartesian substance dualism, but equally not physicalist reductionism, preserving the genuine ontological reality of the rational faculty as distinct from matter considered alone. His entire practical reason framework presupposes that the rational faculty is a genuine apprehending and directing power, not a computational output of prior physical states.

P2 — Free choice as self-determination under incommensurable goods. Finnis’s account of practical reason requires genuine free choice as a structural premise. Natural Law and Natural Rights identifies practical reasonableness as itself one of the basic goods, and the framework of self-direction — choosing among incommensurable basic goods, forming a coherent life plan, acting for reasons rather than from causes — presupposes that the agent’s choice is genuinely his own and not determined by prior physical states. The incommensurability of basic goods is load-bearing here: precisely because no basic good is reducible to any other or to a common currency that could be maximized, genuine choice rather than calculation is required. His Thomistic account of the will as a rational appetite that moves itself in response to reasons presupposes incompatibilist agency. His moral absolutes require that agents genuinely choose to perform or avoid intrinsically wrong acts: a determined agent cannot be absolutely prohibited from anything, because prohibition has no purchase on a causally determined outcome.

P3 — Basic goods as per se nota: directly apprehended without inference. In Natural Law and Natural Rights, Finnis argues that the basic goods are self-evidently good — known by practical reason directly, not derived from metaphysical premises about human nature or divine command. This is the most discussed and contested feature of new natural law theory, marking its explicit break from the traditional Thomistic derivation of ought from is. The first principles of practical reason — that knowledge is good, that life is good, that practical reasonableness is good — are per se nota: known of themselves, not inferred. The apprehension is not empirical, not inferential, and not culturally conditioned in its foundational form. This is structurally equivalent to ethical intuitionism: the rational faculty directly apprehends that certain things are genuinely worth pursuing.

P4 — Foundationalist practical reason architecture. All practical reasoning about what to do traces back to the basic goods as the ultimate justifying reasons for action. No practical conclusion is justified by infinite regress or by a coherentist web of mutual support: it terminates in a basic good that is known per se nota. Finnis’s epistemology of practical reason mirrors his epistemology of theoretical reason — both require basic propositions that are self-evident and do not derive their justificatory force from prior propositions. Foundationalism is structurally load-bearing throughout his system.

P5 — Correspondence truth as the governing standard throughout. Finnis’s defense of moral absolutes requires that certain moral propositions are genuinely true — not merely approved or useful — because they correspond to the real moral structure of persons and actions. His critique of consequentialism requires that the consequentialist’s claim is false, not merely inconvenient. His natural law critique of legal positivism requires that law’s claim to moral authority is either genuine or not, which presupposes a correspondence standard against which that claim is assessed. His account of practical reason as reason apprehending real goods presupposes that the apprehension either succeeds or fails in tracking what is actually there.

P6 — Basic goods as real, moral absolutes as objectively true, law as genuinely unjust or not. Finnis’s entire philosophical program is built on moral realism at its most demanding: basic goods are real goods, not preferences or culturally endorsed values; moral absolutes are objectively true regardless of consequences or cultural context; law can be genuinely unjust, not merely disliked, which presupposes objective moral standards against which law is measured. His Thomistic inheritance reinforces this: the natural law tradition is the longest-standing systematic defense of moral realism in Western philosophy.

Stage B — Domain Mapping. P1 is mapped at C1: the person as rational agent irreducible to physical systems, with the hylomorphic residual identified and carried into Step 2. P2 is mapped at C2: free choice as self-determination, specifically the incommensurability argument and the moral-absolutes requirement. P3 is mapped at C3: per se nota basic goods as direct moral apprehension. P4 is mapped at C4: foundationalist architecture terminating in basic goods. P5 is mapped at C5: correspondence truth throughout. P6 is mapped at C6: moral realism at its most demanding.

Self-Audit Complete: all presuppositions traced to load-bearing argumentative moves; the hylomorphic residual identified precisely at P1 and carried into Step 2 rather than suppressed; P3’s explicit break from traditional Thomistic derivation noted as the load-bearing basis for the C3 finding. Proceed to Step 2.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

C1 — Substance Dualism. Partially Aligned. P1 requires throughout that the rational faculty is a genuine apprehending and directing power, not a computational output of prior physical states — substantial, pervasive correspondence with C1’s core anti-reductionist claim. The residual is that Finnis’s Thomistic hylomorphism is not Cartesian substance dualism: it treats mind and body as form and matter of one substance rather than as two separate substances, and this difference is load-bearing in his Thomistic account of the unity of the person. The functional alignment is clear; the precise metaphysical architecture differs from the Cartesian dualism Sterling’s C1 names. Partially Aligned rather than Aligned on this basis — the same residual found across the Thomist cluster (Geach, MacIntyre, Feser, Anscombe).

C2 — Libertarian Free Will. Aligned. P2’s incommensurability argument is distinctive and load-bearing: precisely because the basic goods cannot be reduced to a common currency, genuine choice rather than maximization is required at every significant practical juncture, and this requirement builds libertarian self-determination structurally into the framework rather than presupposing it from outside. Moral absolutes require genuine agency: a determined agent cannot be absolutely prohibited from anything in the morally significant sense Finnis requires. The will’s Thomistic self-movement in response to reasons presupposes incompatibilist agency. No contrary presupposition qualifies this finding.

C3 — Ethical Intuitionism. Aligned. P3’s per se nota account of the basic goods is direct moral apprehension: the rational faculty knows them immediately without inference from metaphysical premises or empirical observation. Finnis argues this explicitly and at length, and it is the foundational move distinguishing new natural law theory from traditional Thomism. This distinguishes Finnis’s C3 finding from the Partially Aligned Thomist C3 residual found in Geach, MacIntyre, Feser, and Anscombe, all of whom mediate moral knowledge through natural teleology or tradition rather than arriving at it by direct apprehension of self-evident principles. The explicit, argued, load-bearing per se nota claim earns Aligned here where the naturalistic-teleological mediation of the others earns only Partially Aligned.

C4 — Foundationalism. Aligned. P4’s basic goods as foundational self-evident principles of practical reason constitute an explicitly foundationalist architecture. All practical justification traces to them; no coherentist web of mutual support substitutes for foundational bedrock. No contrary presupposition qualifies this finding.

C5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth. Aligned. P5 is presupposed uniformly throughout Finnis’s moral, legal, and practical-reason record. Moral absolutes are genuinely true; consequentialism is genuinely false; law is genuinely unjust or not. No deflationary or pragmatist qualification appears as load-bearing.

C6 — Moral Realism. Aligned. P6’s moral realism is the most explicit and demanding in the cluster. Basic goods are real; moral absolutes are objectively true regardless of consequences or cultural context; law can be genuinely unjust. The commitment is argued across Finnis’s entire career and is the foundation of both his legal and his moral philosophy.

Self-Audit Complete: all six commitments audited without selective treatment; C3 Aligned finding explicitly distinguished from the Thomist cluster’s usual C3 Partially Aligned on the basis of Finnis’s own explicit per se nota argument, which the other Thomists do not make; C1 Partially Aligned finding verified as the same hylomorphic residual found independently across the cluster; no finding distributed for apparent balance. Proceed to Step 3.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

C1: Partially Aligned. C2: Aligned. Neither is Contrary. Per the dissolution rule: No Dissolution.

Finnis’s framework does not require those who adopt it to dissolve their prohairesis into an external system. His hylomorphic account of the rational faculty preserves its genuine ontological reality and causal efficacy against reductionist dissolution, even while differing from Cartesian substance dualism in its metaphysical architecture. His libertarian free will commitment fully preserves genuine originating agency. An agent who adopts Finnis’s framework retains a self-description in which the rational faculty is real, the will is genuinely self-moving, and choices originate in the agent rather than in prior physical causes.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 4.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Part A — Commitment Pattern

CommitmentFinding
C1 — Substance DualismPartially Aligned
C2 — Libertarian Free WillAligned
C3 — Ethical IntuitionismAligned
C4 — FoundationalismAligned
C5 — Correspondence Theory of TruthAligned
C6 — Moral RealismAligned

Five Aligned (C2, C3, C4, C5, C6), one Partially Aligned (C1), zero Contrary, zero Inconsistent, zero Non-Operative. No Dissolution. Among the highest alignment counts in the entire Ethics/Philosophy cluster, matching Feser (Document 67) at five Aligned. The single Partially Aligned finding at C1 carries the hylomorphic residual uniform across the Thomist cluster. Finnis breaks the cluster’s C3 pattern decisively: where Geach, MacIntyre, Feser, and Anscombe all land at Partially Aligned at C3 because their moral epistemology mediates through natural teleology or tradition, Finnis’s explicit per se nota argument for the basic goods earns Aligned at C3, making him the only Thomist in the cluster to do so. Strongest alignment: C3 and C6, where Finnis provides the most systematically developed natural law defense of moral realism and the most explicit contemporary argument for direct apprehension of basic moral goods. Deepest point of divergence: C1 alone — hylomorphism preserves what the corpus requires functionally while differing in metaphysical architecture.

Part B — Dissolution Finding. No Dissolution. C1 Partially Aligned, C2 Aligned. The framework fully preserves the space for a self-governing rational faculty whose choices are genuinely its own.

Part C — Agent-Level Implication. An agent who adopts Finnis’s framework acquires the most fully developed natural law defense of moral realism available in contemporary analytic jurisprudence and moral philosophy (C6), a rigorously argued per se nota account of direct moral apprehension that earns Aligned at C3 where every other Thomist in the cluster reaches only Partially Aligned (C3), an explicitly foundationalist practical reason architecture (C4), correspondence truth as the governing standard throughout (C5), and a robust libertarian account of free choice grounded in the incommensurability of basic goods (C2). The one point requiring supplementation is C1: Finnis’s hylomorphic account preserves the genuine reality of the rational faculty but does not carry the full Cartesian substance dualist architecture. An agent working within the corpus who adopts Finnis’s framework would find it the most nearly complete alignment available among contemporary natural law philosophers, with the metaphysics of mind as the single point requiring explicit supplementation. Nothing in Finnis’s record closes C1 against the corpus — the gap is architectural rather than contradictory, and supplementation from Feser’s argued substance dualism (Document 67) is architecturally consistent.

Corpus boundary. The CPA issues findings on presuppositions embedded in an argumentative record. It does not evaluate the adequacy of new natural law theory as a legal philosophy, the success of Finnis’s critique of legal positivism, or the internal debates between new natural law theory and traditional Thomism.

Self-Audit Complete: summary follows from Steps 1–3 without new material introduced; the C3 Aligned finding’s distinction from the cluster pattern was stated in Part A and Part C rather than left to implication; the Feser supplementation suggestion was verified as architecturally consistent rather than asserted; agent-level implication addressed to a prospective adopter; corpus boundary declared; summary self-contained. CPA run complete.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Instrument architecture and analysis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude.

Classical Presupposition Audit — W. D. Ross

 

Classical Presupposition Audit — W. D. Ross

Instrument: Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. Instrument architecture and analysis: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude. Sterling/Kelly corpus. 2026.

Subject: W. D. Ross (1877–1971), Provost of Oriel College, Oxford; translator of Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics and Metaphysics. Primary sources: The Right and the Good (1930); Foundations of Ethics (1939); Aristotle (1923).

Prior corpus standing. Named in the CRI as one of the most fully aligned contemporary philosophers. Named in the SFI as a principal figure in the intuitionist tradition whose Rossian framework Audi explicitly builds upon.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Corpus in view. Sources restricted to Ross’s own argumentative record. No prior conclusion stated. Subject is a professional philosopher; the Political Application Constraint does not apply.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 1.


Step 1 — Presupposition Profile

P1 — Non-naturalism as the architecturally central commitment. Ross’s moral philosophy requires that moral properties — rightness, goodness, prima facie duty — are not identical to natural properties and cannot be reduced to them. This non-naturalism is maximally load-bearing: it governs his moral epistemology, his critique of consequentialism and Kantian derivation alike, and his account of the mind’s apprehension relation to moral reality. Every other presupposition in his record is entailed by or required to support P1.

P2 — Prima facie duties as directly apprehended self-evident moral truths. The Right and the Good requires that the duties of fidelity, reparation, gratitude, justice, beneficence, self-improvement, and non-maleficence are known by direct rational intuition, not derived from a single overarching principle or from empirical observation. Ross explicitly rejects the utilitarian derivation of all moral obligation from a single principle and the Kantian derivation from the categorical imperative: both are attempts to derive what can only be directly apprehended. The mathematical analogy is load-bearing: just as the angles of a triangle are known to sum to 180 degrees by direct rational apprehension rather than measurement, the prima facie duties are known directly by a mind of sufficient maturity and experience attending carefully to the moral situation.

P3 — Genuine agency as presupposed by moral obligation and practical wisdom. Ross’s account of how agents adjudicate among conflicting prima facie duties requires that the judgment about which duty is most stringent in particular circumstances is a genuine exercise of practical wisdom rather than a computational procedure or a determined output of prior causes. Praise and blame, which Ross treats as appropriate responses to moral performance, have no purchase on determined outputs. His structural incompatibilism reinforces this: if moral properties are non-natural and moral knowledge is not natural knowledge, then the agent who acts on moral knowledge is not acting from natural causation alone.

P4 — Correspondence truth as the governing epistemic standard. Ross’s non-naturalism and his intuitionism together require that moral claims are true or false by correspondence to real non-natural properties. His critique of naturalistic definitions of goodness presupposes that moral claims have a determinate truth-value fixed by the non-natural moral reality they either track or fail to track. The intuition either corresponds to a real moral fact or it does not — correspondence is the standard against which its accuracy is assessed.

Stage B — Domain Mapping. P1 bears on C1, C5, and C6: non-naturalism requires a cognitive capacity beyond physicalism (C1), correspondence truth for moral claims (C5), and real non-natural moral properties (C6). P2 bears directly on C3 and C4: direct apprehension of self-evident moral truths is the intuitionist claim (C3) and the foundationalist claim (C4) simultaneously — the prima facie duties are both directly apprehended and epistemically basic. P3 bears on C2: genuine agency required as a structural presupposition of moral obligation and practical wisdom. P4 bears on C5 as the explicit epistemic standard.

C1 and C2 are both carried in as structural presuppositions of P1 and P3 respectively rather than as explicit argumentative commitments in Ross’s own record, which is focused entirely on moral philosophy rather than philosophy of mind or action theory. This distinction is carried into Step 2.

Self-Audit Complete: all presuppositions traced to load-bearing argumentative moves; charity requirement applied at C1 and C2, both noted as structural presuppositions rather than explicit arguments; non-naturalism correctly identified as the architecturally central commitment. Proceed to Step 2.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

C1 — Substance Dualism. Partially Aligned. P1’s non-naturalism requires a mind capable of apprehending non-natural properties — a cognitive capacity that goes beyond any purely physicalist account of mental states as natural events. Ross’s moral epistemology presupposes that the rational faculty stands in a genuine apprehension relation to non-natural moral reality: the intuition is not a psychological reaction but a rational cognition, which is a presupposition that no purely physicalist account of mental states can supply. The residual is that Ross does not develop an explicit philosophy of mind and does not argue for substance dualism as a position anywhere in his principal texts. The alignment is structural and required by his non-naturalism; the explicit metaphysical commitment is absent. Partially Aligned rather than Aligned on this basis.

C2 — Libertarian Free Will. Partially Aligned. P3 requires genuine agency at multiple load-bearing points in Ross’s framework: the adjudication among conflicting prima facie duties is a genuine exercise of practical wisdom that cannot be reduced to a computational procedure; praise and blame presuppose genuine origination; and his non-naturalism is structurally incompatibilist in the sense that acting from moral knowledge is not acting from natural causation alone. The residual is that Ross does not argue for libertarian free will explicitly and does not address the free will debate directly in his principal texts. The structural requirement is clear; the explicit argumentative commitment is absent. Partially Aligned rather than Aligned on this basis.

C3 — Ethical Intuitionism. Aligned. P2 is the foundational text of twentieth-century moral intuitionism. The direct apprehension of prima facie duties as self-evident moral truths, the mathematical analogy for moral intuition as genuine rational cognition rather than psychological reaction, and the explicit rejection of derivation from single principles all constitute the most fully argued intuitionist position in the analytic tradition. The commitment is load-bearing, explicit, and defended at length. Ross’s treatment of moral knowledge as self-evident to any person of sufficient maturity and experience who attends carefully is the clearest statement of ethical intuitionism in the corpus’s primary sources.

C4 — Foundationalism. Aligned. P2’s prima facie duties are explicitly epistemically basic — foundational moral truths not derived from prior moral claims but the starting points of moral reasoning. Ross’s non-naturalism requires foundationalism: if moral properties are not reducible to natural properties, then moral knowledge cannot be derived from natural knowledge and must have its own foundational starting points apprehended directly by the rational faculty. The mathematical analogy reinforces this: mathematical axioms are foundational, known directly, not derived from empirical premises; moral first principles have the same foundational character. No contrary presupposition qualifies this finding.

C5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth. Aligned. P1 and P4 together require correspondence truth for moral claims throughout. Moral properties are real; moral claims are true or false by correspondence to those real non-natural properties; the intuition either corresponds to the moral fact or it does not. Ross’s critique of naturalistic definitions of goodness presupposes that moral claims have a determinate truth-value fixed by the non-natural moral reality they either track or fail to track. No deflationary or pragmatist qualification appears as load-bearing.

C6 — Moral Realism. Aligned. P1’s non-naturalism is the most uncompromising moral realism in the corpus of audited figures to date. Non-natural moral properties — rightness, goodness, prima facie duty — are real features of actions and states of affairs, not reducible to natural properties, not identical to attitudes, not constructed by rational procedure. His critique of Moore’s consequentialism and utilitarian single-principle theories is not that they are pragmatically unhelpful but that they are morally wrong, a critique that has no force without robust moral realism as its presupposition. His treatment of moral disagreement as resulting from insufficient attention or insufficient experience rather than from the absence of moral facts is the clearest moral realist response to the argument from disagreement in the intuitionist tradition.

Self-Audit Complete: all six commitments audited without selective treatment; C1 and C2 both held to Partially Aligned rather than Aligned on the stated distinction between structural presupposition and explicit argumentative commitment; C3 and C6 both Aligned on the strength of Ross’s own explicit, extended, load-bearing arguments; no finding distributed for apparent balance. Proceed to Step 3.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

C1: Partially Aligned. C2: Partially Aligned. Neither is Contrary. Per the dissolution rule: No Dissolution.

Ross’s framework does not require those who adopt it to dissolve their prohairesis into an external system. His non-naturalism preserves the genuine reality of the rational faculty as a cognitive power apprehending non-natural moral reality — a picture structurally incompatible with the reductionist physicalism that would dissolve the rational faculty into a natural causal system. His framework’s structural requirement for genuine agency preserves the space for originating choice even without an explicit libertarian argument. An agent who adopts Ross’s framework retains a self-description in which the rational faculty is real, morally apprehending, and the genuine source of practical judgment.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 4.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Part A — Commitment Pattern

CommitmentFinding
C1 — Substance DualismPartially Aligned
C2 — Libertarian Free WillPartially Aligned
C3 — Ethical IntuitionismAligned
C4 — FoundationalismAligned
C5 — Correspondence Theory of TruthAligned
C6 — Moral RealismAligned

Four Aligned (C3, C4, C5, C6), two Partially Aligned (C1, C2), zero Contrary, zero Inconsistent, zero Non-Operative. No Dissolution. The pattern matches Geach’s (Document 65) in Aligned count, with a different distribution: Ross’s four Aligned are concentrated at C3–C6 (moral epistemology and metaphysics), where Geach’s are at C2, C4, C5, C6. The C1/C2 Partially Aligned findings in Ross arise from the absence of explicit philosophy of mind and action-theory arguments in a record focused entirely on moral philosophy; in Geach, they arise from the hylomorphic residual and the naturalistic-teleological moral-epistemology residual. The gaps are architectural in both cases but for different reasons.

Strongest alignment: C3 and C6. Ross provides the foundational texts of twentieth-century moral intuitionism and the most uncompromising non-naturalist moral realism in the analytic tradition. Deepest point of divergence: C1 and C2, both absent as explicit argumentative commitments in a record structured entirely around moral philosophy.

Part B — Dissolution Finding. No Dissolution. C1 Partially Aligned, C2 Partially Aligned. The framework structurally requires and preserves the space for a self-governing rational faculty without explicitly securing its philosophical ground.

Part C — Agent-Level Implication. An agent who adopts Ross’s framework acquires the foundational texts of moral intuitionism (C3) — the strongest available resource at that commitment among all figures audited to this point — an explicitly foundationalist moral epistemology grounded in self-evident prima facie duties (C4), correspondence truth as the governing standard for moral claims (C5), and the most uncompromising non-naturalist moral realism in the analytic tradition (C6). What the framework does not supply is an explicit philosophy of mind (C1) or an explicit defense of libertarian free will (C2). The rational faculty Ross’s framework requires is fully present as a functional presupposition; its metaphysical grounding is the agent’s own work to complete. An agent working within the corpus who adopts Ross’s framework would find it the strongest available resource for C3 and C6 specifically, while needing to supplement C1 and C2 from outside Ross’s own argumentative record — from Feser’s argued substance dualism, for instance, or from the corpus’s own C1 and C2 primary documents.

Corpus boundary. The CPA issues findings on presuppositions embedded in an argumentative record. It does not evaluate the adequacy of Ross’s prima facie duty framework, the success of his non-naturalism against Moore’s consequentialism, or his standing within analytic moral philosophy.

Self-Audit Complete: summary follows from Steps 1–3 without new material introduced; the comparison to Geach was verified against Document 65’s actual table rather than assumed; agent-level implication addressed to a prospective adopter; corpus boundary declared; summary self-contained. CPA run complete.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Instrument architecture and analysis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude.

The Moral Life and Its Ground: An Ethics Restoration

 

The Moral Life and Its Ground: An Ethics Restoration

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Instrument architecture and analysis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude. Layer: Field Restoration Synthesis — sixth document of this kind in the corpus, following Sociology (Document 88), Anthropology, Economics, Epistemology, and Philosophy. Built from the complete Ethics cluster: the Classical Field Audit (Ethics), the CRI prescriptive run, and the CPA series bearing most directly on the field’s governing questions (Ross, Anscombe, Finnis, Parfit, Enoch, Huemer, MacIntyre, Feser). 2026.


I. Governing Principle

This synthesis is grounded directly in Core Stoicism’s own theorems (Th 1–29), not in the six philosophical commitments treated as a free-standing telos. Ethics is the field for which this principle has the highest stakes, because the field’s governing questions are precisely the questions the six commitments address — which is exactly why the CFA found all six commitments Inconsistent rather than Contrary. The field has not wholesale displaced the classical commitments; it has made every one of them the subject of active, sophisticated, unresolved dispute. A synthesis grounded in the six commitments as a telos would therefore land in the middle of the field’s own contested terrain without a standpoint from which to adjudicate it. Grounding in Core Stoicism’s theorems provides that standpoint: not because the theorems avoid the field’s disputes, but because they answer them from a position that does not presuppose any of the contested metaethical positions as a starting point, deriving its moral architecture instead from the control dichotomy and its consequences.


II. Why Ethics Is the Most Internally Contested Field

The CFA’s Total Internal Contestation finding — all six commitments Inconsistent, no commitment Contrary, no commitment Aligned — is the most uniform finding pattern across any field audited. It requires a precise explanation rather than a general observation about academic disagreement.

Ethics is the only field in the CFA series whose central subject matter is precisely the domain of the six classical commitments. Whether moral facts are real, whether moral truth requires correspondence, whether moral knowledge involves direct recognition, whether moral reasoning requires foundational first principles, whether the moral subject is an irreducible rational faculty, whether moral responsibility requires genuine freedom — these are not questions Ethics addresses alongside its primary concerns. They are its primary concerns. This means that the displacement the CFA diagnoses across all sixteen fields — the displacement originating, per the Philosophy synthesis, in Philosophy’s own explicit self-displacement — reaches Ethics not as an external force acting on a field with different primary concerns, but as a direct engagement with the field’s own foundational questions from the inside.

The result is not Contrary findings but Inconsistent ones: the moral realism revival, the neo-Aristotelian tradition, natural law ethics, and classical intuitionism all continue to defend the classical commitments with genuine philosophical sophistication. Emotivism, expressivism, constructivism, error theory, and evolutionary debunking deny or bypass them with equal sophistication. Every commitment is simultaneously present and denied, held by significant live traditions and contested by equally significant ones. The field cannot resolve this internally because any resolution would presuppose one of the positions being resolved. This is Total Internal Contestation in the precise sense the CFA named it: not a field that has lost its classical resources, but a field that cannot adjudicate between those resources and the frameworks that contest them, using resources available from within the field itself.

Sterling’s framework resolves this not by entering the contested terrain as one more metaethical position among others, but by providing the single thing the field’s internal contestation cannot supply: a standpoint outside the contested metaethical positions from which the dispute’s terms can be examined. That standpoint is the control dichotomy. Th 6 establishes that beliefs and will are in our control; Th 7 establishes that desires are caused by beliefs about good and evil; Th 10 establishes that virtue is the only genuine good. These three theorems do not assume any of the contested metaethical positions — they are derived from an analysis of what the agent’s actual situation requires, and they answer the contested questions as consequences rather than presuppositions.


III. What the CPA Cluster Shows

The Ethics CPA cluster contains the corpus’s highest concentration of near-complete alignment figures. Huemer (six Aligned — first fully clean profile in the entire series), Finnis (five Aligned), Feser (five Aligned), Ross (four Aligned), Anscombe (four Aligned), Parfit (four Aligned). No other field in the CFA series has produced this density of high-alignment profiles from within its own tradition. This is not accidental. Ethics is the field whose central questions most directly require the classical commitments as enabling conditions, so the figures who have engaged those questions most seriously and most comprehensively have independently converged on the highest alignment counts.

What this concentration shows is that the resources required for a restored Ethics are already substantially present within the field’s own tradition — they are not externally imposed by Sterling’s framework but drawn from work the field’s own best figures have already done. What the field cannot do with those resources, from within its own institutional practice, is establish them as governing rather than as minority positions contested by the dominant anti-realist and constructivist traditions. The synthesis does not produce new philosophical arguments; it names what the cluster’s convergence already establishes and applies it from the governing standpoint Core Stoicism’s theorems supply.

Two features of the cluster are worth marking precisely. First, Huemer’s fully clean profile is reached by a secular, phenomenological route — moral seemings as prima facie evidence of moral reality, on direct analogy with perceptual seemings — that requires none of the natural law, Thomistic, or theological frameworks the other high-alignment figures employ. This means the classical commitments are recoverable from within analytic philosophy itself, not only from within traditions that explicitly inherit the ancient or medieval synthesis. Second, Parfit’s profile — the strongest moral realism in the cluster (four Aligned at C3, C4, C5, C6) bundled with the one Contrary (C1, reductionist personal identity) that produces Partial Dissolution — is the clearest demonstration of the stakes of Total Internal Contestation at the foundational level: even the most comprehensive moral realism the field has produced is, on this corpus’s analysis, architecturally incomplete without the account of the moral subject it simultaneously denies.


IV. What Consequentialism Gets Wrong, Precisely

The CFA identified the consequentialist tradition as the dominant framework in practical ethics — bioethics, policy ethics, global ethics, and the Singer-influenced effective altruism movement — and as the framework most directly in conflict with Core Stoicism’s governing theorems. The conflict is precise and worth naming exactly rather than as a general disagreement about metaethics.

Th 10 establishes that virtue is the only genuine good, and Th 12 establishes that externals are never genuinely good or evil. Consequentialism evaluates actions by their consequences for welfare or preference satisfaction. Welfare and preference satisfaction are paradigmatic externals in the sense Th 6 names: outcomes not in the agent’s control, subject to the contingencies of circumstance. Th 12 is therefore a direct denial of consequentialism’s governing premise: the good that consequentialism measures and maximizes is not a good at all in the technical sense, and the framework that evaluates actions by their contribution to maximizing it is systematically evaluating the wrong thing.

This is not a dismissal of concern for others’ welfare. Th 26’s preferred indifferents include life, health, and just dealing — and the welfare of the people affected by an agent’s actions is a genuine object of appropriate concern. The Stoic acts to benefit others, cares about the outcomes of that action, and would choose the action that benefits others more over the action that benefits them less, all else equal. What the Stoic does not do is treat the outcome of this action as the location of genuine good. The good is in the will behind the act — in the rational, virtuous intention to benefit others — not in whether the act succeeded. This is not a technicality. Singer’s effective altruism requires precisely that moral evaluation be concentrated on outcomes: giving to the most effective charity is the morally right act because of what it produces, not because of what it expresses about the agent’s will. Sterling’s framework inverts this exactly: the agent who gives to the most effective charity in order to maximize measured welfare impact has done something appropriate; the agent who gives from a genuine, well-formed rational intention to benefit others and then accepts the result as a preferred indifferent outside his control has done something good. The difference is not in the action but in what the action is taken to be the measure of.

The effective altruism movement’s specific form of this error is worth naming. By concentrating moral evaluation on quantified impact — how many quality-adjusted life years does this donation secure? — it produces a framework in which the agent’s actual moral formation, the quality of his rational will, and the integrity of his character are all secondary to whether he has correctly calculated the most impactful use of his resources. This is the control dichotomy’s inversion in its most technically sophisticated contemporary form: moral evaluation is maximally concentrated on external outcomes, and the agent’s prohairesis is treated as an instrument for producing those outcomes rather than as the location of genuine good.


V. The Evolutionary Debunking Challenge and Its Answer

The evolutionary debunking tradition — Street’s Darwinian dilemma, Joyce’s evolutionary account of moral norms — constitutes the most systematic internal challenge to moral realism from within the naturalist tradition, and the CFA correctly identified it as the most technically sophisticated form of the anti-realist displacement at C3 and C6. The argument structure: if our moral intuitions were calibrated by evolutionary pressures to promote reproductive fitness rather than by reliable responsiveness to mind-independent moral facts, there is no reason to suppose they track moral reality. The intuitions we have are the ones that enhanced survival and reproduction; their content is explained by that history, not by the fact that they are true.

Huemer’s phenomenal conservatism and Parfit’s companions-in-guilt strategy are the field’s own best responses to this challenge — both documented in the CPA cluster — but neither reaches the specific answer Sterling’s framework supplies. The Stoic answer to evolutionary debunking is not a defense of the reliability of moral intuitions against causal explanation of their origin. It is a direct denial of the debunking argument’s key premise at C1: the rational faculty whose deliverances constitute direct moral recognition is not, on Sterling’s account, reducible to its evolutionary history. The argument from causal origin — your intuitions were caused by selective pressures rather than by moral reality — presupposes that a causal account of the rational faculty’s origin exhausts what it is. C1 denies this. A faculty that is not exhaustively constituted by its physical and evolutionary conditions is not fully explained by a causal account of those conditions, and the inference from “evolved” to “unreliable as a guide to moral reality” does not go through. This is the answer that the field’s own naturalist constraint prevents it from giving — which is precisely why the debunking argument has remained a live and unresolved challenge within academic Ethics despite decades of sophisticated responses.


VI. Reflective Equilibrium and the Displacement of Direct Recognition

The reflective equilibrium method is the dominant methodological procedure in academic normative ethics. It works toward equilibrium between considered moral judgments and theoretical principles, treating both as revisable in light of the other and aiming at a coherent, mutually supporting system. It is the method employed across the field’s normative traditions — Rawlsian liberalism, consequentialism, and virtue ethics all use it — and it is the specific methodology by which C3’s direct rational recognition of moral truth has been institutionally displaced within academic Ethics.

The displacement is structural rather than merely rhetorical. Under reflective equilibrium, moral intuitions are inputs to a procedure that may revise them: if an intuition conflicts with a sufficiently strong theoretical principle, the intuition is to be abandoned rather than the principle. The procedure is bidirectional in theory but asymmetric in practice: theoretical sophistication tends to override intuitive resistance, which is why Peter Singer’s arguments for radical demands of beneficence and for the moral equivalence of action and omission — both deeply counterintuitive — are treated as live and serious positions within academic Ethics rather than as refuted by the intuitions they violate. C3’s account of direct moral recognition inverts this asymmetry: the strong, widely-shared intuition that there is a morally significant difference between killing and letting die is not a datum to be revised by theoretical argument — it is evidence of a moral reality that the theoretical argument has failed to reach. When an argument leads to a conclusion that strikes virtually every reflective person as monstrous, the right response is not to revise the intuition; it is to find the flaw in the argument. This is Ross’s methodological point in The Right and the Good, and it is what the reflective equilibrium method systematically fails to preserve.


VII. What Is Restored

The CFA named five specific capacities Ethics has lost. The restoration addresses each in turn.

The capacity to conduct normative ethics with a metaethical foundation that vindicates the cognitive status of moral argument. Restored by Th 7’s account of the desire-belief relation: desires are caused by beliefs about good and evil, beliefs are either true or false (C5), and moral argument is the activity of correcting false beliefs about good and evil. Moral argument is therefore not a sophisticated form of preference expression (emotivism), not a rational procedure for constructing moral norms (constructivism), and not an evolutionary artifact (debunking) — it is the cognitive activity most directly constitutive of the moral life, vindicating its own status by the same standard that vindicates any other truth-directed inquiry.

The capacity to distinguish genuine moral understanding from sophisticated rationalization. Restored by the discipline of assent and its foundational bedrock (C3, C4, C5, C6 together): moral understanding consists in the direct recognition of moral truth and the correct formation of moral belief; sophisticated rationalization consists in the construction of an internally coherent argument whose premises have not been examined for correspondence to moral reality. The distinction is not between more and less sophisticated argument but between argument that tracks moral reality and argument that tracks internal coherence. A perfectly valid argument from false premises is rationalization regardless of its technical sophistication; a direct, non-inferential recognition of moral truth is genuine moral understanding regardless of how inelegantly it can be stated. This distinction is precisely what the reflective equilibrium method, with its symmetric revisability of intuitions and principles, is structurally unable to preserve.

The capacity to ground moral responsibility in something stronger than compatibilist freedom. Restored by C2’s libertarian account of the origination of assent: genuine moral responsibility requires that the agent is the genuine originator of his judgments about good and evil, not merely that his judgments are causally connected to his character in the right way. Compatibilist accounts of freedom preserve the form of moral responsibility while emptying it of the specific content that Th 27’s account of virtue requires: virtue as a rational act of will demands a will that is genuinely self-originating, not merely unconstrained by external coercion.

The capacity to treat moral formation as genuine rational self-governance rather than as conditioning optimization. Restored by the discipline of assent as a practical activity: moral formation is the training of the rational faculty to assent correctly to kataleptic moral impressions and to withhold assent from false value judgments. This is self-governance in the precise sense — governance by the self’s own rational activity, not governance of the self by external conditioning, behavioral incentives, or social pressure. The behavioral ethics and nudge traditions, which treat moral behavior improvement as a matter of choice architecture design, represent the institutionalization of the opposite account: moral improvement by rearrangement of external conditions acting on the agent’s decision environment rather than by correction of the agent’s own judgments.

The capacity to give a unified account of what moral inquiry is for. Restored by Th 10 and Th 27 together: moral inquiry is for the formation of a rational will in whose acts of will alone genuine good is located. This is not a procedural account (moral inquiry is for reaching agreement), not a consequentialist account (moral inquiry is for maximizing welfare), and not a constructivist account (moral inquiry is for deriving principles rational agents could not reject). It is a teleological account in the strict sense: moral inquiry has a telos, which is the perfection of the rational faculty whose acts of will constitute virtue. Everything the field’s surviving traditions have genuinely achieved — the moral realism revival’s defense of objective moral facts, the neo-Aristotelian tradition’s account of character and flourishing, the intuitionist tradition’s account of direct moral recognition, the natural law tradition’s account of objective human telos — is a contribution to that single project, whether or not any of those traditions has named it as such.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Instrument architecture and analysis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude.