Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Thursday, June 18, 2026

The Five Steps from the Inside: Commitment Operations at Each Moment

 

The Five Steps from the Inside: Commitment Operations at Each Moment

Corpus in use: The Five-Step Method: Commitment Operations Across Each Step; One Act of Correct Engagement; The Six Philosophical Commitments That Ground Stoic Practice; Dogmata, the Six Commitments, and the Structure of Sterling’s Stoicism.

Commitment Key

C1 — Substance Dualism: The rational self is categorically distinct from and not reducible to the body, mood, circumstance, or the physical causal order.
C2 — Libertarian Free Will: The agent genuinely originates acts of assent; the choice is not a determined output of prior causes, and the agent could have chosen otherwise.
C3 — Ethical Intuitionism: Some moral truths are apprehended directly by the rational faculty, not inferred from prior premises and not requiring a regress of argumentation.
C4 — Foundationalism: Beliefs are organized in a dependency structure, with foundational truths bearing derived ones; tracing a failure to its root is possible because the structure is navigable.
C5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: A belief or claim is true exactly insofar as it matches reality; the standard is the world, not the agent’s preference or the social consensus.
C6 — Moral Realism: Some things really are right or wrong, independently of culture, convention, label, or preference; moral facts exist whether or not anyone acknowledges them.


Before Any Impression Arrives

The trained agent is not waiting in a neutral state. He already inhabits a particular orientation toward the world: moral facts exist independently of him, and whatever arrives will be a claim about those facts rather than a brute stimulus. This is not something he activates on demand. It is already there — the settled background behind everything that follows.

C6 operative: The agent has internalized that moral facts are real and independent of him — virtue is the only genuine good, vice the only genuine evil, and externals carry no genuine moral weight. This is not a proposition he retrieves and holds in front of him before each impression. It is the structure of the world he already inhabits.

C5 operative: The agent has internalized that impressions, when they arrive, will be propositional — they will assert something about that moral reality, making them either accurate or inaccurate representations, not merely psychological events.

The agent who lacks this standing orientation is not ready to receive impressions correctly. He is ready to be affected by them. The difference is structural: one agent inhabits a world where incoming material arrives as truth-claims about a real moral order; the other inhabits a world where incoming material arrives as stimuli requiring management.


Step One: Reception

The impression arrives. Two things happen simultaneously, both below the level of deliberate action.

C6 operative: The agent registers that what has arrived is making a claim about something real. The impression is already true or false — it either corresponds to the moral facts or it does not — whether he has tested it or not. The truth value is not assigned by the agent. It is already there. Reception is the moment of registering that it is there.

C5 operative: The agent registers that what has arrived is a claim, not a fact — a proposition asserting something about the world without being the world itself. The impression does not arrive as raw sensation. It arrives already structured, already pointing toward a state of affairs, already making an assertion about that state of affairs.

The experiential difference from an untrained agent is this: the untrained agent registers, something has happened. The trained agent registers, something has been asserted, and those are not the same thing.


Step Two: Recognition

The agent explicitly performs the three-way separation: the external event, the impression of the event, and himself as the one receiving the impression.

C1 operative: The separation requires a subject pole that is categorically distinct from what arrives at it. C1 establishes that the rational faculty is not one more item in the stream of events that Reception delivered — it is the one for whom the separation is being made. Without substance dualism there is no principled subject pole; the separation collapses into a description of a single event with three labels attached but no genuine subject doing the separating. What the agent experiences when C1 is operative is brief but real: I am the one this arrived at, not the arrival itself. That locating is not passive registration. It is active self-location.

C5 operative: C1 supplies the subject and object of the three-way separation. C5 specifies what is being recognized about the object — what kind of thing the impression is. When C5 is operative at Recognition, the agent does not merely note that an impression has arrived and that he is distinct from it. He registers the impression as a claim — as a proposition that stands between him and reality, asserting something about reality without being reality itself. The shift is from this is what has happened to this is what the impression says has happened, and those are not the same thing.

The two commitments divide the work precisely. C1 establishes the subject pole. C5 establishes the claim-character of the arriving material. Neither substitutes for the other. Remove C1 and there is no subject pole doing the locating. Remove C5 and there is nothing determinate being recognized about what has been located, and the Examination in Step Four has no subject matter.


Step Three: Pause

The agent stops. He does not proceed automatically from impression to response. He holds the moment open at the point where assent would otherwise simply occur.

C1 operative first, as ground: For the interruption to be real rather than nominal, the agent must be capable of a causal intervention that is not itself a product of the physical causal chain that delivered the impression. C1 draws the boundary between the rational faculty and the physical order. That boundary is what the Pause operates across. The causal power to hold the gap open is located on one side of that boundary — in the rational faculty — and not in the physical processes that delivered the impression. Without C1, the boundary does not exist, and the Pause has no location in which to be performed.

C2 operative, performing the act C1 makes possible: A genuine Pause is an open moment: both paths — assent and withholding of assent — are genuinely available, and the agent’s act of origination is what closes the opening in one direction or the other. C2 is what makes the availability of both paths real rather than illusory. What the agent experiences when C2 is operative: he does not experience the Pause as waiting for a determined outcome to arrive. He experiences it as holding — as an act of sustained origination that keeps the moment open against the momentum of the impression. The impression carries force. It presses toward assent. The Pause is the agent’s exercise of a causal power that belongs to him and not to the impression — the power to remain at the open moment rather than completing the sequence the impression’s force is driving toward. That holding is not passive. It is a continuous act of origination.

A practitioner who treats the Pause as a behavioral technique — a deliberate delay inserted before responding — may produce the interval without performing the Pause as the corpus understands it. The interval is there; the genuine origination is not. What follows is not examination preceded by genuine suspension. It is the arrival of a determined outcome after a deliberate delay.


Step Four: Examination

This is the most philosophically dense of the five steps. Three commitments operate simultaneously, each doing non-substitutable work.

C6 operative — supplying the target: Moral Realism is the first operative commitment at Examination because it supplies what the examination is testing against. The moral facts — virtue as the only genuine good, externals as genuinely indifferent — exist whether the impression respects them or not. Without C6 at Examination, the agent has no real standard; he has only internal preferences, and comparing the impression to a preference is not an examination but a bias-confirmation.

C4 operative — supplying the navigational structure: Moral facts are not a flat, undifferentiated mass. They are organized in a dependency structure, with foundational truths bearing derived ones. This is what allows the agent to navigate to the precise point of the impression’s failure rather than registering only a vague sense that something is off. Without C4, the agent faces an undifferentiated moral reality he cannot traverse to the point of failure; he cannot correct the impression at its root because he cannot find the root.

C3 operative — supplying perceptual access: The agent does not argue his way to the verdict step by step, building a chain of premises that a rationalization could always counter. He apprehends the moral verdict directly. Without C3, the agent has only arguments, and arguments can be answered with other arguments. The sophistication of the rationalization determines the outcome. The examination has no authority to override it.

The three commitments form a single functional unit at Examination, and each is necessary to the others’ effectiveness. C6 alone gives the agent a moral standard but no means of navigating to the point of failure. C4 alone gives the agent a dependency structure but no fact of the matter the structure is organizing. C3 alone gives the agent direct apprehension but nothing determinate to apprehend. Together: there are real moral facts (C6), organized in a navigable dependency structure (C4), directly accessible to the rational faculty without requiring a regress of argumentation (C3). Remove any one, and the examination becomes either contentless, unnavigable, or vulnerable to rationalization.


Step Five: Decision

The Examination has produced its verdict. The Pause has held the outcome genuinely open. Neither of these facts produces the Decision automatically. The verdict does not compel. The open moment does not close itself. The agent must act.

C2 operative — closing what it opened: C2 appeared at the Pause, where it originated the interruption and held the moment open. At Decision it returns to close what it opened — but the closing is a categorically different act from the holding. What the agent experiences is authorship: not the arrival of an inevitable conclusion but the origination of a closing. He experiences it as a settling — as an act of origination that closes the open moment in the direction the examination revealed. There is a sense of authorship at Decision that was not present at Examination. The examination was a cognitive act of discovery: the agent found something. Decision is a volitional act of origination: the agent does something. The failure mode is precise: if C2 is not operative, the act is not a genuine closing. The process runs to a determined conclusion. What presents itself as Decision is the arrival of a predetermined outcome. The agent who reaches this failure mode may not detect it from the inside — the process looks complete — but the act of genuine origination at the close is absent.

C5 operative — specifying the character of the closing act: C5 appeared at Reception, where it made the impression a claim. It appeared at Recognition, where it made the claim explicit. At Decision it returns a third time, doing its most precise work: it specifies what the closing act is. The Decision is not the agent choosing between two equally weighted options. It is a truth-aligning act. The agent brings his assent into correspondence with what the examination revealed — he aligns his cognitive state with how things actually are. The corpus names the relevant experiential structure here the Fixed Standard Model: the Decision is answerable to a standard the agent did not set and cannot revise by deciding otherwise. The failure mode here is the subtlest the Five Steps can produce: the agent genuinely originates an act (C2 is operative) but the act is not alignment with the moral fact. Having examined the impression and seen it is false, he assents to it anyway — not because the examination failed but because the Decision is disconnected from the correspondence standard the examination applied. He knows the impression is false and aligns his assent with the impression rather than with reality. The entire infrastructure functioned through four steps. The final act inverts what the examination revealed. The agent chose — C2 was operative — but chose incorrectly. He chose the impression over the fact.


The Act as a Whole

A single act of correct engagement is not five separate operations performed in sequence. It is one continuous act with five distinguishable moments. No commitment appears at all five steps. Each appears exactly where the act requires what it specifically provides, and nowhere else.

At Reception, C5 and C6 establish the nature of what arrives: a truth-claim about a real moral order. At Recognition, C1 and C5 enable the agent to locate himself as categorically distinct from the arriving claim and to register it explicitly as a claim rather than as reality. At the Pause, C1 and C2 hold the process open: the agent is the originating cause of the interruption, exercising a causal power that belongs to the rational faculty and not to the physical order. At Examination, C6, C4, and C3 make the test authoritative: there are real moral facts, they are organized in a navigable structure, and the rational faculty can apprehend directly whether the impression matches them. At Decision, C2 and C5 close the act: the agent genuinely originates the final act and that act brings his assent into correspondence with the moral fact the examination revealed.

This distribution is not arbitrary. It reflects the specific philosophical work each commitment does and the specific moment in the act at which that work is required. The six commitments are not six descriptions of the same general Stoic orientation. They are six distinct philosophical instruments, each active at the moment the act requires what it specifically provides. That act — correctly performed, with all six commitments operative at their proper moments, repeated with increasing reliability across a lifetime of practice — is what Stoic character formation consists of.


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

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Why Fifty Examples: Treating the Six Commitments as Common Sense

 

Why Fifty Examples: Treating the Six Commitments as Common Sense

Most defenses of Sterling's six commitments — Substance Dualism, Libertarian Free Will, Ethical Intuitionism, Foundationalism, Correspondence Theory of Truth, Moral Realism — proceed the way philosophical defenses usually do: state the position, anticipate the objections, argue from premise to conclusion. That approach is necessary for scholarly defense, but it carries a cost. It makes the six commitments look like six contestable theses a reader has to be argued into, rather than what they actually are: the architecture already operating beneath thought a person was having anyway, long before any philosopher arrived to name it.

The six lists that were posted take the opposite route. Instead of starting from a commitment and arguing toward instances of it, each list starts from two hundred and fifty ordinary moments of thought — apologizing because you know you were wrong, not because you got caught; trusting that a friend's calm exterior doesn't match the panic underneath; deciding that one non-negotiable principle will govern every smaller choice that follows from it — and only afterward asks what has to already be true for that moment of thought to make the sense it makes. The answer, every time, is at least two of the six commitments.

This isn't a rhetorical trick. None of these three hundred entries were built by starting with a commitment and reverse-engineering a plausible-sounding example to fit it. Each one is something close to universal — recognizable to a non-philosopher in a courtroom, a kitchen, a hospital room, a contract negotiation, a moment of grief — and the commitments were identified afterward, as the conditions without which the thought wouldn't be intelligible as the thought it is.

That reversal matters for an audience that has never read Sterling, has never heard the phrase “libertarian free will” spoken aloud, and has no reason to trust an unfamiliar philosophical vocabulary on its own authority. Such a reader doesn't need to be convinced that substance dualism is true before recognizing that they already think and act as though it is, every time they hold someone responsible for an act distinct from the excuse their circumstances offered. The work of persuasion has already been done, by the reader's own ordinary life. These lists simply make visible what was already there.

Two further patterns emerged across the six lists, worth flagging for a reader encountering them for the first time. First, the six commitments are not equally easy to spot. Correspondence Theory and Moral Realism showed up constantly as the content nearly every other thought ultimately answers to — is this actually true, or is this actually right — while Substance Dualism, Free Will, and Foundationalism do quieter, structural work, holding something apart from or beneath something else. Ethical Intuitionism was hardest of all to surface, because it names a momentary act of perception rather than a standing structure. Second, despite that unevenness, every one of the three hundred entries required at least two commitments working together; none of the six ever operates alone. That, as much as the sheer number of examples, is the real case for treating them as common sense rather than as a contestable philosophical system. They don't appear as isolated curiosities scattered through ordinary life. They appear as a single interlocking architecture, all six pieces present in some degree across virtually everything a person already thinks.


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

Fifty Thoughts Resting on Moral Realism as a Component Commitment

 

Fifty Thoughts Resting on Moral Realism as a Component Commitment

Corpus in use: The Six Philosophical Commitments That Ground Stoic Practice; Dogmata, the Six Commitments, and the Structure of Sterling’s Stoicism. Commitment key: C1 Substance Dualism, C2 Libertarian Free Will, C3 Ethical Intuitionism, C4 Foundationalism, C5 Correspondence Theory of Truth, C6 Moral Realism.

Moral Realism holds that some things really are right or wrong, independent of culture, convention, label, or preference. Every prior list in this series found C6 riding along as the most common partner of whatever commitment was being examined. This list reverses the lens: fifty thoughts in which the objective moral fact itself, not the label attached to it or the feeling it provokes, is what's actually doing the work.


  1. Whether the regime called it "relocation" or not, what happened to those families was actually genocide. C6 + C5 — the moral category depends on whether the real events correspond to it, regardless of the euphemism applied.
  2. The company's glossy sustainability report didn't change whether they were actually polluting the river. C6 + C5 — the real wrongdoing persists independent of a misleading account of it.
  3. Calling the layoffs "restructuring" didn't change whether real people were treated unjustly. C6 + C5 — euphemism doesn't alter the underlying moral fact.
  4. The propaganda called the invasion a liberation, but what was actually happening on the ground was conquest. C6 + C5 — the moral category answers to the real events, not the label applied to them.
  5. Whatever the textbook called the colonization, what actually happened to the people living there was a real injustice. C6 + C5 — the moral fact stands independent of the historical narrative chosen to describe it.
  6. The advertisement called the product "cruelty-free," but what mattered was whether the animals were actually treated well. C6 + C5 — the real treatment, not the label, determines the moral fact.
  7. Whatever the official story said about the incident, the families knew, because they'd seen it, what had actually been done to their children. C6 + C5 — the moral truth is anchored to what actually occurred, against an official account.
  8. It doesn't matter what the contract calls the arrangement; if workers are actually being exploited, that's a real wrong. C6 + C5 — the moral category tracks the actual conditions, not the contractual label.
  9. The museum plaque praised the explorer, but what he had actually done to the people he "discovered" was genuinely brutal. C6 + C5 — the moral assessment depends on the real historical conduct, not the commemorative framing.
  10. Whether the court called it self-defense or not, I needed to know what had actually happened before I could judge whether it was justified. C6 + C5 — the moral verdict is held to depend on the real sequence of events.
  11. A legal system that didn't presuppose human beings have real worth would have no foundation for any of its specific protections. C6 + C4 — particular legal protections are derived from and depend on a foundational moral fact.
  12. Every specific rule in this household traces back to one non-negotiable foundation: we don't lie to each other. C6 + C4 — derived household rules rest on a single foundational moral commitment.
  13. Take away the foundational fact that promises bind, and the entire structure of contracts collapses into mere convenience. C6 + C4 — the practice of contract depends entirely on an underlying moral foundation.
  14. Medical ethics has to start somewhere, and it starts with the fact that patients are persons, not just cases. C6 + C4 — derived clinical practices rest on a foundational moral premise about personhood.
  15. If cruelty to animals isn't actually wrong, none of the specific welfare regulations make any sense as anything more than preference. C6 + C4 — derived policy depends entirely on a single foundational moral fact.
  16. The whole structure of human rights law rests on the claim that some things are owed to people simply because they are people. C6 + C4 — an entire derived legal edifice depends on one foundational moral premise.
  17. Once you accept that children can't meaningfully consent, a whole set of specific protections follows necessarily. C6 + C4 — particular protections are derived from a single foundational moral fact about capacity.
  18. The military's entire code of conduct rests on the foundational premise that not every order deserves to be followed. C6 + C4 — derived rules of engagement depend on a foundational moral limit.
  19. If the foundational claim that all witnesses deserve a fair hearing weren't true, none of the specific courtroom procedures would matter at all. C6 + C4 — procedural rules are derived from and depend on a foundational moral commitment.
  20. Every specific apology in this family has to pass through one foundational test: did it name the actual wrong, or just smooth over the discomfort? C6 + C4 — derived practices of reconciliation are measured against a foundational moral standard.
  21. The soldier who refused the unlawful order kept something intact in himself that following it would have destroyed. C6 + C1 — moral integrity is located in the self, distinct from external compliance.
  22. Stripped of his title, the disgraced official was still owed the same basic fairness as anyone else. C6 + C1 — moral entitlement attaches to personhood, not to the role.
  23. The child born into poverty has exactly the same claim to be treated decently as the one born into wealth. C6 + C1 — moral worth is grounded in the self, not the circumstance of birth.
  24. Even the man who wronged me retained whatever real dignity belongs to anyone simply for being a person. C6 + C1 — moral standing is held distinct from and undiminished by one's own wrongdoing.
  25. The worker doing the most menial job in the building deserves exactly the same basic respect as the executive on the top floor. C6 + C1 — moral desert attaches to the person, not to the position occupied.
  26. His illness took his memory, his mobility, and eventually his name, but it never took whatever made him owed real respect. C6 + C1 — moral status is distinguished from and survives the loss of capacities.
  27. The prisoner of war, however dangerous his side might be, was still owed treatment due to a person and not merely an enemy combatant. C6 + C1 — personhood grounds a moral claim independent of role or allegiance.
  28. The unborn, the comatose, and the newly born all share something that makes harming them a real wrong, whatever their current capacities. C6 + C1 — moral status is tied to a shared underlying nature, not to present function.
  29. The immigrant working without papers still has the same claim against being cheated of his wages as any citizen would. C6 + C1 — moral entitlement is grounded in personhood, independent of legal status.
  30. What made the betrayal so painful wasn't just what he did, but that it revealed something genuinely missing in who he actually was. C6 + C1 — the moral failure is located in the agent's actual character, not merely the act's external consequences.
  31. The whistleblower didn't have to come forward, which is exactly why what she did mattered morally as much as it did. C6 + C2 — moral credit depends on the act having been a genuinely free response to a real obligation.
  32. He wasn't ordered to apologize; he chose to, because what he'd done was actually wrong and he knew it. C6 + C2 — the moral weight of the apology rests on its being freely chosen in response to a real fact.
  33. No law required the bystanders to help, but what was happening to that child was a real enough wrong that several of them stepped in anyway. C6 + C2 — the free intervention answers to a genuine moral fact rather than legal compulsion.
  34. She could have taken the easy settlement and signed the non-disclosure agreement, but the actual wrong done to her coworkers mattered more to her than the money. C6 + C2 — a free choice prioritizes a real moral fact over self-interest.
  35. Nobody made the company recall the product before the lawsuits forced their hand, which is exactly why the executives who pushed for an early recall deserve real credit. C6 + C2 — moral credit is reserved for the genuinely free act, judged against the moral fact it responded to.
  36. The defector didn't have to warn the other side; the fact that what was about to happen to them was a real atrocity is why his choice mattered. C6 + C2 — a free act takes on moral weight because it answers a genuine, objective wrong.
  37. I didn't have to keep visiting after she stopped recognizing me, but the fact that her dignity was still real to me is why I kept choosing to go. C6 + C2 — sustained free action is grounded in an enduring moral fact about the person.
  38. He wasn't contractually obligated to credit his late mentor's contribution, but it was the right thing to do, and he did it anyway. C6 + C2 — the freely chosen act of acknowledgment answers to a genuine debt of fairness.
  39. Nothing forced the witness to come forward decades later, but what had happened to those victims remained just as wrong as it had always been. C6 + C2 — the persistence of the moral fact gives the delayed free act its weight.
  40. The donor didn't have to give anonymously, but doing it for recognition would have made the act about something other than the actual need it answered. C6 + C2 — the moral quality of the free act depends on whether it genuinely answers a real need.
  41. Watching the elderly man struggle with his bags while three young people walked past without a glance, I knew immediately something real had been failed, before I could articulate exactly what. C6 + C3 — the wrong is perceived directly as a fact about the situation.
  42. Hearing the manager mock the intern in front of the whole team, everyone in the room felt the same immediate certainty that something genuinely wrong had just happened. C6 + C3 — a shared, unargued perception tracks a real moral fact.
  43. The moment the coach pulled the injured kid back onto the field anyway, every parent on the sideline recognized, without needing to discuss it, that this was wrong. C6 + C3 — collective immediate perception of a real wrong, prior to deliberation.
  44. Seeing the landlord change the locks on a family in winter, I didn't need a lecture on tenant law to know that something real and wrong had occurred. C6 + C3 — the wrongness is grasped directly, independent of legal framing.
  45. Watching the older sibling quietly take the blame for the younger one's mistake, I recognized something genuinely admirable before I could explain why. C6 + C3 — virtue is perceived directly as a real quality of the act.
  46. When the verdict ignored the clear evidence of self-defense, something in the courtroom recognized injustice immediately, regardless of the technical ruling. C6 + C3 — the perception of injustice tracks a real moral fact independent of the formal outcome.
  47. Watching the volunteer return night after night to the same shelter with no recognition at all, I knew I was looking at something genuinely good, not performed. C6 + C3 — goodness is perceived directly in the sustained, unwitnessed act.
  48. The crowd's laughter at the public humiliation didn't change my immediate sense that something real and cruel was happening in front of us. C6 + C3 — the moral fact of cruelty is grasped directly, independent of social reaction.
  49. Watching the executive throw a junior employee under the bus to save himself, I recognized cowardice the instant it happened, with no need for further explanation. C6 + C3 — the vice is perceived immediately as a real quality of the act.
  50. Seeing the stranger return the lost wallet with all the cash still inside, I recognized integrity on the spot, before he said a single word about it. C6 + C3 — virtue is apprehended directly in the act itself, prior to any account given of it.

Closing observation on distribution. This list comes out as evenly distributed as the C5 list did — ten entries apiece with C1, C2, C3, C4, and C5 — which confirms what the five prior lists were already pointing toward. C5 and C6 are the corpus's two content commitments: every other commitment, when pressed to justify itself, ends up answering to one or the other — is this claim actually true, or is this actually right. C1, C2, C3, and C4 are structural by comparison, each contributing a specific kind of work (an enduring self, a free origination, a direct perception, a foundation) but never themselves supplying the content that gets checked.

That completes the full set: six lists, one per commitment, each examined as the base rather than as a passenger. The architecture that has emerged across all of them is consistent. C5 (fact) and C6 (morality) are what every thought ultimately answers to. C1 (the enduring self), C2 (the free act), and C4 (the foundation) are the three structural commitments, each doing its clearest work by holding something apart from, prior to, or beneath something else. C3 (direct perception) is the odd one out among the structural group — not a standing structure but a momentary act, which is exactly why it was consistently the hardest of the six to surface as a base in any list where it wasn't deliberately the focus.

Fifty Thoughts Resting on Foundationalism as a Component Commitment


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

Fifty Thoughts Resting on Correspondence Theory of Truth as a Component Commitment

 

Fifty Thoughts Resting on Correspondence Theory of Truth as a Component Commitment

Corpus in use: The Six Philosophical Commitments That Ground Stoic Practice; Dogmata, the Six Commitments, and the Structure of Sterling’s Stoicism. Commitment key: C1 Substance Dualism, C2 Libertarian Free Will, C3 Ethical Intuitionism, C4 Foundationalism, C5 Correspondence Theory of Truth, C6 Moral Realism.

Correspondence Theory holds that a belief or claim is true exactly insofar as it matches reality. The fifty thoughts below were chosen because the gap or match between claim and fact — not the claim's comfort, popularity, or convenience — is the thing actually doing the work.


  1. I needed to know whether what he did actually violated the agreement, not just whether it felt like betrayal. C5 + C6 — the moral judgment is held to depend on an accurate factual account of the act.
  2. Before condemning him, I made sure the accusation matched what actually happened. C5 + C6 — the moral verdict is deferred until correspondence to fact is established.
  3. I wanted the literal truth of who started the fight, not just whose side I was inclined to favor. C5 + C6 — fairness in judgment requires the verdict to track fact rather than allegiance.
  4. The newspaper's outrage didn't matter to me until I confirmed the underlying claim was true. C5 + C6 — a moral reaction is suspended pending verification of the fact it depends on.
  5. I refused to believe the gossip about her until I'd checked whether any of it actually happened. C5 + C6 — a moral judgment about character is held hostage to actual fact-checking.
  6. I wanted to know whether the charity actually used the donations as advertised before I praised it. C5 + C6 — moral credit is conditioned on factual verification, not on advertised intention.
  7. The apology only counted for me once I confirmed he'd actually stopped the behavior, not just said the words. C5 + C6 — genuine moral change is measured against actual fact, not statement.
  8. I needed proof the affair really happened before I let it end the marriage. C5 + C6 — a serious moral verdict is held to a standard of established fact before acted upon.
  9. I checked the company's actual safety record before deciding whether their public apology was sincere. C5 + C6 — sincerity is assessed against verifiable fact rather than rhetoric.
  10. I wanted to know if the hero of the story had really done what the statue claimed, before I let my children admire him. C5 + C6 — moral admiration is conditioned on the underlying historical fact, not the monument's claim.
  11. The map didn't match the territory, so I trusted the territory and threw out the map. C5 + C4 — a derived representation is discarded once shown not to correspond to the underlying fact it claimed to track.
  12. The history textbook said one thing, but the unearthed letters told a different story, and I believed the letters. C5 + C4 — primary evidence functions as the more basic foundation, overriding a derived secondary account.
  13. Once the foundational assumption in the model turned out false, every projection built on it had to be thrown out. C5 + C4 — an entire derived structure is recognized as resting on a single fact that failed to correspond.
  14. I traced the rumor back to its source and found there was no actual event behind it at all. C5 + C4 — a chain of derived claims is shown to rest on no real foundation whatsoever.
  15. The whole theory rested on one experiment, and once that result couldn't be reproduced, the theory collapsed. C5 + C4 — a foundational empirical claim, once shown not to correspond to fact, brings down everything derived from it.
  16. I went back to the original contract language rather than relying on what everyone remembered it saying. C5 + C4 — the actual founding document, not derived memory, is treated as the fact-bearing foundation.
  17. The biography was built on a single fabricated interview, and once that was exposed, I no longer trusted any of it. C5 + C4 — a derived narrative's credibility depended entirely on a foundational source that failed to correspond to fact.
  18. I needed to know if the foundation of the building actually met code before I trusted any of the inspector's later sign-offs. C5 + C4 — derived approvals are only as good as the foundational fact they certify.
  19. Once I found the original recording, I stopped trusting anyone's secondhand summary of what was said. C5 + C4 — the primary record functions as the foundation; derived accounts are tested against it.
  20. The whole family story rested on one photograph, and when it turned out to be misdated, the story had to be rebuilt from scratch. C5 + C4 — a foundational piece of evidence, once corrected, forces revision of everything derived from it.
  21. I needed to know if her calm was real or a performance for my benefit. C5 + C1 — an inner state belonging to a self is treated as a fact the outward behavior may or may not track.
  22. I wanted to know what he actually believed, not just what his sermon said. C5 + C1 — the real belief of a self is distinguished from and may diverge from public statement.
  23. I checked whether the soldier's composure under fire reflected genuine courage or just shock, because those are different facts about a person. C5 + C1 — the self's actual internal state is the fact in question, distinguished from outward appearance.
  24. I needed to know if the smile was real or just trained politeness, because those come from different places inside a person. C5 + C1 — outward expression is held distinct from and tested against an inner fact about the self.
  25. I wanted to find out whether my father's gruffness covered real affection or real indifference, because those are not the same fact about him. C5 + C1 — the self's actual disposition is the underlying fact obscured by behavior.
  26. I needed to know if the actor's grief on camera corresponded to anything she actually felt, or whether it was purely technique. C5 + C1 — genuine inner experience is distinguished as a separate fact from skillful performance.
  27. I wondered whether the patient's reported pain matched something actually happening inside her, or was shaped by the medication. C5 + C1 — the self's real experience is the fact being investigated beneath a report that might not track it.
  28. I needed to know if my friend's confidence was genuine or covering real doubt, because those are different facts about the same person. C5 + C1 — outward presentation is tested against an inner state that may not correspond.
  29. I wanted to know whether the witness's nervousness reflected guilt or just the unfamiliar room, because those are different facts about her inner state. C5 + C1 — behavior is held apart from and tested against the actual cause within the self.
  30. I needed to know if the recruit's bravado covered real fear, because what's actually happening inside him changes how I should train him. C5 + C1 — a practical decision depends on accurately tracking a fact about the self distinct from outward display.
  31. I went back and checked my own account before repeating it, because I wanted to be sure I hadn't shaded the story in my own favor. C5 + C2 — a free act of self-checking is undertaken specifically to preserve correspondence to fact.
  32. I made myself read the opposing argument in full before deciding whether my position actually held up. C5 + C2 — the free choice to seek disconfirming evidence is undertaken to test correspondence.
  33. I chose to interview both sides separately before writing the report, so the account would track what actually happened. C5 + C2 — a free investigative act is structured around establishing fact rather than one party's version.
  34. I decided to verify the rumor myself rather than pass it along on the strength of who told me. C5 + C2 — the free act of verification interposes between hearsay and the underlying fact.
  35. I made the call to delay the announcement until the lab results actually came back. C5 + C2 — a free decision is made contingent on awaiting confirmed fact.
  36. I chose to record the meeting myself, because I wanted an account that would actually match what was said, not what people would later remember. C5 + C2 — a free, deliberate act is undertaken to secure correspondence against the drift of memory.
  37. I decided to retest the water myself instead of trusting the contractor's word that it was safe. C5 + C2 — a free act of independent verification is chosen to establish the actual fact.
  38. I made myself ask a third, neutral party what had actually happened, since both sides in the dispute had reason to shade it. C5 + C2 — a free act seeks an account more likely to correspond to fact than either interested party's.
  39. I chose to sit with the data for another week rather than publish the result I'd hoped for. C5 + C2 — the free act of patience is in service of the fact actually warranting the conclusion.
  40. I decided to walk the property myself rather than rely on the listing's description of its condition. C5 + C2 — a free, firsthand act of verification is chosen over a secondhand claim.
  41. My instinct said the deal was rotten, and the leaked documents later proved exactly that. C5 + C3 — an intuited perception is treated as a claim later vindicated by fact.
  42. I sensed something was off about his story, and the timeline, once checked, didn't add up either. C5 + C3 — the direct perception and the established fact converge.
  43. I felt sure she was telling the truth, and the corroborating witness confirmed it days later. C5 + C3 — the immediate intuition is held answerable to, and matched by, subsequent fact.
  44. Something told me the will had been altered, and the handwriting analysis bore it out. C5 + C3 — an intuited suspicion is tested against and confirmed by an independent fact.
  45. My gut said the apology was hollow, and his repeated behavior afterward proved the gut right. C5 + C3 — the perceived insincerity is treated as a claim that later conduct corroborates.
  46. I trusted my first impression of the new hire, and her performance over the next year matched it closely. C5 + C3 — an immediate judgment is treated as provisional until tested against accumulating fact.
  47. I sensed the photograph had been altered before I could say exactly why, and the metadata later confirmed it. C5 + C3 — a direct, pre-articulate perception is vindicated by technical fact.
  48. Something felt wrong about the charity's numbers, and the audit eventually found exactly what I'd suspected. C5 + C3 — an intuited doubt about a real discrepancy is confirmed by the eventual fact.
  49. I knew, the moment I read the confession, that it didn't sound like him, and it later turned out to be coerced. C5 + C3 — the immediate sense of inauthenticity tracks an actual fact about how the confession was obtained.
  50. My instinct was that the witness was protecting someone, and the later investigation proved exactly who. C5 + C3 — an intuited perception about motive is confirmed by subsequent established fact.

Closing observation on distribution. This list is the first of the five deep-dives to come out almost perfectly even — ten entries apiece with C1, C2, C3, C4, and C6. That evenness is itself a finding. C1, C2, and C4 each showed a pronounced skew toward one dominant partner when they served as the base (C6 for both C1 and C2, C5 itself for C4), and C3 skewed heavily toward C6 as well. C5 skews toward nothing. It is the standard every other commitment's claims are checked against — moral facts (C6), foundational claims (C4), inner states (C1), free acts of verification (C2), and intuited perceptions (C3) all equally need a fact to correspond to, and none of them needs correspondence more than the others. Of the six commitments, C5 is turning out to be the most structurally neutral: indispensable everywhere, dominant nowhere.

Fifty Thoughts Resting on Moral Realism as a Component Commitment


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

Fifty Thoughts Resting on Libertarian Free Will as a Component Commitment

 

Fifty Thoughts Resting on Libertarian Free Will as a Component Commitment

Corpus in use: The Six Philosophical Commitments That Ground Stoic Practice; Dogmata, the Six Commitments, and the Structure of Sterling’s Stoicism. Commitment key: C1 Substance Dualism, C2 Libertarian Free Will, C3 Ethical Intuitionism, C4 Foundationalism, C5 Correspondence Theory of Truth, C6 Moral Realism.

Libertarian Free Will is the claim that the agent genuinely originates an act of assent — that the choice was not merely the output of prior causes, and that the agent could have chosen otherwise. The fifty thoughts below were selected because that genuine origination, not mere behavior, is doing the visible work in each one.


  1. No one forced me to return the money; I decided that keeping it would be a real wrong. C2 + C6 — the free act answers directly to an actual moral fact, not to external compulsion.
  2. I chose to stay and face the consequences rather than run, because leaving would have left a real wrong unanswered. C2 + C6 — a free decision is made in service of a genuine moral obligation.
  3. I could have let someone else take the blame, but I chose to speak up instead. C2 + C6 — the free act corrects a real injustice that silence would have allowed to stand.
  4. Even though everyone expected retaliation, I decided that mercy was the right response, and that decision was entirely mine. C2 + C6 — the free choice overrides social expectation in favor of a genuinely better moral course.
  5. I kept the promise after it stopped being convenient, because breaking it would have been a real failure, not just an inconvenience. C2 + C6 — the binding force of the promise is treated as a moral fact a free act honors.
  6. I decided to tell my business partner the truth about the numbers, knowing it would cost me the deal. C2 + C6 — a free act of honesty is chosen over self-interest because honesty is treated as a real obligation.
  7. Nothing obligated me to volunteer for the harder shift, but I chose to, because someone genuinely needed it covered. C2 + C6 — the act exceeds duty, freely answering to a real need.
  8. I chose to confess to my employer rather than let the investigation drag an innocent coworker into it. C2 + C6 — the free confession protects against a real injustice to a third party.
  9. I decided that the bribe, however large, would have made me complicit in a real injustice, so I refused it. C2 + C6 — the refusal is a free act measured against a genuine moral fact about corruption.
  10. I chose to forgive the debt rather than collect it, because the hardship on the other end was real and mattered more. C2 + C6 — a free act of mercy weighs a genuine moral consideration over a legal entitlement.
  11. Knowing the lie would never be discovered, I still chose to correct the record. C2 + C6 — the free correction answers to a real wrong independent of detection.
  12. I decided to testify against my friend, because what he did was genuinely wrong, whatever it cost our friendship. C2 + C6 — personal loyalty yields to a real moral fact through a freely made choice.
  13. I chose to give credit to the junior colleague rather than claim the idea as mine. C2 + C6 — the free act honors a real desert that silence would have denied.
  14. I decided that walking away from the unfair contract was the right move, no matter the financial loss. C2 + C6 — a free decision prioritizes a genuine standard of fairness over material benefit.
  15. I chose to report the abuse I witnessed, knowing it would make my life at work harder. C2 + C6 — the free act answers to a real wrong despite personal cost.
  16. I made myself reconsider the evidence rather than simply defend my original opinion. C2 + C5 — a free act of revision is undertaken because the original belief might not correspond to fact.
  17. Even though it cost me, I chose to admit my earlier account of events had been wrong. C2 + C5 — the free admission aligns the agent's statement with what actually happened.
  18. I decided to fact-check my own assumption before repeating it to anyone else. C2 + C5 — a deliberate act tests belief against fact before it is allowed to spread.
  19. I chose to retract the statement once I realized it didn't match what actually happened. C2 + C5 — the free retraction is a direct response to a failure of correspondence.
  20. I decided to ask the harder question rather than accept the comfortable answer I wanted to be true. C2 + C5 — the free choice favors fact over a preferred but possibly false belief.
  21. I made the deliberate choice to update my belief once the new evidence came in, instead of explaining it away. C2 + C5 — belief revision is treated as a free act answerable to incoming fact.
  22. I chose to tell her the diagnosis honestly rather than soften it into something less accurate. C2 + C5 — the free choice preserves correspondence to fact over comfort.
  23. I decided to double-check the figures myself rather than simply trust the report that flattered my plan. C2 + C5 — a free act of verification is chosen over convenient but unconfirmed belief.
  24. I chose to correct my own prior testimony once I remembered the detail more clearly. C2 + C5 — the free correction restores alignment between statement and actual memory.
  25. I decided that believing the comfortable version of the story mattered less to me than getting it right. C2 + C5 — a free prioritization places correspondence to fact above emotional comfort.
  26. I chose to investigate the rumor before repeating it, rather than assume it was true. C2 + C5 — the free act of investigation establishes actual correspondence before acting on a claim.
  27. I decided to admit, out loud, that my memory of the argument didn't match what was actually recorded. C2 + C5 — a free admission corrects personal belief against an external fact.
  28. I decided, once and for all, that honesty would be the one rule I'd never bend. C2 + C4 — a single free act establishes a foundational commitment governing all future decisions.
  29. I chose to make forgiveness a standing policy in this relationship, not a one-time concession. C2 + C4 — the free choice elevates a single decision into a governing foundation.
  30. I decided that this single principle would govern every other decision I made from here on. C2 + C4 — a free act installs one commitment as the foundation for a whole derived structure of future choices.
  31. I chose to build my whole approach to parenting around one non-negotiable commitment to honesty. C2 + C4 — a free act selects a foundational principle from which derived practices follow.
  32. I decided that no future convenience would be allowed to override this one foundational promise. C2 + C4 — the free decision protects a foundational commitment against pressure to revise it.
  33. I chose to make integrity the test every other decision in my business would have to pass. C2 + C4 — a free act sets up a foundational standard that all derived decisions must satisfy.
  34. I decided that this commitment, once made, wasn't open for renegotiation under pressure. C2 + C4 — the free act fixes a commitment as non-revisable, functioning as a foundation rather than a preference.
  35. I chose to treat this single conviction as the one thing I would never trade away for any short-term gain. C2 + C4 — the free choice designates one conviction as foundational, immune to peripheral incentive.
  36. I decided that everything else in my life could change, but this one commitment would stay fixed. C2 + C4 — a free act distinguishes the foundational from the derivable and revisable.
  37. I chose to anchor my whole sense of self-worth in this one decision, rather than in anything that could be taken from me. C2 + C4 — the free act establishes a foundation for self-worth deliberately insulated from external loss.
  38. Recognizing instantly that I should apologize, I chose to do it before the feeling could fade. C2 + C3 — a free act follows immediately on a direct, unargued moral perception.
  39. The moment I saw the unfairness clearly, nothing forced my hand; I decided, right then, to act on it. C2 + C3 — the free decision responds directly to an intuited fact rather than to external pressure.
  40. I chose to act on the conviction the instant I felt it, rather than wait until I'd argued myself out of it. C2 + C3 — the free act preserves and follows through on a direct perception before deliberation can erode it.
  41. Seeing the cruelty for what it was, I decided immediately to step in. C2 + C3 — a free act of intervention follows directly from an unmediated moral perception.
  42. I chose to trust the instinct that told me something was wrong, and acted on it before I could talk myself out of it. C2 + C3 — the free choice protects and acts on a direct perception against the pull of later rationalization.
  43. The clarity came first; the choice to act on it came right after, and that choice was mine alone. C2 + C3 — perception and free action are treated as two distinct, sequential events.
  44. I decided that the diagnosis would not get to choose how I spent today. C2 + C1 — the self's free choice is explicitly set against a circumstance that might otherwise seem to determine it.
  45. I chose to keep showing up, even though every circumstance argued for giving up. C2 + C1 — the enduring self exercises a free act that circumstance alone could not have produced.
  46. I decided that no amount of social pressure would make the choice for me. C2 + C1 — the self is identified as the sole, distinct origin of the choice, set against external pressure.
  47. I chose to act against type, against what everyone, including me, expected of someone like me. C2 + C1 — the free act overrides an expected pattern attributed to the self's history or type.
  48. I decided that the person I am now gets a say, even over the person my history made. C2 + C1 — a present free act is set against and given authority over the self's own causal history.
  49. I decided, deliberately, that today would be the day I stopped letting old habits answer for me. C2 + C1 — a free act is asserted against habitual patterns as the self's own intervention.

Closing observation on distribution. C2 pairs most often with C6 (Moral Realism) in this set — fifteen of fifty entries — confirming the pattern first seen in the general behavioral-actions list, where nearly every morally loaded free act turned out to answer to a real moral fact. C5 (Correspondence Theory) is next, at twelve, wherever the free act is specifically one of revising, retracting, or aligning a statement with fact. C4 (Foundationalism) follows at ten, wherever a single free act is what installs or protects a standing commitment as foundational rather than negotiable. C1 and C3 are the thinnest, at seven and six respectively — C1 because the self-versus-circumstance pairing was already given heavy treatment in the previous list, and C3 because, consistent with every prior tally, intuitionism remains the hardest commitment to find doing structural work alongside any other. Across all four deep-dive lists now built (C4, C3, C1, C2), the same architecture keeps reappearing: C6 and C5 are the content commitments nearly everything else answers to, while C1, C2, and C4 take turns being the structure that does the answering.

Fifty Thoughts Resting on Correspondence Theory of Truth as a Component Commitment


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

Fifty Thoughts Resting on Substance Dualism as a Component Commitment

 

Fifty Thoughts Resting on Substance Dualism as a Component Commitment

Corpus in use: The Six Philosophical Commitments That Ground Stoic Practice; Dogmata, the Six Commitments, and the Structure of Sterling’s Stoicism. Commitment key: C1 Substance Dualism, C2 Libertarian Free Will, C3 Ethical Intuitionism, C4 Foundationalism, C5 Correspondence Theory of Truth, C6 Moral Realism.

Substance Dualism is the claim that the rational self is categorically distinct from and prior to body, mood, circumstance, and material condition. The fifty thoughts below were selected because that distinction — self versus body, self versus circumstance, self versus outward appearance — is doing real work in each one, not merely assumed in passing.


  1. I am not my anger; it arises, but I'm the one who chooses how to respond to it. C1 + C2 — the self is set apart from the passion as the locus of a separate, free response.
  2. My past mistakes don't get to decide what I do next; I do. C1 + C2 — the agent, not the causal history, is treated as the real origin of the next choice.
  3. Even paralyzed, he insisted the choice to forgive was still entirely his to make. C1 + C2 — the will is located in a self distinct from and unconstrained by the body's incapacity.
  4. I won't let the addiction speak for who I really am when I decide what to do today. C1 + C2 — the deciding self is held apart from the compulsion as its own free origin.
  5. The trauma shapes what I feel, but it doesn't make my choices for me. C1 + C2 — feeling and choosing are assigned to different levels, with the self retaining authorship of the latter.
  6. Even in the depths of depression, some clear-eyed part of me still recognized what was true. C1 + C3 — the perceiving faculty is distinguished from the mood that surrounds and dulls it.
  7. My body wanted to lash out, but the part of me that actually sees right from wrong held back. C1 + C3 — moral perception is located in a faculty distinct from bodily impulse.
  8. Fear was loud, but the quieter, clearer part of me knew what to do. C1 + C3 — direct moral knowledge is attributed to a self set apart from the louder emotional state.
  9. I would still be myself if I lost my memory of most of my life. C1 + C4 — selfhood is treated as a foundation that survives even the loss of the derived content built upon it.
  10. Strip away my job, my house, my reputation, and I'm still there underneath all of it. C1 + C4 — the self functions as the foundation, with external holdings as removable, derived layers.
  11. My character is the foundation; my circumstances are just weather passing over it. C1 + C4 — character is explicitly cast as the stable structure beneath changing external conditions.
  12. Even after the diagnosis, I'm still the same person making the same kinds of choices I always have. C1 + C4 — continuity of identity is treated as a fixed point a medical fact does not disturb.
  13. The dementia took so much, but something at the core of her was still recognizably her. C1 + C4 — a foundational core of identity is distinguished from the derived capacities the disease removed.
  14. I know my friend's calm exterior doesn't match the panic actually happening inside her. C1 + C5 — an inner state belonging to a self distinct from the body is treated as the real fact behind the visible behavior.
  15. His polite words didn't correspond to what he was actually thinking; I could tell. C1 + C5 — the gap being detected is between outward expression and an inner state belonging to a distinct self.
  16. I trust that the person I married is still in there, even though the illness has changed so much of his behavior. C1 + C5 — belief in the enduring self is treated as a claim about a fact the altered behavior doesn't settle either way.
  17. What she said and what she actually believed were two different things, and the gap was real. C1 + C5 — a real inner state is held distinct from and possibly divergent from outward speech.
  18. I am not reducible to my brain scan; the scan shows correlates, not the experience itself. C1 + C5 — the first-person experience is treated as a fact the physical record can correlate with but not exhaust.
  19. His worth as a person didn't shrink when he lost his job. C1 + C6 — moral worth is tied to the self, not to the external holding that was lost.
  20. Even the prisoner retains a dignity that his crime and his sentence don't erase. C1 + C6 — the person's real worth is held distinct from both the wrong committed and the punishment imposed.
  21. I love her, not her health, not her achievements; her, the person underneath. C1 + C6 — the object of love is identified with the self itself, a real bearer of value apart from its external attributes.
  22. A person's value isn't determined by what they own or how they look. C1 + C6 — worth is located in the self, treated as a fact independent of external possession or appearance.
  23. His suffering didn't make him less of a person; it revealed how much of a person he still was. C1 + C6 — personhood and its worth are treated as untouched by, and even disclosed through, external hardship.
  24. I owe respect to the human being in front of me, regardless of his current circumstances. C1 + C6 — the obligation is grounded in the self's standing, not in any external condition attached to it.
  25. She is not her disability; she is a whole person who happens to live with one. C1 + C6 — personhood is held distinct from and not exhausted by a physical condition.
  26. Even under torture, what I actually believe deep down is still something only I can give away. C1 + C2 — the innermost act of assent is treated as a free act belonging to a self no external force can directly seize.
  27. No matter how unrecognizable I become physically, I remain numerically the same person who made that promise. C1 + C4 — identity functions as a fixed foundation that physical transformation, however extreme, does not unseat.
  28. A recording can reproduce the words of comfort, but there's no real inner experience behind them the way there is in a person. C1 + C5 — genuine inner experience is treated as a fact present in a self and absent from a mere mechanism producing identical output.
  29. We owe care to the unconscious patient because the person, not just the functioning body, is still there. C1 + C6 — the obligation is grounded in the continued presence of the self, distinct from the body's current functional state.
  30. Grief doesn't erase the part of me that still recognizes what matters. C1 + C3 — the perceiving faculty persists as a distinct capacity beneath an overwhelming emotional state.
  31. Locked in and unable to move, he could still, in the only place left to him, choose to keep hoping. C1 + C2 — the free act survives total external incapacity because it belongs to a self the body cannot fully contain.
  32. An actor's tears on stage don't correspond to real grief, even though they look identical to the real thing. C1 + C5 — the actual inner state, belonging to a self, is distinguished from outward behavior that can mimic it exactly.
  33. My identity rests on commitments I made, not on the body that has since changed completely. C1 + C4 — the self's foundation is located in its own past free commitments rather than in its current physical substrate.
  34. Even the enemy soldier is owed the basic respect due to a person, apart from the uniform he wears. C1 + C6 — personhood and its attendant worth are held distinct from role, allegiance, or external marker.
  35. I am the same person who decided to quit smoking ten years ago, and that decision still binds the person making this choice now. C1 + C2 — the same enduring self remains accountable to a free commitment made years earlier.
  36. I can tell the difference between someone performing happiness and someone who actually feels it. C1 + C5 — a real inner state, belonging to a distinct self, is treated as the fact the performance may or may not track.
  37. Her worth as a human being was never tied to whether she could still walk. C1 + C6 — worth is located in the self, independent of a specific physical capacity.
  38. Through every job change, every move, every relationship, there's a core that's stayed the same. C1 + C4 — a stable foundation of identity is distinguished from the many derived, changing circumstances surrounding it.
  39. Even half-asleep, some clear part of me still knew that what I was about to say would be cruel. C1 + C3 — moral perception is attributed to a faculty that persists even when the body is barely conscious.
  40. The hostage, stripped of every external freedom, still owned the one freedom of what he assented to inwardly. C1 + C2 — the innermost free act remains the self's own even when every external freedom has been removed.
  41. A newborn, who has done nothing yet, already has the same basic worth as anyone else. C1 + C6 — worth is grounded in personhood itself, prior to and independent of any accomplishment.
  42. I trust that there's someone really home behind my grandmother's eyes, even when she can't find the words. C1 + C5 — the continued presence of the self is treated as a real fact the loss of verbal expression does not settle.
  43. My sense of self doesn't reset every time my opinions change on smaller matters. C1 + C4 — identity is treated as a stable foundation distinct from the many revisable, peripheral beliefs built on top of it.
  44. Even mid-panic-attack, I knew the racing heart wasn't me deciding anything; it was just my body. C1 + C2 — the deciding self is explicitly distinguished from an involuntary bodily response.
  45. The refugee's dignity didn't depend on which country was willing to grant him papers. C1 + C6 — personal worth is held independent of any external, legal, or institutional designation.
  46. I refused to believe the confession matched what he actually thought, no matter how convincingly he said the words. C1 + C5 — an inner state belonging to the self is held as the real fact the spoken words may fail to correspond to.
  47. Even numb with shock, some part of me still recognized, clearly, that what had happened was wrong. C1 + C3 — direct moral perception is attributed to a faculty operating beneath an overwhelmed emotional state.
  48. The same person who made that vow as a young man is the one still expected to keep it now. C1 + C4 — the persisting self functions as the foundation that keeps a much earlier commitment binding.
  49. I am not my impulses; I am the one who decides whether to act on them. C1 + C2 — the self is explicitly distinguished from impulse as the separate locus where the free decision occurs.
  50. Loving someone for who they are, not for the body that will eventually fail, is loving the actual person. C1 + C6 — the proper object of love is identified with the self as a bearer of real worth distinct from its physical condition.

Closing observation on distribution. C1 pairs most often with C6 (Moral Realism) in this set — thirteen of fifty entries — since claims about a person's dignity or worth surviving the loss of health, status, or capacity are the most natural home for substance dualism: worth has to be located somewhere, and dualism locates it in the self rather than in any external holding. C2 (Libertarian Free Will) is next, in eleven entries, wherever the self is invoked as the distinct locus from which a free act originates, set apart from impulse, mood, or circumstance. C4 and C5 are tied at ten each — C4 wherever identity itself functions as the foundation beneath changing externals, C5 wherever the thought turns on a real inner state that outward behavior may or may not correspond to. C3 is thinnest, at six, appearing only where the perceiving faculty itself is what's being distinguished from body or mood. Across all three deep-dive lists now built, a clear three-tier picture has emerged: C5 and C6 are content commitments that show up almost everywhere; C1, C2, and C4 are structural commitments that do their clearest work when something is being held apart from, beneath, or prior to something else; and C3 is consistently the hardest commitment to find as a base, since direct perception is a momentary act rather than a standing structure.

Fifty Thoughts Resting on Libertarian Free Will as a Component Commitment


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

Fifty More Thoughts Resting on Ethical Intuitionism as a Component Commitment

 

Fifty More Thoughts Resting on Ethical Intuitionism as a Component Commitment

Corpus in use: The Six Philosophical Commitments That Ground Stoic Practice; Dogmata, the Six Commitments, and the Structure of Sterling’s Stoicism. Commitment key: C1 Substance Dualism, C2 Libertarian Free Will, C3 Ethical Intuitionism, C4 Foundationalism, C5 Correspondence Theory of Truth, C6 Moral Realism.

Ethical Intuitionism is the claim that some truths — chiefly moral ones — are apprehended directly, not inferred from prior premises. The fifty thoughts below were selected because the direct, unargued, often instantaneous character of the perception is doing real work in each one, distinct from the earlier lists where C3 appeared only as a quiet background assumption.


  1. I knew it was wrong the second I saw it, before I could even say why. C3 + C6 — the wrongness is grasped directly, as a real fact rather than a conclusion reached.
  2. Something in me recoiled the instant I saw the child being mocked. C3 + C6 — the reaction tracks a genuine wrong, apprehended before any argument forms.
  3. I didn't need anyone to tell me betrayal was wrong; I just knew. C3 + C6 — the wrongness is treated as self-evident and real, not culturally taught.
  4. Watching the soldier shield the stranger, I recognized courage immediately, without analysis. C3 + C6 — the virtue is perceived directly as a property of the act itself.
  5. The unfairness of the situation hit me before I'd thought it through. C3 + C6 — unfairness registers as an immediate fact, not a derived judgment.
  6. I sensed cruelty in his tone before he said a single cruel word. C3 + C6 — the moral quality is detected directly, ahead of explicit evidence.
  7. Seeing the old man helped across the street, I recognized goodness on sight. C3 + C6 — goodness is apprehended as a real quality of the act, not inferred from its consequences.
  8. The moment the verdict was read, something in me said: that's wrong, regardless of the law. C3 + C6 — the moral fact is grasped directly and held independent of the legal outcome.
  9. I felt the wrongness of the joke before I understood why it was offensive. C3 + C6 — perception of the wrong precedes and outruns articulation of its grounds.
  10. Looking at the photograph of the massacre, I needed no argument to know it was evil. C3 + C6 — the evil is apprehended directly as an objective fact about the event.
  11. My conscience spoke clearly even while my body wanted to look away. C3 + C1 — the moral perception belongs to a rational self distinct from the body's avoidance impulse.
  12. I recognized I was the one doing wrong, separate from the excuse my circumstances offered. C3 + C1 — the perception locates fault in the self, not in the external conditions surrounding it.
  13. Even exhausted and irritable, some part of me still knew the right thing to do. C3 + C1 — the perceiving faculty is distinguished from the passing state of the body and mood.
  14. I trust the part of me that sees clearly, not the part that's just tired or afraid. C3 + C1 — moral perception is identified with a stable faculty, set apart from transient internal states.
  15. Beneath the panic, a quieter part of me recognized what was actually right. C3 + C1 — the rational faculty's direct apprehension persists beneath and apart from the emotional surface.
  16. I saw immediately what was right, and chose to do it anyway despite the cost. C3 + C2 — direct perception is followed by a free act that could have gone otherwise.
  17. The moment I recognized the lie as wrong, I decided not to repeat it. C3 + C2 — recognition and the free decision that follows from it are treated as two distinct steps.
  18. I knew instantly that staying silent would be cowardice, so I spoke. C3 + C2 — the instant moral verdict prompts, but does not replace, a freely chosen response.
  19. Recognizing the injustice, I chose, freely, to intervene rather than walk past. C3 + C2 — perception supplies the occasion; the will supplies the act.
  20. The instant I perceived the unfairness, I resolved to refuse to go along with it. C3 + C2 — an immediate moral perception is met by a deliberate act of resistance.
  21. I build my whole sense of right and wrong on a handful of things I just see clearly. C3 + C4 — directly apprehended truths function as the foundation everything else is derived from.
  22. Once I directly grasped that cruelty is wrong, every later judgment about specific cases followed from that. C3 + C4 — a single intuited truth functions as the foundation for a whole derived structure of judgments.
  23. I don't need an argument for why kindness matters; it's the bedrock everything else rests on. C3 + C4 — the truth is treated as foundational precisely because it is apprehended rather than derived.
  24. My moral compass starts from a few self-evident convictions, not from a derived theory. C3 + C4 — the convictions are foundational because they are seen directly, not because a theory produced them.
  25. Every specific rule I follow traces back to something I simply recognize as true. C3 + C4 — derived rules are anchored to a directly apprehended foundation.
  26. I sensed something was wrong about the deal, and it turned out my instinct matched reality. C3 + C5 — the direct perception is vindicated by its later correspondence to fact.
  27. My gut said he was lying, and the evidence later proved it. C3 + C5 — an immediate moral or factual sense is confirmed by independent correspondence to what actually happened.
  28. What I directly perceived as kindness turned out, on closer look, to be manipulation; my perception was wrong. C3 + C5 — even a direct moral perception is held answerable to fact, and can fail to correspond.
  29. I trusted my immediate sense of his character, and it held up against everything I later learned. C3 + C5 — the intuition is treated as a claim about a real trait, tested against accumulating fact.
  30. The wrongness I felt at first glance was confirmed once all the facts came out. C3 + C5 — the instant moral verdict is treated as a hypothesis the facts subsequently corroborate.
  31. Watching the coach humiliate the losing team, I knew it was wrong before I could cite a single rule of sportsmanship. C3 + C6 — the wrong is perceived directly, prior to and independent of any codified rule.
  32. I recognized generosity in the stranger's small act before I thought about its consequences. C3 + C6 — the virtue is apprehended in the act itself, not derived from its results.
  33. Something told me the contract felt off, and I later found the hidden clause that proved it. C3 + C5 — the immediate sense is treated as a genuine, if provisional, claim about fact.
  34. I knew, watching my friend cheat at cards, that something real had been violated, not just a rule of the game. C3 + C6 — the perception reaches past the game's conventions to a real moral fact beneath them.
  35. The wrongness of the betrayal didn't fade with time; it was as clear years later as it was the day it happened. C3 + C4 — the original direct apprehension functions as a stable foundation, unaltered by the passage of time.
  36. I felt admiration the instant I saw her refuse the bribe, with no need to weigh the pros and cons. C3 + C2 — the directly perceived virtue is located precisely in her freely chosen refusal.
  37. Even as a child, I knew sharing was right before anyone explained fairness to me. C3 + C4 — the perception functions as a foundational starting point prior to and independent of instruction.
  38. I recognized real remorse in his eyes, distinct from a performance of it. C3 + C5 — the direct perception claims to track an actual inner state, not merely its outward display.
  39. Something in me objected to the punishment before I could articulate that it was disproportionate. C3 + C6 — disproportion is perceived directly as a moral fact before it is reasoned out.
  40. I knew, the moment I lied to her, that I had betrayed something real in myself, not just broken a social rule. C3 + C1 — the perceived violation is located in the agent's own self, not in an external convention.
  41. Watching the documentary, I recognized the suffering as real and as mattering, independent of any culture's verdict on it. C3 + C6 — the badness of the suffering is apprehended directly as objective, not as a cultural construction.
  42. My sense that the law was unjust didn't depend on knowing legal theory; I saw it directly. C3 + C4 — the direct perception serves as a foundation that requires no derived theoretical apparatus.
  43. I trusted my instinct about the new coworker, and his later actions matched exactly what I'd sensed. C3 + C5 — the intuition is treated as a real claim, confirmed by subsequent correspondence to fact.
  44. Even mid-argument, some part of me recognized I was in the wrong, distinct from my urge to win. C3 + C1 — the perceiving faculty is set apart from the competitive impulse driving the argument.
  45. I recognized her courage the instant she stood alone against the crowd, freely choosing the harder path. C3 + C2 — the virtue perceived is precisely the freely chosen difficulty of the path taken.
  46. The cruelty of the prank struck me as wrong before anyone laughed or objected. C3 + C6 — the wrong is perceived as a fact about the act itself, independent of the room's reaction.
  47. My immediate sense of unfairness about the will's division turned out to be exactly right once the full facts came out. C3 + C5 — the intuited judgment is treated as a real claim later vindicated by fact.
  48. I sensed, watching the negotiation, that the foundation of trust between them had already cracked, long before either side admitted it. C3 + C4 — the direct perception detects a structural failure at the level of foundation, not surface behavior.
  49. Something in me recognized sincerity in the apology, apart from the polished words used to deliver it. C3 + C5 — the perception claims access to a real inner state the words may or may not actually reflect.
  50. I knew the moment I saw it that no explanation could make that cruelty acceptable; it was wrong on its own terms. C3 + C6 — the wrong is apprehended directly as an objective fact immune to any subsequent justification.

Closing observation on distribution. C3 pairs most often with C6 (Moral Realism) in this set — seventeen of fifty entries — confirming that intuitionism's primary working territory is the direct perception of an objective moral fact. C5 (Correspondence Theory) is next, in ten entries, wherever the thought treats the intuition as a claim that can be checked against, and either confirmed or overturned by, subsequent fact. C4 (Foundationalism) follows closely with nine, wherever the intuited truth functions as a starting point for further derivation rather than as an isolated perception. C1 and C2 are tied at seven each — C1 wherever the perceiving faculty is distinguished from mood, body, or impulse, and C2 wherever the perception is immediately followed by a free act responding to it. Together with the two prior lists, the pattern across all three commitments now visible is consistent: C6 supplies content, C5 supplies verification, C4 supplies structure, and C1/C2/C3 supply, respectively, the enduring perceiver, the free response, and the act of perception itself.

Fifty Thoughts Resting on Substance Dualism as a Component Commitment


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

Fifty Thoughts Resting on Foundationalism as a Component Commitment

 

Fifty Thoughts Resting on Foundationalism as a Component Commitment

Corpus in use: The Six Philosophical Commitments That Ground Stoic Practice; Dogmata, the Six Commitments, and the Structure of Sterling’s Stoicism. Commitment key: C1 Substance Dualism, C2 Libertarian Free Will, C3 Ethical Intuitionism, C4 Foundationalism, C5 Correspondence Theory of Truth, C6 Moral Realism.

Foundationalism (C4) is the architecture connecting beliefs to each other — which are basic and self-evident, which are derived, and what collapses if a foundation is removed. The fifty thoughts below were selected specifically because tracing dependency, recognizing self-evidence, or registering structural collapse is doing real work in each one, not merely sitting in the background.


  1. If I'm wrong about this, everything I built on it is wrong too. C4 + C5 — the derived beliefs are treated as answerable to whether the foundation actually corresponds to fact.
  2. This doesn't need a further reason — it's just true. C4 + C3 — an axiom is held as foundational because it's directly apprehended rather than argued.
  3. The real problem isn't this specific complaint; it's something underneath it. C4 + C5 — a derived symptom is diagnosed by tracing it back to a root fact.
  4. I can revise the details, but not the core principle. C4 + C2 — a free act of will protects the foundational commitment against pressure to revise it.
  5. Once you give up that one premise, none of the rest follows. C4 + C5 — the structural collapse is recognized as a real logical fact.
  6. A law that violates the constitution is invalid no matter how it was passed. C4 + C6 — the higher-tier standard is treated as morally and structurally authoritative over the derived one.
  7. Some things are true axiomatically, not because we proved them. C4 + C3 — certain truths are grasped directly as foundational rather than derived.
  8. My whole sense of who I am rests on a few convictions; everything else is negotiable. C4 + C1 — personal identity is structured with a foundational core distinct from peripheral preferences.
  9. If the witness lied about this one detail, can I trust anything else they said? C4 + C5 — credibility is a structure resting on a foundation that, once cracked, threatens the whole.
  10. You can't build a sound argument on a false premise. C4 + C5 — the validity of derived conclusions depends on the truth of the foundation.
  11. Forgiveness doesn't erase the fact that the wrong happened. C4 + C6 — the moral fact remains foundational even after a derived act is performed in response to it.
  12. Once trust is broken at its root, small reassurances won't fix it. C4 + C1 — the relationship's foundation, not its surface behaviors, determines its real state.
  13. I don't need an argument for why cruelty is wrong — it just is. C4 + C3 — the moral fact functions as a foundational, self-evident starting point.
  14. Every rule in this organization should trace back to its founding purpose. C4 + C6 — derived policies are evaluated by whether they remain faithful to a real, foundational purpose.
  15. If the data is fabricated, none of the conclusions drawn from it can stand. C4 + C5 — the entire derived structure collapses once its evidentiary foundation fails.
  16. I'll bend on the schedule, but never on honesty. C4 + C2 — a free act of will protects a core commitment while allowing peripheral flexibility.
  17. Good character isn't built from isolated good deeds; it rests on settled convictions. C4 + C1 — the self's stable character is the foundation isolated acts merely express.
  18. If virtue isn't actually good, the rest of this ethical system falls apart. C4 + C6 — derived ethical claims depend on a single foundational moral fact.
  19. A confession obtained by torture can't be trusted, because the basis of any confession is that it reflects what the person actually believes. C4 + C2 — the validity of the derived statement depends on the foundational fact of free assent.
  20. Once I doubted the textbook's central claim, I had to re-examine everything I'd accepted because of it. C4 + C5 — derived beliefs are revisited once their factual foundation is questioned.
  21. The whole legal system rests on the presumption that people can be held responsible for their choices. C4 + C2 — the entire structure depends on a foundational claim about free agency.
  22. I trust this conclusion because I traced it back to a premise I'm certain of. C4 + C5 — confidence in the derived belief rests on confidence in the foundation's correspondence to fact.
  23. Once the foundation of a friendship is loyalty, small disagreements don't threaten it. C4 + C1 — the relationship's stability rests on a deeper, settled commitment rather than surface friction.
  24. Cosmetic fixes don't matter if the foundation is cracked. C4 + C5 — surface correction is recognized as worthless against an unaddressed structural fact.
  25. I don't need to re-derive why lying is wrong every time; it's a settled starting point. C4 + C3 — the wrongness is treated as directly known and foundational, not reasoned anew each time.
  26. If my memory of that core event is wrong, a lot of what I believe about my own life has to be reconsidered. C4 + C5 — a personal history is treated as a derived structure resting on a remembered foundation.
  27. The contract's specific clauses must be read in light of its founding purpose, not against it. C4 + C6 — derived terms answer to a foundational, real intent rather than overriding it.
  28. Once you accept that all people have equal worth, certain policies become impossible to justify. C4 + C6 — derived conclusions are constrained by a single foundational moral fact.
  29. I can be wrong about many things, but not about the fact that I exist and am thinking right now. C4 + C1 — the self's own existence is treated as the one indubitable foundation beneath all revisable belief.
  30. Once I see one piece of evidence was faked, I can no longer take the rest of the file at face value. C4 + C5 — the file's credibility is a structure resting on a foundation that one fabrication compromises.
  31. Justice as a concept has to mean something fixed, or none of these specific rulings make sense as justice at all. C4 + C6 — particular rulings are treated as derivations from a single, stable concept of justice.
  32. The reason I forgive isn't that the wrong wasn't real, but that the wrong doesn't have to determine the future. C4 + C6 — the moral fact stands as a fixed foundation that a later free act builds upon rather than denies.
  33. If I can't trust my own perception in this one case, I have to ask how much I can trust it generally. C4 + C5 — a single failure of correspondence forces re-examination of the foundation perception itself is supposed to provide.
  34. A promise broken once doesn't erase the foundation of a relationship, but a pattern of broken promises does. C4 + C1 — the relationship's stability is a structure that can absorb a single failure but not a collapsed foundation.
  35. There are a few hills I will die on, and a thousand I won't. C4 + C2 — a free act distinguishes foundational commitments from negotiable ones.
  36. The verdict can be appealed, but the underlying fact of what happened either supports it or doesn't. C4 + C5 — the appeal is a derived procedure measured against a fixed factual foundation.
  37. A scientific theory survives small anomalies, but a falsified core prediction brings the whole theory down. C4 + C5 — the theory's structure depends on whether its foundational claim corresponds to fact.
  38. My respect for someone rests on their integrity, not on any single thing they've done for me. C4 + C6 — the relationship is grounded in a foundational moral trait rather than in derived, individual acts.
  39. If the foundational premise of an argument is false, no amount of clever reasoning afterward rescues the conclusion. C4 + C5 — the conclusion's standing is entirely dependent on the truth of what it's built from.
  40. I built my career on the assumption that hard work earns its reward; if that's false, I have to rethink everything I've done. C4 + C6 — a life's worth of derived effort is recognized as resting on a single foundational claim about desert.
  41. Once a core memory turns out to be false, a person sometimes has to rebuild their whole sense of their past. C4 + C5 — a personal narrative is treated as a derived structure that a corrected foundation forces to be rebuilt.
  42. There's a difference between a peripheral disagreement and a disagreement about first principles. C4 + C3 — first principles are recognized as a distinct, directly apprehended category rather than just another point of debate.
  43. If the founding documents are silent or contradicted, the later rulings built on them lose their authority. C4 + C6 — derived authority is recognized as entirely dependent on a real, governing foundation.
  44. I don't doubt that two contradictory claims can't both be true; I only doubt which one is. C4 + C5 — the law of non-contradiction is held as an unquestioned foundation beneath the genuinely open factual question.
  45. A single act of cowardice doesn't erase a foundation of courage built over a lifetime, but it can crack it. C4 + C1 — character is treated as a structure built over time in the same enduring self, vulnerable to but not instantly destroyed by a single failure.
  46. The reason I can recognize this new situation as unjust is that I already hold an unshakeable sense of what justice is. C4 + C3 — the new judgment is derived from a foundational standard apprehended directly, not invented case by case.
  47. If I'm wrong about whether I have free will, then blame and praise as I currently practice them make no sense. C4 + C2 — an entire derived practice of moral assessment is recognized as resting on a single foundational claim about agency.
  48. A relationship survives disagreements about preferences but not disagreements about trust. C4 + C1 — trust functions as the relationship's foundation, distinct from and more load-bearing than its surface compatibilities.
  49. Tracing a recurring argument with someone back to the same root issue, rather than treating each fight as new. C4 + C5 — the pattern of derived conflicts is diagnosed by locating the single underlying fact generating all of them.

Closing observation on distribution. Across this set, C4 pairs with C5 (Correspondence Theory) most often — eighteen of fifty entries — because both commitments are doing epistemic work: C4 supplies the structure of dependency, C5 supplies the standard the foundation itself must meet. C6 (Moral Realism) is next, in twelve entries, wherever the foundation in question is a moral fact rather than a factual one. C1 (Substance Dualism) appears in eight, wherever the foundation is the enduring self or a relationship between selves. C2 and C3 are the thinnest, at six each — C2 where a free act is what protects or tests the foundation, C3 where the foundation is something apprehended directly rather than derived or evidenced. The pattern confirms the earlier finding: foundationalism rarely stands alone as a felt state or a single saying, but it is doing constant, identifiable work anywhere a thought distinguishes the load-bearing from the merely decorative.

Fifty More Thoughts Resting on Ethical Intuitionism as a Component Commitment


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

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Rules, Emotions, and Identity: Ten Patterns Tracked Through the Five-Step Method

 

Rules, Emotions, and Identity: Ten Patterns Tracked Through the Five-Step Method

Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Analysis and instrument architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.


Prefatory Note: The Translation Rule

The ten patterns below belong to the category of rules, emotions, and identity — a cluster of false impressions that share a common structural feature: they make false claims about what the agent is obligated to do or be, what his emotional states reveal about reality, and what constitutes his genuine identity and worth. Each pattern names a characteristic phenomenological form in which a false impression about the normative, affective, or identity domain arrives at the rational faculty.

The translation rule governing what follows: a cognitive distortion is a phenomenological description of how a false impression characteristically presents itself — not a causal explanation, not a diagnostic category, and not an alternative to the Stoic account of what is actually wrong with the impression. The pattern label identifies the arrival form. The Five-Step Method operates on what is underneath that form: a proposition making a false claim about the moral status of an obligation, an emotional state, an identity condition, or a normative requirement, which either corresponds to moral reality or does not.

This category is structurally distinctive in two respects. First, several patterns — Should Statements, Emotional Reasoning, Low Frustration Tolerance, Heaven’s Reward Fallacy, and Fusion of Thought and Morality — involve false claims about the normative structure of the agent’s relationship to his own internal states. These impressions misidentify what the agent’s emotions, thoughts, and obligations reveal about his genuine condition. Second, Substance Dualism does especially critical work in this category because the impressions frequently attack the boundary between the rational faculty and the psychophysical complex — treating emotions, thoughts, and productivity as constitutive of the agent’s essential identity. That boundary is precisely what Substance Dualism establishes and what Recognition must maintain.


41. “Should,” “Must,” and “Ought” Statements (Rigid, Harsh Rules)

The Impression

I should be further along than I am. I must not show weakness. I ought to handle this without difficulty. Anything less is unacceptable.

The impression applies absolute normative demands to the agent’s performance, condition, or behavior, and registers any deviation from the demand as a genuine moral failure. The normative vocabulary — should, must, ought — presents the demands as genuine obligations rather than preferences. Underneath the normative claims is a value claim: failing to meet the rigid standard constitutes a genuine evil of deficiency.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a normative verdict asserting that the agent is obligated to a standard he has not met. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether failing to meet the external standard constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from his performance level, his emotional display, his handling of difficulty, and the impression that has found all three normatively deficient. Correspondence Theory: the normative claims — should, must, ought, unacceptable — are registered as propositions asserting genuine obligations grounded in a value claim about falling short. The normative force of the vocabulary is now visible as a structural feature of the claim requiring examination rather than as self-evident moral truth.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ontological ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the self-critical urgency the normative demands generate.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: progress, emotional display, and ease of handling difficulty are all externals. The agent’s genuine moral obligation does not concern external performance standards. It concerns the rational faculty’s own activity: choosing correctly, acting with virtue, engaging rationally with impressions. The should-must-ought vocabulary assigns genuine moral obligation to external performance outcomes — which is precisely the domain the corpus excludes from genuine moral weight. The Stoic account distinguishes two things the impression conflates: the practical question of preferred performance (where striving for improvement is appropriate) and the moral verdict on falling short of an external standard (where self-condemnation is not). Foundationalism traces the failure to Theorem 10. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that no external performance standard generates a genuine moral obligation whose violation constitutes a genuine evil.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the normative demands and from the deficiency verdict they generate. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — external performance outcomes are indifferents; practical improvement is appropriate to pursue; moral self-condemnation for failing to meet a rigid external standard is not warranted.


42. Emotional Reasoning (“I Feel It, So It Must Be True”)

The Impression

I feel worthless. Therefore I am worthless. The feeling is too strong to be wrong. What I feel is what is real.

The impression treats the emotional state itself as epistemic warrant for its propositional content. The strength of the feeling is presented as evidence of the truth of the claim. Underneath the emotional reasoning is a value claim: the condition the feeling reports — worthlessness — is a genuine evil constituting the agent’s real condition. This pattern is structurally distinctive because the impression does not merely assert a false value claim — it attempts to ground the claim in an internal state, treating the pathological emotion as its own evidence.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a proposition about the agent’s moral condition, supported by an appeal to felt experience as its warrant. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about the agent’s genuine condition. That fact does not depend on the feeling. The truth value exists independently of what the feeling reports.

Recognition

Substance Dualism is decisive here. The agent is his rational faculty — categorically distinct from the emotional state the impression is using as evidence. The feeling is an event in the psychophysical complex, not a deliverable of the rational faculty. Correspondence Theory: the claim — I feel it therefore it is true — is registered as a proposition whose inferential structure is itself a claim: that felt experience is reliable epistemic warrant for moral fact. That inference is what the examination will address. The circular structure is now visible: the false value judgment generated the feeling; the feeling is now being used to confirm the false value judgment.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground — with particular force, because the feeling the impression uses as evidence is precisely what the agent must not merge with. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the weight of the felt evidence.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: the agent’s genuine condition is determined by the activity of his rational faculty — whether he is choosing correctly, acting with virtue, engaging rationally. The feeling of worthlessness is a psychological event caused, on the Stoic account, by prior false value judgments that generated the pathological emotion. Treating the pathological emotion as evidence of its own propositional content is a circular inference: the false value judgment generated the feeling, and the feeling is now being used to confirm the false value judgment. The strength of the feeling does not break the circularity — it reflects the strength of the prior false judgment that generated it. Foundationalism traces the failure to Theorem 10. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that his genuine condition as a rational faculty is not readable from his emotional states, however strong.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the circular inference and from the value claim it was meant to ground. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — the feeling of worthlessness reports nothing about the moral reality of the agent’s condition; his rational faculty is intact; the pathological emotion is a consequence of prior false value judgments, not evidence of a genuine deficiency.


43. Low Frustration Tolerance (“I Can’t Stand This”)

The Impression

This situation is intolerable. I cannot bear it. It is too much. No one should have to endure this.

The impression asserts that the agent’s capacity for endurance is exhausted by the present external situation and that the situation itself is normatively excessive. The intolerance presents itself as an accurate registration of genuine suffering. Underneath the intolerance claim is a value claim: the external situation constitutes a genuine evil of a magnitude the rational faculty cannot be expected to bear.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a compound claim — a capacity claim (I cannot bear it) and a normative claim (no one should have to endure this) both grounded in a value claim about the external situation’s magnitude. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether the external situation constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism is again decisive. The impression makes a claim about the rational faculty’s own capacity — it asserts that the faculty is overwhelmed by the external situation. Substance Dualism establishes that the rational faculty is categorically distinct from the external order. The faculty’s capacity for assent and refusal is not determined by external conditions. Correspondence Theory: the intolerance claim — I cannot stand this; it is too much — is registered as a proposition making a capacity claim about the rational faculty and a value claim about the external situation. Both are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open — and the Pause is again evidence against the impression’s claim: the agent who holds the moment open against the force of I cannot bear it is bearing it, in the act.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: the external situation is an external. Externals are indifferent. The situation the impression calls intolerable carries no genuine moral weight. The value claim fails at Theorem 12. The capacity claim is additionally false on philosophical grounds: the corpus holds that no external situation can compel the rational faculty’s assent. The faculty’s originating capacity is not defeated by external pressure. The intolerance claim conflates the genuine difficulty of an external situation with a genuine incapacity of the rational faculty — which is precisely the distinction Substance Dualism maintains. The normative claim — no one should have to endure this — assigns genuine normative weight to relief from the external situation, which repeats the value claim in prescriptive form. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 10. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that the external situation carries no genuine moral weight and that the faculty’s capacity is not determined by it.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the intolerance claim and from the normative excess verdict it carries. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — the external situation is an indifferent; the rational faculty’s capacity is not defeated by external conditions; the situation is being borne, in the act of examining the claim about it.


44. Heaven’s Reward Fallacy (Expecting the World to Reward Sacrifice)

The Impression

I have given so much and sacrificed greatly. I deserve to be rewarded for this. The fact that I have not been rewarded is unjust. Something is owed to me.

The impression asserts that the external order is normatively obligated to deliver rewards proportionate to the agent’s sacrifice and effort. The expectation presents itself as a reasonable moral claim. Underneath the reward expectation is a value claim: the absence of reward constitutes a genuine evil and a genuine injustice that the agent is right to resent.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a compound claim — a normative claim that reward is owed, a factual claim that it has not been delivered, and a value claim about the moral weight of its absence. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether the absence of external reward constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from his past sacrifices, the external rewards that have or have not arrived, and the impression that has found the external order morally deficient for failing to deliver them. Correspondence Theory: the compound claim — I deserve reward; something is owed; the absence is unjust — is registered as a set of propositions making normative, factual, and value claims. All are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the resentment the unmet expectation generates.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: external rewards are externals. Whether the external order delivers recognition, compensation, or relief proportionate to the agent’s effort occupies the domain of indifferents. The absence of reward is not a genuine evil. The normative claim — that the external order owes the agent reward — rests on a false premise: the Stoic account does not locate a normative requirement of proportionate reward in the external order. The external order is not governed by a merit-reward principle owed to individual agents. The corpus is precise on this: virtue is its own reward, in the sense that correct action is its own completion — it does not generate a debt in the external order. The value claim fails at Theorem 12. The normative claim fails the foundational account of the external order. Foundationalism traces both failures. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that external reward carries no genuine moral weight and that the external order carries no normative obligation to deliver it.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the reward expectation and from the resentment its non-fulfillment generates. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — external reward is an indifferent; the external order carries no normative debt to the agent; sacrifice pursued as virtue is complete in the act, not in the external response it generates.


45. Self-Serving Bias (Crediting Success to Self, Blaming Failure Externally)

The Impression

When things go well, it is because of my ability and effort. When things go badly, it is because of circumstances or others. The pattern is consistent and feels natural.

The impression applies asymmetric causal attribution: success is internalized as evidence of genuine ability, failure is externalized as evidence of unfavorable conditions. The asymmetry presents itself as accurate self-knowledge. Underneath the self-serving pattern is a compound value claim: the agent’s ability, confirmed by success, is a genuine good constituting his worth; failure attributable to externals is not a genuine evil touching his standing.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — an asymmetric causal attribution applied consistently across outcomes. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether success-derived ability constitutes a genuine good and failure-derived external conditions constitute a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival for both components.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the external outcomes, the ability assessments derived from them, and the impression that has applied asymmetric attribution to protect a self-image. Correspondence Theory: the asymmetric attribution pattern — internal for success, external for failure — is registered as a proposition whose asymmetric structure is now visible as a claim requiring examination rather than as transparent self-knowledge.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the self-protective comfort the asymmetric attribution provides.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target and addresses both components simultaneously: external success outcomes are externals, and external failure outcomes are externals. Neither occupies the good-evil axis. The self-serving bias attempts to extract a genuine good — confirmed ability — from successful external outcomes, while protecting the agent from a genuine evil — confirmed failure — by externalizing unsuccessful ones. Both moves operate on a moral axis that does not apply to external outcomes. The asymmetry is additionally false as a causal account: outcomes are typically produced by multiple causal factors; consistent asymmetric attribution that always credits the agent for success and excuses him from failure is not accurate causal assessment but motivated reasoning. The honest causal assessment the Stoic account requires applies a consistent standard to both success and failure — which is what the self-serving bias specifically refuses to do. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 10 for both components. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that external outcomes in either direction carry no genuine moral weight.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the asymmetric attribution and from both value claims it carries. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — external outcomes are indifferents in both directions; honest causal assessment applying a consistent standard to both success and failure is appropriate; motivated asymmetric attribution is not.


46. Negative Self-Comparison (Measuring Self Only Against Idealized Others)

The Impression

Compared to the people I admire most, I fall far short. They have achieved what I have not. Measured against them, my accomplishments are negligible.

The impression selects a comparison class consisting exclusively of idealized others — those the agent admires for their achievements — and uses the unfavorable comparison to generate a verdict of inadequacy. The idealized comparison presents itself as an aspirational standard. Underneath the comparison is a value claim: falling short of idealized others constitutes a genuine evil determining the agent’s real standing.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a comparative verdict derived from a selectively idealized reference class. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether comparative inadequacy relative to admired others constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the idealized others, their achievements, his own achievements, and the impression that has generated a comparative verdict from a selected class. Correspondence Theory: the comparative verdict — my accomplishments are negligible measured against them — is registered as a proposition whose comparison class is now visible as a structural feature of the claim requiring examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the self-diminishing force of the idealized comparison.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: comparative standing relative to others’ achievements is an external. Whether the agent’s accomplishments are large or small relative to idealized others occupies the domain of indifferents. The value claim fails at Theorem 12. The comparison is additionally false as an assessment method: it selects the most admired and accomplished as the reference class, which systematically ensures an unfavorable verdict regardless of the agent’s actual achievements. The idealized others are idealized precisely because they represent exceptional achievement; comparing oneself exclusively to exceptional achievers produces inadequacy verdicts by construction, not by honest assessment. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 12. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that comparative achievement standing carries no genuine moral weight.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the comparative inadequacy verdict. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — comparative achievement is an indifferent; the idealized reference class produces an unfavorable verdict by construction; practical aspiration toward genuine achievement is appropriate as a preferred indifferent; a moral verdict derived from comparison to idealized others is not.


47. Over-Responsibility for Others’ Feelings or Outcomes

The Impression

She is upset. It must be because of something I did. I am responsible for how she feels. If she is unhappy, I have failed in my obligation to her.

The impression attributes causal and moral responsibility for another person’s emotional state to the agent, treating the other’s feelings as the agent’s domain of obligation. The responsibility claim presents itself as sensitivity and care. Underneath the over-responsibility is a value claim: another’s unhappy emotional state, attributed to the agent’s failure, constitutes a genuine evil for which the agent bears genuine moral culpability.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a compound claim — a causal attribution (her upset is caused by me) and a normative claim (I am obligated to manage her feelings) grounded in a value claim about the moral weight of the attributed failure. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether another’s emotional state constitutes a genuine evil for which the agent bears culpability. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the other person, her emotional state, its actual causes, and the impression that has attributed causal and moral responsibility for that state to the agent. Correspondence Theory: the over-responsibility claim — I am responsible for how she feels; I have failed — is registered as a proposition making a false causal claim and a false normative claim, both grounded in a value claim. All three are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the guilt the over-responsibility claim generates.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: another person’s emotional state is an external. On the Stoic account, emotional states are caused by the person’s own value judgments — not by external events or by other people’s actions. The impression’s causal claim is false on Stoic grounds: the other person’s upset is caused by her own judgments about her situation, not by the agent’s actions. The agent may have provided the occasion for those judgments, but the judgments and their emotional consequences belong to her rational faculty, not to his. The normative claim — that the agent is obligated to manage another’s feelings — assigns genuine moral obligation to an external outcome (another’s emotional state) that is both outside the agent’s causal domain and outside the moral domain that generates genuine obligations. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 12 and the causal claim to the Stoic account of emotional causation. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that another’s emotional state carries no genuine moral weight as a verdict on the agent’s conduct.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the over-responsibility claim and from the guilt it generates. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — another’s emotional state is an external caused by her own value judgments; the agent’s genuine moral domain is his own rational activity; honest assessment of whether his actions were appropriate is the relevant inquiry, not assumption of causal and moral responsibility for another’s emotional response.


48. Minimization of Strengths and Achievements

The Impression

What I have accomplished is not significant. Anyone could have done it. My strengths are ordinary. There is nothing genuinely impressive about what I have done or can do.

The impression systematically reduces the significance of the agent’s actual achievements and capabilities, treating them as ordinary or negligible. The minimization presents itself as honest modesty. Underneath the minimization is a compound value claim: significant achievements would be genuine goods establishing worth; the agent’s ordinary achievements do not; therefore his worth is not established.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a verdict of ordinariness applied to the agent’s achievements and strengths. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether ordinary achievements constitute a genuine evil or constitute a failure to establish genuine worth. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from his achievements, their objective significance, and the impression that has minimized both to produce a worth verdict. Correspondence Theory: the minimization claim — not significant; anyone could have done it; ordinary — is registered as a proposition making a factual claim about the objective significance of achievements and a value claim about the moral weight of ordinary versus significant achievement. Both are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the deflating force of the ordinariness verdict.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: achievements and strengths are externals. Whether the agent’s accomplishments are objectively significant or ordinary occupies the domain of indifferents. The minimization’s implicit premise — that significant achievement is a genuine good establishing worth and ordinary achievement is not — fails at Theorem 12 on both sides: significant achievement is not a genuine good, and ordinary achievement is not a genuine evil. The agent’s worth is not established or withdrawn by the external significance of his achievements. It is constituted by his identity as a rational faculty. The minimization is additionally operating on a false comparative standard: “anyone could have done it” is a claim requiring evidence that is rarely supplied. Foundationalism traces the primary value failure to Theorem 10 and Proposition 4. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that the external significance of his achievements has no capacity to establish or withdraw his genuine worth as a rational faculty.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the minimization verdict and from the worth claim it carries. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — achievements are indifferents at any level of external significance; the agent’s worth is constituted by his identity as a rational faculty, not by the external significance of his outputs; honest practical assessment of strengths and achievements is appropriate, a systematic minimization that serves a false worth model is not.


49. Defining Worth Solely by Productivity or Achievement

The Impression

My worth is determined by what I produce. If I am not productive, I am worthless. A period of low output means I have no real value. Worth must be earned through achievement.

The impression locates the agent’s entire worth in his external productivity and achievement outputs, so that fluctuations in output determine fluctuations in genuine worth. The productivity-worth equation presents itself as a reasonable motivational framework. Underneath the equation is a value claim: high productivity is a genuine good constituting worth; low productivity is a genuine evil removing it.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — an identity and worth verdict conditioned on external productivity outputs. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether productivity levels determine genuine worth. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism is the critical commitment. The impression locates the agent’s worth in his external outputs. Substance Dualism establishes that the agent’s identity is his rational faculty — not his productivity, not his achievement, not any external output. The impression is registered as a claim that misidentifies the locus of the agent’s worth at the most fundamental level: it places worth in the external order, which is categorically distinct from what the agent actually is. Correspondence Theory: the productivity-worth equation — worth must be earned through achievement — is registered as a proposition asserting a conditional identity claim requiring examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground — with particular force, because the impression attacks the locus of the agent’s worth by locating it in external outputs. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the anxiety that productivity fluctuation generates when worth depends on it.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: productivity and achievement outputs are externals. External outputs carry no genuine moral weight. The productivity-worth equation treats external achievement as a genuine good that constitutes worth and its absence as a genuine evil that removes it. Both fail at Theorem 12. More fundamentally, Proposition 4 of the corpus establishes that the agent’s identity is his rational faculty alone. Worth that must be earned through external achievement is worth located in the wrong domain — in what the agent does externally rather than in what the agent is. The rational faculty’s identity and worth are not conditional on external output levels. They are constituted by the faculty’s nature. Foundationalism traces the failure to Theorem 10 and Proposition 4. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that external productivity outputs have no capacity to establish or remove his genuine worth as a rational faculty.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the productivity-worth equation. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — productivity is an indifferent; worth is constituted by the agent’s identity as a rational faculty and is not conditional on external output; practical pursuit of productive work is appropriate as a preferred indifferent, worth contingent on productivity levels is not the correct account of the agent’s genuine condition.


50. Fusion of Thought and Morality (“Having a Bad Thought Makes Me Bad”)

The Impression

I had a violent thought. I am the kind of person who has violent thoughts. Having such a thought makes me morally deficient. A person of genuine virtue would not have thoughts like this.

The impression treats the mere occurrence of a negative, violent, or unwanted thought as evidence of the agent’s moral character, fusing the having of the thought with genuine moral culpability. The fusion presents itself as moral seriousness. Underneath the fusion is a value claim: having the bad thought constitutes a genuine evil that reveals and constitutes a genuine moral deficiency in the agent.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a moral character verdict derived from the occurrence of an unwanted thought. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether having a bad thought constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism is decisive here. The impression attributes moral significance to the occurrence of a thought in the psychophysical complex — but the Stoic account distinguishes sharply between the occurrence of an impression and the act of assenting to it. The impression arrived. It was not chosen. What is in the agent’s domain is what he does with it — whether he assents or withholds assent. The occurrence of an unwanted thought is an impression arriving at the rational faculty from the psychophysical complex. It is not yet an act of the rational faculty. It is subject to the five-step procedure, not itself a verdict on the faculty’s character. Correspondence Theory: the moral character verdict — having this thought makes me morally deficient — is registered as a proposition that misidentifies the domain of genuine moral action: it locates moral culpability in the occurrence of an impression rather than in the act of assent.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open — and the Pause is itself the evidence against the fusion claim: the agent is not assenting to the violent thought; he is examining the impression that having it makes him bad. The five-step engagement with the thought is precisely the virtuous response to its arrival.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: the occurrence of an unwanted thought is not the domain of genuine moral action. Genuine moral action occurs at the point of assent and refusal — the act of the rational faculty that either endorses the impression or withholds endorsement. The thought arrived as an impression from the psychophysical complex. The agent did not choose it. What is up to the agent is his response to it: assent, withholding of assent, and the five-step engagement. Applying the five-step procedure to a violent thought is not the action of a morally deficient agent — it is the correct virtuous response. The fusion claim conflates the arrival of an impression with the endorsement of it, which collapses the distinction between impression and assent that is foundational to the entire Stoic account. Foundationalism traces the failure to the foundational distinction between impression and assent. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that the occurrence of an unwanted thought is not a moral act and generates no genuine culpability.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the moral character verdict derived from the thought’s occurrence. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — the thought arrived as an impression; its occurrence is not a moral act; genuine moral action is the response to the impression, not the impression itself; the five-step engagement with the thought is the correct virtuous response and evidence against, not confirmation of, moral deficiency.


Closing Observation

Across all ten patterns in this category, two structural features distinguish this set from preceding categories. First, the false value claims in this category are more frequently directed inward — at the agent’s obligations, his emotional states, his identity, and his worth — than at external outcomes or other persons. The agent is both the subject making the claim and the object the claim is about. This internal direction makes the impressions in this category particularly difficult to examine because they present themselves as self-knowledge rather than as claims about externals. Correspondence Theory at Recognition does especially critical work here: registering the internally directed claim as a proposition requiring examination rather than as transparent self-access.

Second, Substance Dualism does its most philosophically specific work across this category. Patterns 42, 43, 47, 49, and 50 all involve impressions that attack or exploit the boundary between the rational faculty and the psychophysical complex — treating emotional states as epistemic warrants (42), treating the faculty as overwhelmed by external conditions (43), treating another’s emotions as the agent’s causal domain (47), locating worth in external outputs (49), and treating the mere arrival of an impression as a moral act of the faculty (50). In every case, Substance Dualism at Recognition is the commitment that maintains the boundary the impression is collapsing, and that makes the examination possible by preserving the subject pole as categorically distinct from the psychophysical events the impression is treating as constitutive of the agent’s genuine condition.

Pattern 50 (Fusion of Thought and Morality) is structurally the most philosophically precise in this set. It collapses the foundational Stoic distinction between impression and assent — the distinction on which the entire Five-Step Method rests. The examination of this pattern is therefore not merely a tracking of a false value claim through the steps but a demonstration that the five-step engagement itself is the evidence against the claim it is examining.


Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Analysis and instrument architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.