The Six Commitments and the Three Foundations
The Six Commitments and the Three Foundations
Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Analysis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.
Sterling’s Stoicism rests on three foundational claims: that only internal things are in our control; that unhappiness is caused by falsely believing that externals are good or evil; and that getting our assents right guarantees eudaimonia. These three claims are not merely the entry points to Stoic practice — they are its entire architecture. Every theorem, every instrument, every discipline derives from them. What is less immediately visible is that the three foundations themselves require philosophical support. They are not self-standing assertions. The six philosophical commitments — substance dualism, libertarian free will, moral realism, correspondence theory of truth, ethical intuitionism, and foundationalism — are what the three foundations require in order to stand. Each commitment is the philosophical ground of a specific structural element. Remove any one of them and a specific element of the three foundations gives way.
Foundation One: Only Internal Things Are in Our Control
The first foundation draws a line. On one side: beliefs, desires, acts of will — everything the agent originates in the rational faculty. On the other side: body, property, reputation, outcomes, the behavior of others. Epictetus calls this distinction the most fundamental fact about the human situation. Sterling’s Theorem 6 formalizes it: the only things in our control are our beliefs and our acts of will.
The line requires substance dualism to be real. If the mind is a brain state, then mental events are physical events, subject to physical causation, determined by prior physical conditions. On that account, “beliefs and acts of will” belong to the same causal web as the body, property, and external events. There is no principled boundary. The dichotomy of control dissolves into a difference of degree — some things more directly accessible, some less — rather than a genuine ontological divide. Substance dualism is what makes the boundary a boundary: the rational faculty is a distinct substance with its own causal powers, not reducible to or constituted by anything external to it. The line is real because the distinction between substances is real.
The first foundation also requires libertarian free will. “In our control” cannot mean merely “caused by internal states rather than external compulsion.” That is the compatibilist reading, and it is insufficient for Sterling’s purposes. If the agent’s assent is determined by prior causes — even internal ones — then the agent who judges correctly was always going to do so, and the agent who judges falsely could not have done otherwise. The dichotomy describes a topology of causation, not a domain of genuine origination. Libertarian free will is what makes “in our control” mean that the agent is the genuine first cause of the act — that he could have judged otherwise, that the correct judgment is something he achieves rather than something that happens to him. Without this, the first foundation produces a map of the self that the agent cannot actually use.
Foundation Two: Unhappiness Is Caused by Falsely Believing That Externals Are Good or Evil
The second foundation is the causal heart of the framework. Theorem 10 establishes that virtue is the only genuine good and vice the only genuine evil. Theorem 12 follows: things not in our control are never good or evil. Therefore all beliefs that externals have value are false beliefs, and the pathological emotions caused by those beliefs are responses to false judgments. The agent who fears the loss of his reputation is not responding appropriately to a real threat. He is responding, with the full force of an emotion, to something that is not there.
The word falsely carries the entire normative weight of the framework. The claim is not that believing externals are good or evil is psychologically counterproductive, or strategically unwise, or socially conditioned. The claim is that it is factually false. This requires moral realism. Theorem 10 must state a fact about moral reality — an objective truth that holds independently of what any agent believes, prefers, or constructs. If “only virtue is good” is a useful organizing principle, or a cultural preference, or a hypothesis adopted for its therapeutic effects, then the belief that externals are good or evil is not false. It is simply a different preference, equally valid from within its own framework. The demand that false value beliefs be corrected loses all force the moment moral realism is abandoned. There is no longer anything to be corrected against. Moral realism is what makes the correction rational rather than an imposition.
The identification of beliefs as false requires correspondence theory of truth. A belief is false when it fails to correspond to reality. The impression that a reputation loss is a genuine evil makes a truth claim about the moral status of reputation. Correspondence theory is what makes that claim testable: does it correspond to how things actually are? Theorem 10 specifies that it does not. The verdict of the framework is not “this impression is unhelpful” but “this impression fails to correspond to moral reality.” Without correspondence theory, the framework has no account of what makes value impressions false rather than merely inconvenient or unfashionable.
The recognition of which beliefs are false requires ethical intuitionism. The agent must be able to apprehend directly that virtue is the only genuine good. Sterling identifies the foundational theorems of Core Stoicism as unprovable fundamental postulates defensible only by appeal to intuition of their truth. Theorem 10 is foundational in exactly this sense: it is directly apprehended, not derived from prior premises. Without ethical intuitionism, the agent examining an impression has no secure epistemic access to the moral facts against which the impression is to be tested. He can reason toward those facts, but reasoning from disputed premises produces conclusions of uncertain standing. The examination requires a standard the agent can actually see to be true. Ethical intuitionism is what makes that seeing possible.
The systematic organization of which beliefs are false requires foundationalism. False beliefs are not an undifferentiated mass. They are organized in a dependency structure. Theorem 12 derives from Theorem 10. Theorem 13 — that desiring things out of our control is irrational — derives from Theorems 9 and 12. When the agent examines a specific value impression, the examination traces it to the foundational theorem it contradicts. Without foundationalism, the agent knows something is wrong but cannot locate the structural source of the error. Corrections remain peripheral, addressing the symptom rather than the root. Sterling notes explicitly in Core Stoicism that denying one theorem collapses others, because they interconnect in a foundational dependency structure. Foundationalism is what makes the correction of false beliefs systematic rather than case-by-case.
Foundation Three: Getting Our Assents Right Guarantees Eudaimonia
The third foundation is the practical payoff. Assent — the act of the rational faculty in response to an impression — is the only thing fully in the agent’s control. Everything critical to the best possible life is contained in that one act. Getting it right consistently produces no pathological emotions, virtuous action, and the continual positive feeling appropriate to the agent who sees and acts on the truth. This is eudaimonia. The guarantee is unconditional: not “if external conditions cooperate” but “if the agent judges correctly.”
The guarantee requires that correct judgment actually be available to the agent regardless of external conditions. This returns all five of the preceding commitments to the analysis, now in their positive mode rather than their defensive one.
Substance dualism makes the rational faculty prior to all external conditions. A slave, a prisoner, a person dying of illness can judge correctly, because the rational faculty is not constituted by any of those conditions. The guarantee extends to every possible external situation because the seat of judgment is distinct from the situation.
Libertarian free will makes the guarantee a real promise rather than a predetermined outcome. If assent is determined by prior causes, the agent who gets his assents right was always going to do so — and the agent who fails was always going to fail. The guarantee becomes a description of how things will turn out, not a prescription the agent can act on. Libertarian free will is what makes it meaningful to say: the agent can choose to judge correctly, and if he does, the consequences follow necessarily.
Ethical intuitionism makes the correct assent immediately accessible. The agent does not need extended inference, empirical investigation, or favorable social conditions to know what the moral facts are. The foundational truth that virtue is the only genuine good is available to the rational faculty that attends to it, at any moment, in any external circumstances. This is what makes the guarantee immediate rather than conditional on philosophical preparation: the access is direct.
Foundationalism makes the correct assent stable. The agent who has located the foundational truths has a standard that does not shift. Sophisticated rationalizations cannot dislodge a directly apprehended foundational truth, because it is not the conclusion of an argument — it is the premise from which arguments proceed. The stability of the guarantee across a life of practice depends on the stability of the standard.
Correspondence theory makes the correct assent meaningful. Getting one’s assents right means aligning them with how things actually are. The joy that follows correct assent is not a psychological trick. It is the appropriate response to genuine good, apprehended as such. The guarantee is not that correct judgment will feel better. It is that correct judgment will be correct — aligned with moral reality — and that such alignment constitutes the best possible life.
Moral realism closes the guarantee. The third foundation works because virtue is objectively good. If virtue were merely a preferred organizing principle, then the joy produced by virtuous action and the distress produced by external loss would be equally legitimate expressions of the agent’s preferences — and the guarantee would collapse into a preference for one emotional register over another. Moral realism is what makes the guarantee asymmetric: virtuous action produces appropriate positive feeling because virtue is genuinely good; external loss does not produce genuine harm because externals are genuinely indifferent. The asymmetry is not chosen. It is a fact about how things are.
The Structure as a Whole
The six commitments are not additions to the three foundations. They are what the foundations require to stand. Substance dualism and libertarian free will provide the ontological account of what “in our control” means. Moral realism and correspondence theory provide the alethic account of what makes value beliefs false. Ethical intuitionism and foundationalism provide the epistemic account of how the agent can know which beliefs are false and systematically correct them.
None of this is philosophical ornamentation. Ancient Stoic ethics was grounded in ancient Stoic physics: a materialist cosmology in which the universe was a single rational organism, matter permeated by pneuma, everything determined by the divine logos. That physics is not defensible. Sterling’s reconstruction strips it away and replaces it with six commitments drawn from defensible classical philosophy. What remains is not Stoicism weakened by the loss of its foundations. What remains is Stoicism with its philosophical skeleton made visible — the skeleton that was always present beneath the ancient cosmology, now articulated in terms that do not require anyone to believe in fiery pneuma or the rational fire that permeates the cosmos.
Remove any commitment and a specific element of the three foundations gives way. Remove substance dualism and there is no principled boundary between self and external; the first foundation collapses. Remove libertarian free will and “in our control” becomes compatibilist description rather than genuine agency; the guarantee of the third foundation is vacuous. Remove moral realism and “falsely” in the second foundation loses its force; the correction has nothing to be correct against. Remove correspondence theory and there is no account of what makes value impressions false rather than merely unhelpful. Remove ethical intuitionism and the examination of impressions has no secure epistemic access to moral reality; it stalls at the point of needing a standard. Remove foundationalism and corrections remain peripheral rather than structural; the false beliefs are addressed case-by-case rather than at their root.
The framework holds because all six commitments hold together. Each is load-bearing. Each sustains a specific element of the foundational structure. The three foundations state what Sterling’s Stoicism claims. The six commitments state what the three foundations require to be true. Together they constitute a single philosophical structure — rigorous, integrated, and indivisible.
Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Analysis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.

