Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Thursday, May 28, 2026

Scholar Field Instrument — Robert Audi and Ethical Intuitionism

 

Scholar Field Instrument — Robert Audi and Ethical Intuitionism

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


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

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

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

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

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

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

Political Application Constraint: Confirmed.

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

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 1.


Step 1 — Target Specification

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

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

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

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 2.


Step 2 — Field Synthesis

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

Part A — State of the Field

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

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

Part B — Argument Inventory

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

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

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

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

Part C — Pressure Points and Open Questions

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

Part D — Historical Development

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

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

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 3.


Step 3 — Philosopher Record Layer

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

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

Mapping:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 4.


Step 4 — Juxtaposition

Part A — What the Field Shows

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

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

Part B — What Audi Shows Within the Field

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

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

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

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

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

Part C — What the Juxtaposition Reveals

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 5.


Step 5 — Expert Validation Gap Declaration

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Self-Audit Complete. SFI run complete.


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

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Scholar Field Instrument — Michael Huemer and Ethical Intuitionism

 

Scholar Field Instrument — Michael Huemer and Ethical Intuitionism

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


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Target philosopher: Michael Huemer, University of Colorado, Boulder.

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

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

CPA context: A full-record Classical Presupposition Audit has been completed on Huemer. All six classical philosophical commitments were found Aligned; the dissolution finding was No Dissolution. Noted here as context only. It does not govern this run.

Independence note: Huemer’s 2009 article “Apology of a Modest Intuitionist,” was read as part Apology of a Modest Intuitionist, Field Synthesis produced at Step 2 ranges the contemporary field as a whole, independently of Huemer’s specific arguments. The Philosopher Record Layer at Step 3 draws on his full published record, including works not previously examined.

Political Application Constraint: Confirmed. Sterling’s name is not associated with political applications in this output.

Self-Audit — Step 0: Target philosopher named. Target commitment specified and scoped to one commitment. Audience confirmed as non-professional. CPA context noted. Political Application Constraint confirmed.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 1.


Step 1 — Target Specification

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

Primary sources for Field Synthesis: The historical foundation of the contemporary debate: G.E. Moore, W.D. Ross, H.A. Prichard, Henry Sidgwick. Contemporary anti-realist positions: A.J. Ayer, Simon Blackburn, Allan Gibbard, Sharon Street, Richard Joyce, Mark Schroeder. Contemporary naturalist realism: Peter Railton, Nicholas Sturgeon, Richard Boyd. Contemporary non-naturalist and intuitionist realism: Robert Audi, David Enoch, Russ Shafer-Landau, Ralph Wedgwood, David McNaughton, Derek Parfit (late work).

Scope: The contemporary analytic debate from the early twentieth century to the present, with the fall and revival of intuitionism as the historical frame. Historical antecedents are noted where they bear directly on the contemporary debate.

Self-Audit — Step 1: Target stated in propositional form. Scope boundaries stated. Historical depth specified. Philosopher’s specific work not consulted at this step.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 2.


Step 2 — Field Synthesis

Part A — State of the Field

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

The minority that defends something like ethical intuitionism is real and has been growing since the 1990s. Philosophers including Robert Audi, David Enoch, Russ Shafer-Landau, Ralph Wedgwood, and David McNaughton have defended non-naturalist moral realism in forms that require intuitionism at the epistemological level, even when they do not use the word. The revival is sometimes called “third wave” intuitionism to distinguish it from the classical British intuitionism of the early twentieth century. But the revival remains a minority against a large and well-resourced opposition.

Part B — Argument Inventory

The historical foundation. Ethical intuitionism entered the twentieth century as a dominant position in British moral philosophy. G.E. Moore’s Principia Ethica (1903) established the core non-naturalist claim through the open question argument: for any natural property N, it remains an open question whether something that has N is actually good — which suggests that “good” cannot be defined in natural terms. H.A. Prichard argued in “Does Moral Philosophy Rest on a Mistake?” (1912) that our knowledge of moral obligations is immediate and non-inferential — we either see that we are obligated or we do not, and no further argument can settle the matter. W.D. Ross’s The Right and the Good (1930) developed the most influential intuitionist system of the period: a set of prima facie duties (fidelity, reparation, gratitude, non-maleficence, beneficence, justice, self-improvement) each of which is self-evidently obligating, with actual duty in any situation determined by the balance of prima facie duties in play.

The fall. The dominant position of intuitionism ended abruptly in the 1930s with the rise of logical positivism and emotivism. A.J. Ayer’s Language, Truth and Logic (1936) applied the verificationist criterion of meaning to moral claims: a proposition is meaningful only if it is either analytically true or empirically verifiable. Moral claims are neither. Therefore, moral claims are not genuine propositions — they are expressions of attitude, not statements of fact. Intuitionism, on this account, mistakes expressions of emotion for apprehensions of non-natural fact. C.L. Stevenson developed a more sophisticated emotivism; R.M. Hare developed prescriptivism. John Mackie’s Ethics: Inventing Right and Wrong (1977) pressed the “queerness” argument: if there were objective moral facts of the kind intuitionists describe, they would be metaphysically unprecedented — entities of a sui generis kind, attached to natural facts by no intelligible relation. And we would need a correspondingly sui generis faculty to perceive them. The combination of metaphysical and epistemological queerness, Mackie argued, makes moral realism implausible.

The contemporary opposition. Modern anti-intuitionism takes several forms. Simon Blackburn’s quasi-realism and Allan Gibbard’s norm expressivism are the most philosophically sophisticated anti-realist positions: they aim to earn the right to talk as though moral claims are true or false without committing to moral facts in the realist sense. Mark Schroeder defends a Humean theory of reasons that reduces normative facts to facts about desires. Sharon Street’s evolutionary debunking argument (2006) is arguably the most significant contemporary challenge to moral realism and intuitionism in particular: natural selection shaped our evaluative attitudes to track reproductive fitness, not moral truth; if moral facts are mind-independent, there is no reason to expect the attitudes evolution produced to track them; therefore, either moral realism is false or our confidence in our moral judgments is deeply undermined. Richard Joyce presses a related argument from evolutionary psychology. These arguments do not merely challenge intuitionism’s epistemology — they challenge the entire non-naturalist realist project of which intuitionism is the epistemological arm.

Arguments for the commitment in the contemporary field. The open question argument remains a resource, though it has been contested. More influential in the contemporary revival are three arguments. First, the companions-in-guilt argument: if moral intuitions are unreliable because they are not empirically verifiable, then mathematical and logical intuitions face the same problem; but no one seriously abandons mathematics; therefore the criterion that disqualifies moral intuitions is too strong. Second, the indispensability argument: moral reasoning cannot begin without some non-inferential moral premises; even ethical naturalists rely on intuitions to select and test their naturalistic accounts; intuitionism simply makes this dependence explicit and honest. Third, the self-defeat argument pressed particularly by Huemer’s branch of the revival: every alternative epistemology of morals either relies on intuitions covertly or collapses into skepticism; therefore, the principled rejection of moral intuition is self-undermining.

Part C — Pressure Points and Open Questions

The evolutionary debunking challenge is the most sustained contemporary pressure on intuitionism. Street’s argument forces a dilemma: either our evaluative attitudes were shaped by evolution to track moral truth (requiring an explanatory connection between evolution and moral facts that looks mysterious), or they were not (in which case our confidence in moral intuitions is massively deflated). Intuitionists have responded by distinguishing between intuitions that are plausibly explained by evolutionary pressures and those that are not — the transitivity of value relations, the pro tanto goodness of conscious experience, the basic wrongness of gratuitous cruelty. Whether this distinction survives close scrutiny is a live dispute.

The selection problem is an internal pressure: if not all intuitions are reliable, which ones are? And who decides? Any procedure for selecting reliable intuitions will itself rely on intuitions, raising the question of circularity. Ross handled this by restricting strong intuitionist claims to very general principles; contemporary intuitionists have developed more nuanced accounts, but the problem has not been solved to general satisfaction.

The supervenience problem remains open: moral properties supervene on natural properties (the same natural facts cannot support different moral facts), but if moral properties are non-natural, what explains this dependence? Intuitionists have proposed various accounts, none of which has gained consensus.

The relationship between intuitionism and moral particularism (Jonathan Dancy) is unresolved: if moral reasons are context-dependent in the way particularists claim, the intuitionist’s general self-evident principles may be too crude to capture the structure of moral reality.

Part D — Historical Development

The cultural displacement of intuitionism was rapid and thorough. In the 1920s, any educated philosopher would have recognized intuitionism as the dominant metaethical position in the British tradition. By the 1950s, it was a position held mostly by those who had been trained before logical positivism arrived. The verificationist weapon was decisive not because it refuted intuitionism on its own terms — it assumed that meaningful claims must be empirically verifiable, and this assumption was itself never verified — but because it redrew the map of what counted as a philosophically serious position. Intuitionism fell from the new map not through philosophical defeat but through a change in the standards by which philosophical seriousness was measured. The verificationist criterion later collapsed under its own weight: the criterion itself is neither analytically true nor empirically verifiable, and therefore, by its own standard, meaningless. But the collapse of the weapon did not automatically restore the position it had displaced. The damage was done by the cultural conditions under which the new map was drawn, not by the weight of the arguments alone.

Self-Audit — Step 2: Philosopher’s specific arguments were not the source of the Field Synthesis — the synthesis ranges the field as a whole. All claims are traceable to identifiable positions in the contemporary literature. The minority status of intuitionism has been represented accurately, not suppressed. No verdicts on whether intuitionism is correct have been issued.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 3.


Step 3 — Philosopher Record Layer

Sources consulted: Ethical Intuitionism (Palgrave Macmillan, 2005); “Apology of a Modest Intuitionist,” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research (2009); “Revisionary Intuitionism,” Social Philosophy and Policy (2008); “Compassionate Phenomenal Conservatism,” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research (2007); “Phenomenal Conservatism and the Internalist Intuition,” American Philosophical Quarterly (2006); Knowledge, Reality, and Value (Open Court, 2021); Fake Nous (fakenous.substack.com), selected posts.

Coverage gap: Huemer’s full Substack archive was not ranged exhaustively. Individual posts not sampled may contain positions not captured here.

Mapping:

Convergence — The historical narrative. Huemer’s account of intuitionism’s fall in the twentieth century and its recent revival matches the Field Synthesis at every point. He names Moore, Ross, Prichard, and Sidgwick as the classical foundation; identifies emotivism and logical positivism as the forces of displacement; and situates his own work within the contemporary revival. He adds the specific mechanism by which displacement occurred: cultural and personal biases operating before argument, shaping which theories received sympathetic investigation. This is a Convergence with the Field Synthesis’s Part D finding — that the displacement was not primarily a philosophical defeat.

Convergence — The distinction between reliable and unreliable intuitions. The Field Synthesis identified the selection problem as a live internal pressure: if not all intuitions are reliable, which ones are? Huemer’s documented response converges with the direction the field’s minority has taken. He distinguishes intuitions produced by rational reflection on concepts from intuitions explained by evolutionary pressures, emotional bias, or psychologically irrelevant factors. Transitivity of the better-than relation, the pro tanto goodness of conscious enjoyment, the ceteris paribus preference for benefiting over harming a conscious being — these, he argues, are products of conceptual reflection in the way mathematical intuitions are, and are not plausibly explained as evolutionary artifacts.

Convergence — The revisionary stance. Huemer explicitly positions himself as a “revisionary intuitionist,” distinguished from classical intuitionists like Ross and Prichard who aimed to defend common sense morality substantially as it stands. He takes the Sidgwickian position: intuitionism does not require defending every widely-held moral intuition. Many intuitions are wrong. The task is to build on the most reliable ones, not to vindicate the whole of received moral opinion. This is a Convergence with the field’s recognition that the selection problem is real and that an intuitionist must take it seriously.

Divergence — The epistemological ground of intuitionism. The dominant approach among contemporary intuitionists in the revival — Robert Audi most prominently — works within a roughly Rossian framework, defending self-evident moral principles on broadly Rossian grounds. Huemer’s epistemological strategy is architecturally different. He grounds intuitionism not in a theory specific to moral knowledge but in Phenomenal Conservatism (PC): the general epistemological thesis that if it seems to S that P and S has no defeaters, S has prima facie justification for believing P. Moral intuitions receive their justificatory standing as a species of appearances, not because of anything special about the moral domain. This is a Divergence from the field’s mainstream intuitionist approach, which tends to defend moral intuition on terms specific to ethics. Huemer’s move generalizes the epistemology at the cost of making the case for moral intuitions dependent on a contested general epistemological thesis.

Divergence — Engagement with the evolutionary debunking challenge. The Field Synthesis identified the evolutionary debunking argument as the most significant contemporary pressure on intuitionism. Huemer’s documented engagement with it, in the 2009 article, focuses on the unreliability of specific psychological studies rather than engaging Street’s dilemma at its root. He argues that only one of the seven studies Joyce cites (the disgust-in-dirty-room study) directly addresses moral judgment, that even that study’s effect was modest, and that we should discount intuitions subject to known biases while retaining the most rationally grounded ones. This is a partial response — it does not fully engage the stronger form of Street’s challenge, which is about the explanatory gap between evolutionary pressures and moral truth, not merely about the psychological reliability of specific intuitions.

Addition — The unity of appearances argument. The Field Synthesis did not independently map an argument of this specific form. Huemer argues that sensory experiences, intellectual intuitions, quasi-memories, and introspective representations all share a common property — being an appearance — in virtue of which they dispose us to believe their contents and in virtue of which they confer prima facie justification. He supports this with a five-case analysis showing that what matters for the disposition to believe is the presence of an appearance-state, not its specific qualia, intentional content, or causal mechanism. The epistemological equivalence of perceptual and moral intuition is established by this argument, not merely asserted. This is a genuine philosophical contribution the Field Synthesis did not anticipate.

Addition — The negative program of elimination. Huemer’s systematic argument against every non-intuitive route to moral knowledge — observation, conceptual analysis, deduction from non-moral claims, and inference to the best explanation from non-moral claims — is a specific argumentative structure the Field Synthesis did not map as a named strategy. The argument establishes intuitionism not by directly defending it but by ruling out all alternatives. This is an independent and significant argumentative contribution.

Addition — The self-defeat argument for Phenomenal Conservatism. Huemer argues that any alternative epistemology — reliabilism, coherentism, the acquaintance theory — must itself rely on appearances to get off the ground; therefore, any epistemology that rejects PC is self-defeating. This argument is specific to Huemer’s philosophical project and was not independently mapped in the Field Synthesis.

Extension — The cultural displacement thesis as an account of philosophical fashion. Huemer hypothesizes that cultural and personal biases play a larger role in determining philosophical trends than do the objective features of philosophical arguments — not because philosophers ignore argument, but because biases shape which theories receive sympathetic investigation before argument begins. This goes beyond what the Field Synthesis mapped in its historical account of intuitionism’s fall. As a sociological claim about professional philosophy, it is not directly supported by the primary sources of either side of the debate — it is Huemer’s own explanatory hypothesis about why the field looks as it does.

Self-Audit — Step 3: All philosopher record claims are traceable to his documented public record with specific sources identified. Field Subordination has not occurred — Huemer’s work is the comparison layer, not the field. Addition findings have been identified honestly including contributions the Field Synthesis did not anticipate. Scope Drift has not occurred — no verdict on Huemer’s positions has been issued.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 4.


Step 4 — Juxtaposition

Part A — What the Field Shows

The contemporary field on ethical intuitionism is a story in three acts. In the first, intuitionism was the dominant position: British moral philosophy from Moore through Ross operated on the assumption that some moral truths are directly apprehensible by the rational faculty, that these truths are self-evident to careful reflection, and that moral knowledge does not require reduction to natural facts or derivation from empirical premises. The second act was rapid and almost total displacement. Logical positivism’s verificationist criterion of meaning arrived and declared the entire intuitionist project unintelligible: moral claims are neither analytically true nor empirically verifiable, and therefore not genuine claims at all. Emotivism and its successors filled the vacancy. The professional consensus shifted with remarkable speed, and within a generation intuitionism was a position most analytic philosophers regarded as having been disposed of. The verificationist criterion eventually collapsed under its own weight — it failed to satisfy its own standard — but the collapse of the weapon did not restore the position it had defeated. The professional culture had moved on.

In the third act, now underway, a minority of contemporary philosophers has been rebuilding the intuitionist case. They work against a field in which both sophisticated anti-realism and ethical naturalism have had decades to develop complex defensive positions. The revival is philosophically serious. But it is a minority rebuilding, not a restoration. The pressure points are real: the evolutionary debunking challenge presses the question of whether intuitions track moral facts or merely fitness-enhancing responses; the selection problem presses the question of which intuitions are trustworthy and by what criterion; the supervenience problem presses the question of how non-natural properties relate to natural ones. These questions do not have settled answers. The field is a contested landscape, and the contemporary intuitionist who enters it is doing philosophy against the current.

Part B — What Huemer Shows Within the Field

Against this background, Huemer’s engagement becomes legible in a way it is not when read in isolation.

His first distinctive move is to shift the epistemological ground. Most contemporary intuitionists defend moral intuition on terms specific to ethics — self-evidence, the authority of considered judgments, the Rossian framework of prima facie duties. Huemer builds the defense on a general epistemological principle: Phenomenal Conservatism, the thesis that appearing-true generates prima facie justification for any class of beliefs. On his account, moral intuitions do not need to earn special epistemological standing. They earn the same standing that sensory experience earns, by the same mechanism: they are appearances, and appearances confer justification. This move has a distinctive advantage — it avoids the charge that intuitionism posits a mysterious moral faculty operating by special rules — but it requires defending a contested general epistemological position as the foundation. He is defending intuitionism by first defending Phenomenal Conservatism. His adversaries in the debate know this and engage him at that level.

His second distinctive move is the negative program. Rather than arguing directly for intuitionism, he systematically eliminates every alternative. Observation, conceptual analysis, deduction from non-moral claims, inference to the best explanation from non-moral claims — each route to moral knowledge is argued to fail. What remains is intuition. This is an argumentative strategy the field has engaged but Huemer has pressed with particular systematic force: the case for intuitionism is partly the case against everything else.

The Addition findings from Step 3 are the most significant part of Huemer’s record for the non-professional reader. The unity of appearances argument — showing that it is the property of being-an-appearance, and not the specific qualia or causal origin of a mental state, that is relevant to justification — is a precise philosophical result the Field Synthesis did not anticipate. The self-defeat argument for Phenomenal Conservatism — that any epistemology rejecting it must rely on it to get started — is a distinctive argumentative structure that gives Huemer’s position a kind of methodological immunity: if you try to refute PC by appealing to a competing epistemological account, you are already relying on PC’s basic principle.

His revisionary intuitionism also marks a deliberate departure from the classical tradition he is reviving. Ross and Prichard largely aimed to vindicate common sense morality. Huemer is explicitly willing to revise substantial portions of received moral opinion and to follow the reliable intuitions where they lead, even if they lead to conclusions that conflict with prevailing views. He is not defending the moral status quo. He is defending a method for moral knowledge that may overturn the status quo.

Part C — What the Juxtaposition Reveals

The juxtaposition of field and philosopher reveals something a reader of either alone would miss.

Reading the field alone, the non-professional reader sees an apparent consensus: ethical intuitionism is a minority position that most professional philosophers regard as having been superseded. The weight of sophisticated opposition — the evolutionary debunking challenge, the naturalist program, the anti-realist tradition — appears to reflect a genuine philosophical reckoning in which the intuitionists lost. The field map, read alone, can produce this impression.

Reading Huemer alone, without the field map, the non-professional reader sees a confident defense of a position whose scope and stakes are unclear. The arguments are compelling in the reading but their place in the larger conversation is invisible. Why is this even controversial? What is being resisted and by whom?

Together, the picture is different. The reader sees that the field’s apparent consensus against intuitionism was largely produced not by decisive philosophical refutation but by a weapon — verificationism — that later collapsed on its own terms. The professional consensus, once produced, has enormous inertial force: it shapes which positions receive sympathetic investigation, which arguments seem initially plausible, which theoretical programs attract talented philosophical labor. Huemer argues explicitly that this is the mechanism by which intuitionism remained marginalized after its initial displacement — not because the arguments against it are conclusive, but because the cultural conditions of professional philosophy favor theories that give philosophers more to do. Non-cognitivism and naturalism generate rich research programs; intuitionism threatens to deliver a cleaner answer faster. Philosophers, like all professionals, have interests in complexity.

What the reader gains from the juxtaposition, specifically, is this: a map of which objections to intuitionism are philosophically serious and which are historically contingent artifacts of the field’s development. The evolutionary debunking challenge is a serious objection that Huemer’s documented record addresses only partially. The verificationist heritage is not a serious objection — the criterion is gone — but its cultural effects linger. The queerness argument has been substantially addressed by contemporary non-naturalists. The selection problem is real and remains open. A non-professional reader who has only the field map cannot distinguish these. With the juxtaposition, the distinction becomes visible.

Self-Audit — Step 4: The Juxtaposition is addressed to the non-professional reader, not to Huemer. Conclusions have been made available, not imposed. No verdict on whether intuitionism is correct has been issued. The Addition findings from Step 3 appear in Part B as evidence of the human judgment layer. Reader Condescension has not occurred.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 5.


Step 5 — Expert Validation Gap Declaration

The following gaps are declared to the reader. Each identifies what expert philosophical judgment is needed and why the instrument cannot supply it.

Most consequential gap — Argumentative gap on Phenomenal Conservatism. Huemer’s entire defense of intuitionism rests on Phenomenal Conservatism as its epistemological foundation. Whether PC is defensible — whether the appearance of truth is really sufficient for prima facie justification without further conditions — is a contested question in contemporary epistemology. The Field Synthesis has mapped the objections to intuitionism; those objections can be redirected at PC. Whether Huemer’s responses succeed requires philosophical judgment the instrument cannot issue. A reader who finds PC implausible will find Huemer’s entire defense of intuitionism undermined at the foundation. A reader who finds PC compelling will find the case for intuitionism substantially advanced. The instrument does not adjudicate this.

Second gap — Argumentative gap on the evolutionary debunking challenge. The instrument’s assessment of Huemer’s engagement with the evolutionary debunking challenge as “partial” is itself a judgment call. Huemer may have addressed the challenge more fully in works not ranged in this run, or his targeted response to the psychological studies may constitute a more complete answer than the instrument has assessed. A philosopher with expertise in evolutionary epistemology and the contemporary debate between Street, Joyce, and their interlocutors is better positioned than the instrument to evaluate whether Huemer’s response is adequate.

Third gap — Scope gap on which intuitions survive selection. Huemer argues that certain rational intuitions — the transitivity of value relations, the pro tanto goodness of conscious experience — are products of conceptual reflection not plausibly explained by evolutionary pressures or emotional bias, and therefore survive the selection procedure. Whether his specific list of survivor intuitions is correct, and whether his criterion for identifying them is defensible, requires judgment about both the philosophy and the relevant empirical psychology. The instrument cannot supply this judgment.

Fourth gap — Coverage gap. Huemer’s full Substack archive at Fake Nous was not exhaustively sampled. His Ethical Intuitionism (2005) was ranged through secondary sources and the 2009 response article rather than directly in full. Positions developed or revised in those sources not fully sampled may not be captured in the Philosopher Record Layer.

The reader should hold the Juxtaposition produced here as a structured starting point, not a settled account. What the instrument has produced is a map of the field and a placement of Huemer’s documented positions within it. The map is the instrument’s honest contribution. The gaps declare, specifically, where the map ends and where the reader’s own engagement — or a philosopher’s expert judgment — must begin. That declaration is not a disclaimer. It is the instrument’s account of what honest AI output looks like when it names its limits structurally.

Self-Audit — Step 5: Gaps are specific rather than generic. The most consequential gap (PC as Huemer’s epistemological foundation) has been identified and declared first. The declaration is addressed to the reader. Gap Minimization has not occurred — the PC gap is genuinely the most significant and has been treated as such. Gap Inflation has not occurred — the Field Synthesis and Philosopher Record Layer are substantive independent of the gaps.

Self-Audit Complete. SFI run complete.


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

The Scholar Field Instrument (SFI) — Version 1.0

 

The Scholar Field Instrument (SFI) — Version 1.0

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


I. Purpose and Governing Question

The Scholar Field Instrument (SFI) is a publication and corpus instrument. Its governing question is:

What does the contemporary argumentative field on a given philosophical commitment look like, what has a professional philosopher chosen to argue within that field, and what does the juxtaposition of those two things show a non-professional reader about navigating philosophical territory?

The SFI is addressed to non-professional philosophers who engage serious philosophical questions without the resources of professional academic training. Its purpose is to make two things simultaneously visible: what AI can map quickly across a contemporary philosophical field, and what a professional philosopher has independently chosen to argue within that field — choices that the field map alone cannot generate or explain. The juxtaposition of field and philosopher is the instrument’s core contribution.

The SFI operates at the level of contemporary analytic philosophy. It maps living debates, documented positions, and argumentative choices made by named professional philosophers who are active proponents of one or more of the six classical philosophical commitments that ground Sterling’s reconstruction of Stoicism. It does not operate at the ancient historical-textual layer, which is the domain of the Scholar Engagement Instrument (SEI).

The necessity of human judgment is demonstrated structurally. The reader sees that the field map and the philosopher’s engagement with it are two distinct things — and that the second cannot be derived from the first. What the philosopher has chosen to argue, emphasize, and set aside within the field is the exercise of expert judgment the instrument explicitly cannot replicate. The gap declaration makes this visible.


II. What the SFI Is Not

The SFI is not an audit instrument. It does not evaluate the philosopher’s presuppositions, findings, or philosophical commitments against the six classical commitments. That function belongs to the Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA). Where a CPA has been run on the philosopher, its findings may be noted as context at Step 0; they do not govern the SFI run.

The SFI is not a verdict instrument. It does not issue findings of Aligned, Contrary, or Partially Aligned. Its output categories are descriptive: what the field contains, what the philosopher argues within it, what the juxtaposition reveals.

The SFI is not addressed to the philosopher. The philosopher is the subject of the run, not its audience. An SFI run that is written as though the philosopher will evaluate it has misidentified its reader.

The SFI is not a demonstration of AI superiority to professional philosophical judgment. The field map is what AI can contribute independently. The philosopher’s choices and judgments are what AI cannot generate from the field alone. The instrument exists to show both halves simultaneously — not to elevate one at the expense of the other.

The SFI does not generate verdicts on whether the philosopher’s positions are correct. Adjudicating contested philosophical positions is outside the instrument’s scope and beyond what it can honestly produce. Positions within the field are described; the philosopher’s choices within the field are mapped; the juxtaposition is produced. The reader evaluates.


III. The Architecture

The SFI produces output in three layers, in strict sequence. Mixing the layers is a named failure mode.

Layer One — Field Synthesis. AI ranges across the contemporary philosophical literature on the target commitment independently, before consulting the philosopher’s documented work. The synthesis maps the argumentative landscape: the main positions, the primary arguments for and against the commitment, the principal interlocutors, the historical development of the contemporary debate, and the pressure points and open questions that the field has not settled. The field synthesis is produced without reference to the philosopher’s specific arguments or choices. Independence is architecturally mandatory.

A standing feature of the Field Synthesis: all six classical commitments are minority positions in contemporary analytic philosophy. The field will generally exhibit more argumentative weight against the commitment than for it. This asymmetry is not a bias of the instrument — it is the accurate state of the field. The synthesis represents it accurately. The philosopher’s choice to defend a minority position is precisely what the Juxtaposition Layer makes visible and meaningful.

Layer Two — Philosopher Record Layer. The philosopher’s public record is now ranged across: books, articles, published lectures, recorded interviews, blog posts, Substack publications, and documented public exchanges. The philosopher’s documented positions are mapped against the Field Synthesis using four output categories: Convergence, Divergence, Addition, Extension. The philosopher’s choices — what he argues, what he emphasizes, what he sets aside, what he contests — become visible against the field background the Field Synthesis has produced.

Layer Three — Juxtaposition. The instrument produces the juxtaposition of field and philosopher for the non-professional reader. What the field map shows. What the philosopher’s engagement with it shows. What becomes visible when the two are placed together. This is the instrument’s primary contribution to the reader and the core of the blog-ready output.


IV. Output Categories

The Philosopher Record Layer uses four descriptive categories. These categories describe the philosopher’s relationship to the Field Synthesis. They are not verdicts.

Convergence. The philosopher’s documented record independently reaches the same position, argument, or formulation that the Field Synthesis maps as a claim within the field. Note the specific convergence, the Field Synthesis claim it corresponds to, and the philosopher’s documented source. Convergence points are evidence that the Field Synthesis is not idiosyncratic and that the philosopher is engaging the field as mapped.

Divergence. The philosopher’s documented record takes a position that differs from what the Field Synthesis maps at a specific point. State the divergence precisely: what the Field Synthesis finds, what the philosopher argues, and where they part. Do not adjudicate. Assign significant divergences to the Expert Validation Gap Declaration at Step 5.

Addition. The philosopher’s scholarship contributes material, argument, or connection that the Field Synthesis did not independently map. Additions are the clearest evidence of what expert philosophical judgment produces that AI field ranging cannot. They belong in the Juxtaposition as the most significant demonstration of the human judgment layer.

Extension. The philosopher’s interpretation or argument goes beyond what the field as mapped plainly supports or what the mainstream debate has addressed. Note the extension without evaluating whether it is warranted. The reader evaluates.


V. Expert Validation Gap Declaration

The gap declaration is addressed to the non-professional reader, not to the philosopher. Each gap is stated with enough precision that the reader can see exactly what kind of judgment the instrument cannot supply and why. Generic disclaimers are a named failure mode.

Five gap types govern the declaration.

Argumentative gaps. Where the Field Synthesis has mapped an argument and the philosopher has engaged it, the question of whether the argument is sound requires philosophical judgment the instrument cannot issue. The gap identifies the specific argument and the specific judgment it requires.

Coverage gaps. Sources in the philosopher’s public record that were unavailable or inaccessible for this run. Named explicitly. The reader is told what could not be ranged across.

Interpretive gaps. Where the Field Synthesis has characterized a position or the philosopher’s argument in a way the philosopher might contest. The gap identifies the characterization and the contestation it might face.

Scope gaps. Where the Field Synthesis has drawn the commitment’s boundaries differently from how the philosopher draws them — including or excluding positions the philosopher treats otherwise. The gap identifies the boundary question and why it matters for the juxtaposition.

Philosophical judgment gaps. Where the Field Synthesis identifies a point of genuine philosophical contestation that no amount of further field ranging can resolve — where expert philosophical judgment is the appropriate instrument and AI synthesis is not. These are the gaps most consequential for the reader’s evaluation.


VI. Named Failure Modes

Failure Mode 1 — Gap Minimization. The instrument understates the expert validation gaps to make AI appear more capable than it is. A reader who discovers minimized gaps will distrust the entire output. Each gap must be real, specific, and honestly stated.

Failure Mode 2 — Gap Inflation. The instrument overstates the gaps, hedging every finding until the Field Synthesis demonstrates nothing useful. The instrument must show what AI can do independently before declaring what it cannot. A synthesis that is all hedge has failed its purpose.

Failure Mode 3 — Field Subordination. The instrument treats the philosopher’s documented work as the field rather than as a documented position within the field. The Field Synthesis then becomes a reconstruction of the philosopher’s reading dressed as independent AI ranging. This is the most consequential failure mode. The field and the philosopher’s engagement with it must remain distinct throughout.

Failure Mode 4 — Reader Condescension. The Juxtaposition is written as though the non-professional reader cannot evaluate what it produces — conclusions are imposed rather than made available. The instrument produces the juxtaposition; the reader evaluates it. Condescension defeats the instrument’s purpose by removing the reader’s active role.

Failure Mode 5 — Scope Drift. The instrument issues verdicts on whether the commitment is correct or whether the philosopher’s arguments succeed. This is outside the SFI’s scope. The instrument maps and juxtaposes; it does not adjudicate. Scope drift produces the appearance of philosophical competence the instrument cannot honestly claim.

Failure Mode 6 — Independence Violation. The instrument consults the philosopher’s documented work during the Field Synthesis rather than after it. The Field Synthesis must be produced before the Philosopher Record Layer. A synthesis produced after consulting the philosopher’s work is not independent and cannot demonstrate independent AI contribution. This failure may not be visible in the output and requires explicit self-audit at Step 2.

Failure Mode 7 — Asymmetry Suppression. The Field Synthesis understates the degree to which the target commitment is a minority position in contemporary analytic philosophy in order to make the philosopher’s defense appear less significant than it is. The minority status of the commitment is not a liability of the instrument — it is what makes the philosopher’s choices meaningful. Suppressing the asymmetry suppresses the juxtaposition.


VII. Operational Protocol

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


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Before executing any SFI run, confirm the following.

The target philosopher has been named and the commitment or commitments to be mapped have been specified. If the philosopher is an active proponent of more than one of the six commitments, specify which commitment or commitments the run will address. A run that addresses all six simultaneously is likely too broad for a single blog-ready output; scope it to one or two commitments and note the narrowing explicitly.

The audience has been confirmed: non-professional philosophers. The instrument is not addressed to the philosopher and is not written for professional philosophical audiences.

If a CPA has been run on the philosopher, its findings are noted here as context. They do not govern the SFI run. The SFI produces its own independent Field Synthesis regardless of what the CPA found.

The Political Application Constraint is confirmed: Sterling’s name is not associated with political applications, political figures, or political products in any SFI output.

Self-Audit — Step 0:

  • Has the target philosopher been named?
  • Has the target commitment or commitments been specified and scoped?
  • Has the audience been confirmed as non-professional?
  • Has the CPA context been noted if available?
  • Has the Political Application Constraint been confirmed?

Self-Audit Complete. State result explicitly. Proceed to Step 1.


Step 1 — Target Specification

State the target commitment in propositional form. If the input is expressed as a question or topic, restate it as a proposition before the Field Synthesis begins.

State the scope boundaries: what the Field Synthesis will examine and what it will not. Name the principal contemporary philosophers and works the Field Synthesis will range across. Note any significant works or interlocutors that are likely unavailable or inaccessible; these become coverage gap candidates at Step 5.

State the historical depth of the Field Synthesis: the SFI addresses the contemporary field, meaning the analytic philosophical debate as it has developed from the twentieth century to the present. Historical antecedents are noted where they bear directly on the contemporary debate, not surveyed independently.

Self-Audit — Step 1:

  • Has the target commitment been stated in propositional form?
  • Have the scope boundaries been stated explicitly?
  • Has the historical depth been specified?
  • Has the philosopher’s work been consulted at this step? If so, Independence Violation has occurred. Stop and restart Step 1.

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


Step 2 — Field Synthesis

Governing question: What does the contemporary argumentative field on the target commitment contain, ranging independently across the field before consulting the philosopher’s documented work?

The philosopher’s documented work is not consulted at this step. The synthesis is produced from the field as a whole. Independence is architecturally mandatory and must be confirmed explicitly in the self-audit.

Produce the Field Synthesis in four parts.

Part A — State of the Field. What is the current standing of the target commitment in contemporary analytic philosophy? Which positions dominate, which are minority positions, and where does the commitment stand within that distribution? Name the principal interlocutors on each side. State the asymmetry between majority and minority positions accurately — do not suppress it.

Part B — Argument Inventory. What are the main arguments for and against the commitment in the contemporary field? State each argument with its principal advocate where identifiable. Where multiple philosophers make structurally similar arguments, note the convergence. Where the field is internally divided on arguments for the commitment, note the division.

Part C — Pressure Points and Open Questions. What are the most significant objections the field has pressed against the commitment? What questions has the field not settled? Where are the live disputes within the pro-commitment minority? These feed directly into the Expert Validation Gap Declaration at Step 5.

Part D — Historical Development. How did the contemporary debate arrive at its current state? Where did the commitment fall from favor and why? Note the cultural displacement pattern where it applies — whether the commitment’s minority status reflects decisive philosophical refutation or other factors.

Self-Audit — Step 2:

  • Has the philosopher’s documented work been consulted at any point during this step? If so, Independence Violation has occurred. The Field Synthesis is contaminated and must be restarted.
  • Are all claims in the Field Synthesis traceable to identifiable positions in the contemporary field?
  • Has the minority status of the commitment been represented accurately rather than suppressed?
  • Has Scope Drift occurred — has the instrument issued verdicts on the commitment rather than mapping the field?

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


Step 3 — Philosopher Record Layer

Governing question: How does the philosopher’s documented record map against the Field Synthesis produced in Step 2?

The philosopher’s public record is now ranged across. Sources consulted are listed at the opening of this step. Sources unavailable or inaccessible are noted for the coverage gap declaration at Step 5.

Map the philosopher’s documented positions against the Field Synthesis using the four output categories: Convergence, Divergence, Addition, Extension. For each mapping, state the Field Synthesis point it corresponds to, the philosopher’s documented source, and the category assigned.

Convergence points are evidence that the Field Synthesis is not idiosyncratic. Divergence points are candidates for the gap declaration. Addition points are the most significant input to the Juxtaposition — they are what the philosopher contributes that AI field ranging did not independently produce. Extension points are noted without evaluation.

Self-Audit — Step 3:

  • Are all philosopher record claims traceable to his documented public record?
  • Has Field Subordination occurred — has the philosopher’s work been treated as the field rather than as a documented position within it?
  • Have Addition findings been identified honestly, including contributions that the Field Synthesis did not anticipate?
  • Has Scope Drift occurred at this step?

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


Step 4 — Juxtaposition

Governing question: What does the comparison of field and philosopher reveal, and what does it show the non-professional reader?

This is the instrument’s primary contribution to the reader and the core of the blog-ready output. Produce the Juxtaposition in three parts.

Part A — What the Field Shows. Summarize the Field Synthesis for the non-professional reader. What does the contemporary landscape on this commitment look like? What is at stake? Why is the commitment contested? This is not a repetition of Step 2 — it is a reader-facing rendering of what the field map reveals as background to the philosopher’s engagement.

Part B — What the Philosopher Shows Within the Field. Place the philosopher’s documented positions against the field background. Where does he engage the mainstream? Where does he diverge from it? What has he chosen to argue that the field map alone would not predict? The Addition and Extension findings from Step 3 are the most significant inputs here. The philosopher’s choices become visible precisely because the field has been mapped independently first.

Part C — What the Juxtaposition Reveals. What does the reader gain from seeing field and philosopher together that neither alone provides? This part states the instrument’s central finding for the reader: not a philosophical verdict, but a demonstration of what AI can map and what expert philosophical judgment produces within that map. The reader sees both, and evaluates.

Self-Audit — Step 4:

  • Is the Juxtaposition addressed to the non-professional reader rather than to the philosopher?
  • Has Reader Condescension occurred — have conclusions been imposed rather than made available?
  • Has Scope Drift occurred — have verdicts on the commitment been issued?
  • Do the Addition findings from Step 3 appear in Part B as evidence of the human judgment layer?

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


Step 5 — Expert Validation Gap Declaration

Governing question: What can the instrument not resolve, and what does that mean for the reader?

The gap declaration is addressed to the non-professional reader. State each gap with enough precision that the reader understands exactly what kind of judgment is being declared unavailable and why. Do not list all gaps exhaustively — identify the gaps most consequential for the Juxtaposition and state them specifically. Generic disclaimers are Failure Mode 2.

Apply the five gap types from Section V. Identify which gaps are most significant for this run and why. The most consequential gaps are those whose resolution would most significantly affect the Juxtaposition findings.

Close the declaration with a reader-facing statement: what the gap declaration means for how the reader should hold the Juxtaposition. Not a disclaimer — a demonstration of what honest AI output looks like when it names its own limits structurally.

Self-Audit — Step 5:

  • Are the gaps specific rather than generic?
  • Have the most consequential gaps been identified rather than the most comfortable ones?
  • Is the declaration addressed to the reader rather than functioning as a disclaimer?
  • Has Gap Minimization occurred?
  • Has Gap Inflation occurred?

Self-Audit Complete. State result explicitly. Proceed to Step 6.


Step 6 — Output Production

Governing question: Is the output blog-ready and corpus-ready?

Produce the final output as an HTML file following the project’s governing template. The output integrates the Field Synthesis (Step 2), the Philosopher Record Layer (Step 3), the Juxtaposition (Step 4), and the Expert Validation Gap Declaration (Step 5) into a single readable document addressed to the non-professional reader.

The output carries standard three-part attribution: theoretical foundations Grant C. Sterling; instrument architecture Dave Kelly; prose rendering Claude (Anthropic). Year of production is noted.

The output is corpus-ready as a standalone document. It does not require other corpus documents to be intelligible to its intended reader. Where corpus concepts are used, they are explained in the output itself at a level appropriate for the non-professional audience.

Self-Audit — Step 6:

  • Does the output follow the governing HTML template?
  • Is the output intelligible to a non-professional reader without reference to other corpus documents?
  • Does the output carry correct three-part attribution?
  • Has the Political Application Constraint been respected throughout?
  • Has any philosophical verdict been issued in the output? If so, remove it.

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


VIII. Relationship to Other Instruments

The SFI occupies a distinct position in the instrument register. It is not an audit instrument (CPA, CIA, CDA), not an ideological instrument (SIA), not a corpus evaluation instrument (SCE), and not the historical-textual engagement instrument (SEI). It is a publication and corpus instrument that produces reader-facing output by placing a professional philosopher’s work within the contemporary field on one or more of the six commitments.

Where a CPA has been run on the philosopher, its findings are available as background context at Step 0 but do not govern the SFI run. The SFI produces its own independent Field Synthesis regardless of CPA findings. The two instruments are complementary: the CPA audits presuppositions; the SFI maps the field and the philosopher’s engagement with it for a non-professional reader.

The SFI is the instrument for the contemporary philosopher candidate register. The SEI is the instrument for scholars working at the historical-textual layer. They share an architectural family resemblance — independent AI synthesis followed by scholar comparison followed by gap declaration — but operate in distinct domains for distinct audiences.


IX. Instrument Limitations

The SFI can map the contemporary argumentative field on a target commitment, place a professional philosopher’s documented positions within that map, produce a juxtaposition for a non-professional reader, and declare the gaps that expert philosophical judgment is needed to fill. It cannot:

Adjudicate contested philosophical positions. Whether the arguments mapped in the Field Synthesis succeed or fail is a philosophical judgment the instrument explicitly does not issue.

Guarantee that the Field Synthesis is complete. The contemporary literature is large, and the SFI ranges across accessible sources. Coverage gaps are declared at Step 5. The philosopher’s expert knowledge of the field is the appropriate corrective.

Guarantee that the Philosopher Record Layer has correctly characterized the philosopher’s positions. Interpretive gaps are declared at Step 5. The philosopher’s own reading of his work is the authoritative corrective, not the instrument.

Replace the non-professional reader’s evaluative engagement with the Juxtaposition. The reader evaluates what the instrument produces. The instrument does not evaluate on the reader’s behalf.

Determine the cultural displacement pattern with certainty. Where the instrument notes that a commitment fell from professional favor for reasons other than decisive philosophical refutation, this is a finding of the Field Synthesis that the philosopher’s expert record may confirm, complicate, or contest.


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

Classical Presupposition Audit — Michael Huemer (Full Record)

 

Classical Presupposition Audit — Michael Huemer (Full Record)

Primary source: “Apology of a Modest Intuitionist,” Michael Huemer, Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, Vol. LXXVIII No. 1, January 2009. Supplementary sources: “A Proof of Free Will,” Michael Huemer (owl232.net, original journal submission); “Disembodied Souls Are People Too,” Michael Huemer, in Extreme Philosophy, ed. Stephen Hetherington (Routledge, 2024); Knowledge, Reality, and Value: A Mostly Common Sense Guide to Philosophy (2021). Instrument: Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling’s corpus. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

The subject is Michael Huemer, professor of philosophy at the University of Colorado, Boulder. He is the author of Ethical Intuitionism (2005), The Problem of Political Authority (2013), Knowledge, Reality, and Value (2021), and numerous peer-reviewed articles. His published positions span epistemology, metaethics, philosophy of mind, political philosophy, and metaphysics.

This audit draws on the following sources, all from the figure’s own public record:

  • “Apology of a Modest Intuitionist” (2009) — primary source for C3, C4, C5, C6, and the cultural displacement thesis
  • “A Proof of Free Will” — primary source for C2
  • “Disembodied Souls Are People Too” (Routledge, 2024) — primary source for C1, and corroborating source for C2
  • Knowledge, Reality, and Value (2021) — corroborating source for C2 (minimal free will thesis formulation)

No source outside his own published record has been used. No prior conclusion about findings has been stated or implied.

Self-Audit — Step 0:

  • Is the corpus in view? Yes.
  • Have the sources been identified and restricted to the figure’s own public record? Yes.
  • Has any prior conclusion about findings been stated or implied? No.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 1.


Step 1 — Presupposition Profile

Stage A — Argumentative Record Summary

Position 1: Substance dualism as the theory of personal identity. In “Disembodied Souls Are People Too,” Huemer argues that the mind has three features not explicable in physical terms: qualia, intrinsic intentionality, and free will. These features, he holds, establish that the mind is something over and above the body and brain. He then distinguishes substance dualism from property dualism: the question is whether the non-physical features reside in a distinct non-physical entity (the mind or soul) or merely in a physical entity (the brain) as non-physical properties. He explicitly favors substance dualism on the grounds that it best accommodates strong and widespread intuitions about personal identity — specifically, the intuition that personal identity is an objective, intrinsic, one-one relation that neither spatiotemporal continuity nor psychological continuity theories can accommodate in fission cases. The soul, understood as the immaterial entity that has mental qualities and determines personal identity, is Huemer’s explicit ontological commitment. Load-bearing presupposition: the rational faculty is a genuine non-physical substance, distinct from and not reducible to the body.

Position 2: Free will as genuine alternative possibilities grounded in substance dualism. In “A Proof of Free Will,” Huemer argues for the minimal free will thesis (MFT): at least sometimes, someone has more than one course of action he can perform. He argues that hard determinism — the thesis that the only thing anyone can ever do is the thing he actually does — is self-refuting: it undermines the normative presuppositions of rational discourse, since rational discourse presupposes that we ought to believe only what is true, and “ought” implies “can.” If determinism is true, then there is no genuine can, and therefore no genuine ought, and therefore the normative structure of rational inquiry collapses. In “Disembodied Souls,” he identifies free will — defined as “the ability to control which of a set of genuinely open alternatives is realized” — as one of the three features of mind that require a non-physical substance for their explanation. He lists free will alongside qualia and intentionality as features of mind “hard to explain in physical terms.” Load-bearing presupposition: the agent is genuinely the controlling power over which of several open alternatives is realized, and this control requires a non-physical substance whose operation is not reducible to physical causation.

Positions 3–6 (from the primary source document) are carried forward from the prior audit without modification: the dual-thesis structure of intuitionism (C3, C6); elimination of alternative epistemologies yielding foundationalism (C4); Phenomenal Conservatism and the unity of appearances (C3, C4, C5); defeaters for ethical intuitions with the reliability distinction (C3, C6); and the cultural displacement thesis (C5, C6).

Stage B — Domain Mapping

Huemer’s presuppositions are consistent across domains. His philosophy of mind positions (substance dualism, free will grounded in substance) integrate with his epistemological positions (Phenomenal Conservatism, foundationalism) and his metaethical positions (intuitionism, moral realism) without tension. The non-physical rational faculty required by his ontology is the same faculty through which moral intuitions yield justified moral belief. No domain variation producing an Inconsistent finding has been identified.

Self-Audit — Step 1:

  • Are the presuppositions drawn from the figure’s own record? Yes.
  • Have I applied the load-bearing test? Yes.
  • Have I applied the charity requirement where the record is ambiguous? Yes — particularly on C2, where the MFT is his explicit argumentative product but his grounding of free will in substance dualism carries the stronger implication.
  • Have I mapped domain variations? Yes — no significant variation detected.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 2.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

C1 — Substance Dualism (Rational Faculty as Distinct Substance)

The commitment requires that the rational faculty be genuinely distinct from body and external conditions — a real ontological boundary between self and external, not a useful distinction. Sterling’s governing claim: “I am my soul/prohairesis/inner self. Everything else, including my body, is an external.” Sterling’s supporting corpus: certainty of qualitative mental experience; science cannot account for the feeling of pain or the experience of modus ponens; dualism developed against the constraints of modern scientific physics.

Huemer’s position on substance dualism is explicit, argued, and load-bearing. In “Disembodied Souls Are People Too,” he distinguishes property dualism from substance dualism and explicitly endorses the latter. His argument runs from the requirements of personal identity to the existence of the soul as a distinct non-physical entity: only a non-physical substance whose identity is intrinsic and not constituted by relations to other entities can satisfy the one-one constraint on personal identity that physical continuity theories violate in fission cases. The soul, on his account, is the immaterial thing that has mental qualities and determines who a person is. His list of three features of mind not explicable in physical terms — qualia, intrinsic intentionality, free will — provides independent grounds for the non-physical substance conclusion. The soul is the entity in which these properties reside, not merely a physical entity that instantiates them as non-physical qualities.

This maps precisely onto Sterling’s commitment. Huemer’s soul is the genuine self; the body is something the soul has while alive but is not identical to. His argument that the soul can exist in disembodied form between lives presupposes the categorical distinction between self and body that is foundational to Sterling’s account of the dichotomy of control.

Finding: Aligned. Huemer’s argumentative record requires substance dualism as an explicit, argued, load-bearing position. The self is the non-physical soul; the body is an external to it. No contrary presupposition qualifies the finding.


C2 — Libertarian Free Will (Origination of Assent)

The commitment requires that assent be the genuine act of an originating agent — not a determined output of prior physical causes but the agent’s own first-causal act. Sterling’s governing claim: choosing whether or not to assent to impressions is the only thing in our control, and it must be genuine origination for that control to be real. Supporting corpus: the act of assent as origination; libertarian free will as load-bearing commitment, not philosophical decoration.

Huemer’s position on free will involves two distinct but mutually reinforcing argumentative moves.

The first is the MFT proof. He argues that hard determinism — the thesis that the only thing anyone can ever do is the thing he actually does — is self-refuting. The argument: rational discourse presupposes that we ought to believe only what is true. “Ought” implies “can.” If determinism is true, then whatever can be done is done. Therefore, if determinism is true and I believe the minimal free will thesis, I must have been able to believe it, and since whatever I can do I do, I must not be believing a falsehood — which means the minimal free will thesis is not false. Determinism thus implies its own contradictory and is therefore false. He explicitly stakes out the incompatibilist position by defining determinism, for his purposes, as the thesis that excludes genuine alternative possibilities, acknowledging the compatibilist objection but treating it as insufficient to rescue hard determinism from self-refutation.

The second is the substance dualism grounding. In “Disembodied Souls,” Huemer identifies free will — defined as “the ability to control which of a set of genuinely open alternatives is realized” — as one of three features of mind that are “hard to explain in physical terms.” This is the decisive move for C2. A compatibilist does not need a non-physical substance to account for free will, because compatibilist free will is a matter of acting in accordance with one’s desires without external constraint, not a matter of genuine alternative causation. Huemer’s decision to list free will alongside qualia and intentionality as requiring the non-physical soul for their explanation commits him to a position in which the agent’s freedom consists in a non-physically-grounded capacity to select among genuinely open alternatives. This is the libertarian position: the agent is not a determined output of prior physical causes but the controlling power over which of several real possibilities is actualized — a control that requires the soul as its ontological basis.

A note on the MFT’s modesty: Huemer explicitly states that it “may be disputed whether the truth of MFT is sufficient for us to have free will.” This hedge concerns whether his proof does all the philosophical work free will theorists might want. It does not constitute a retreat from incompatibilism. His framing of determinism as the thesis that excludes genuine alternative possibilities, and his grounding of free will in the non-physical soul, together require origination in the relevant sense: the soul’s selection among open alternatives is not reducible to physical causation, and its operation therefore constitutes genuine first causation at the level of the rational agent.

Finding: Aligned. Huemer’s argumentative record requires genuine origination as a load-bearing presupposition: the soul controls which of genuinely open alternatives is realized, and this control is non-physically grounded. The compatibility of his MFT with a more modest reading is precluded by the substance dualism argument, which commits him to the stronger libertarian claim. No contrary presupposition qualifies the finding.


C3 — Ethical Intuitionism (Direct Apprehension of Moral Truth)

The commitment requires that some moral truths be known through direct rational apprehension — not inferred from prior premises, not derived empirically, but grasped as self-evident necessary truths. Sterling’s governing claim: the rational faculty must be able to apprehend directly that virtue is the only genuine good, in the way mathematical necessity is apprehended.

Huemer’s central epistemological thesis in “Apology of a Modest Intuitionist” is the explicit defense of this position. He holds that some moral truths are known intuitively through Phenomenal Conservatism — the principle that if something seems true to S in the absence of defeaters, S has prima facie justification for believing it. He argues that intellectual intuition and sensory experience share the same epistemological structure (the property of being an appearance is what confers justificatory force in both cases), and that certain rational moral intuitions — the transitivity of “better than,” the pro tanto goodness of enjoyment, the ceteris paribus preference for making a conscious being better off — are produced by rational reflection from a grasp of the relevant concepts in exactly the way mathematical intuitions are. He defends the continuing validity of this epistemic route despite its professional disfavor, attributing that disfavor to cultural bias rather than decisive refutation.

Finding: Aligned. Unchanged from the prior audit. No contrary presupposition qualifies the finding.


C4 — Foundationalism (Structured Dependency of Truths)

The commitment requires that knowledge exhibit a foundational structure in which some beliefs are epistemically basic — non-inferentially justified — and inferential beliefs depend on these basics for their warrant.

Huemer’s Phenomenal Conservatism is a foundationalist epistemology. He argues that all five non-intuitive routes to moral knowledge fail, leaving intuition as the non-inferential base. Appearances confer propositional justification directly; the absence of defeaters is a condition required for justification but not itself what confers it. His structural analysis — the roof/car/Caesar analogies — makes explicit that the base element must be the causally responsible source of the superstructure, not merely the removal of obstacles to it. His argument that doxastic justification requires basing on what confers propositional justification (the Basing Condition) gives the foundational structure a further epistemological articulation.

Finding: Aligned. Unchanged from the prior audit. No contrary presupposition qualifies the finding.


C5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth (Truth as Alignment with Reality)

The commitment requires that truth be a relation between a claim and the way things actually are — not coherence, not consensus, not pragmatic utility.

Huemer’s treatment of defeaters, his analysis of the seven psychological studies from the moral realist’s standpoint, his cultural displacement thesis (professional consensus does not make intuitionism false), and his description of reliable intuitions as those that track objective moral facts all require the correspondence account at every load-bearing point. Truth is what Huemer’s intuitions are aimed at; bias and unreliability are failures of correspondence, not merely failures of coherence or consensus.

Finding: Aligned. Unchanged from the prior audit. No contrary presupposition qualifies the finding.


C6 — Moral Realism (Objective Value Structure)

The commitment requires that moral facts be objective features of reality — not projections, cultural constructions, or natural facts redescribed.

This is Huemer’s explicit metaphysical thesis: nonreductive moral realism. He defends moral facts against ethical naturalists, argues that only intuition survives as a source of moral knowledge of those facts, distinguishes moral judgments from subjective preferences as a class of judgments of objective fact, and holds that many currently accepted ethical beliefs may be wrong while nihilism remains unwarranted — all of which presupposes a moral reality against which beliefs can be tested and found mistaken.

Finding: Aligned. Unchanged from the prior audit. No contrary presupposition qualifies the finding.


Self-Audit — Step 2:

  • Have I applied the load-bearing test to each finding? Yes.
  • Have I cited specific argumentative moves for each presupposition-commitment pair? Yes.
  • Have I avoided Inconsistent Evasion (Failure Mode 3)? Yes — no domain variation detected.
  • Have I avoided Non-Operative Evasion (Failure Mode 6)? Yes — C1 and C2 now carry substantive findings drawn from Huemer’s own published record.
  • Have I avoided Corpus Boundary Violation (Failure Mode 7)? Yes — no findings have been issued about the strategic, political, or institutional implications of Huemer’s positions.
  • Have I avoided Charity Failure (Failure Mode 8)? Yes — the Aligned finding on C2 reflects the stronger reading supported by Huemer’s substance dualism argument, which is the most philosophically favorable consistent interpretation of his combined record.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 3.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

The dissolution criterion is governed exclusively by findings on C1 and C2. Full Dissolution requires Contrary findings on both; Partial Dissolution requires a Contrary finding on one; No Dissolution requires Aligned or Partially Aligned findings on both.

C1: Aligned. C2: Aligned.

Huemer’s framework locates the self in the non-physical soul, which is the distinct subject of mental properties and the ontological basis of genuine freedom. The body, and all external conditions, are not what the agent fundamentally is. The soul selects among genuinely open alternatives; that selection is not determined by prior physical causes. An agent who adopts Huemer’s framework as his governing self-description is not required to locate himself and his condition in externals. On his account, he is the soul — and what matters most about him is the soul’s free control over its own acts.

Dissolution Finding: No Dissolution.


Step 4 — Summary of Findings

C1 — Substance Dualism: Aligned
C2 — Libertarian Free Will: Aligned
C3 — Ethical Intuitionism: Aligned
C4 — Foundationalism: Aligned
C5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: Aligned
C6 — Moral Realism: Aligned
Dissolution Finding: No Dissolution


Step 5 — Analytical Note

Six Aligned findings with No Dissolution. This profile has appeared in the CIA v3.0 series only once — for the constructed Stoic Detective presupposition set — and has not appeared in any prior CPA run on a named public figure.

What distinguishes the Huemer profile from a constructed alignment is that his six commitments are not merely consistent with one another: they are mutually load-bearing in a way that mirrors the corpus’s own internal architecture. C1 (substance dualism) establishes the ontological reality of the soul as the genuine self. C2 (libertarian free will) is grounded in C1: it is the soul’s non-physical nature that makes genuine alternative possibilities possible. C3 (ethical intuitionism) requires a rational faculty capable of direct moral apprehension — the faculty that C1 establishes as a genuine non-physical substance. C4 (foundationalism) gives the structure within which C3’s non-inferential moral knowledge functions as the epistemic base. C5 (correspondence theory) specifies what it means for a C3 intuition to succeed or fail — it succeeds when it corresponds to the objective moral facts that C6 asserts. C6 (moral realism) supplies those facts and is defended in part by ruling out all epistemological accounts that would make C3 dispensable.

The chain runs: soul (C1) → freedom of the soul (C2) → direct moral apprehension by the soul (C3) → foundational structure of that apprehension (C4) → correspondence as its success condition (C5) → objective moral facts as its object (C6). This is not six separate commitments held together by philosophical taste. It is a single integrated structure. The corpus exhibits the same logical spine.

Two features of the Huemer profile merit separate notice.

First, Huemer defends reincarnation as a consequence of his substance dualism and his Bayesian argument from the fact of current existence. This is not a commitment the corpus addresses, and it falls outside the instrument’s domain. It is noted here as an observation, not a finding: Huemer’s substance dualism is robust enough to carry metaphysical commitments the corpus does not entertain.

Second, the cultural displacement thesis in the 2009 source document is the most immediately usable finding for this project. Huemer argues — from within the professional philosophical record, with the authority of a defender of the displaced position — that intuitionism fell from favor not through decisive refutation but through cultural and personal biases operating before argument. He names the mechanism precisely: biases shape which theories receive sympathetic investigation, which arguments seem plausible, and therefore which positions become considered opinions in the light of the arguments. The result is that the professional consensus against intuitionism is produced by bias, not by philosophical defeat. This project applies the same thesis to all six commitments as a class. Huemer’s formulation provides an authoritative inside-the-record statement of the pattern this project identifies comprehensively.


Instrument: Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling’s corpus. Subject: Michael Huemer, University of Colorado, Boulder. Primary source: “Apology of a Modest Intuitionist,” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, Vol. LXXVIII No. 1, January 2009. Supplementary sources: “A Proof of Free Will” (owl232.net); “Disembodied Souls Are People Too,” Extreme Philosophy (Routledge, 2024); Knowledge, Reality, and Value (2021). Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.