Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Thursday, July 09, 2026

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Line 29: The Terminus of the System v1.0

 

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Line 29: The Terminus of the System v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Line Verbatim

29) Ergo, virtue consists of the pursuit of appropriate objects of aim, not the pursuit of the [external] objects of our desires. Such virtuous acts will give us good feelings [by 17], and since we have no desires regarding the actual outcome, they will never produce unhappiness for us.

Section Four: Virtue — the final line of Core Stoicism.


II. Sterling’s Dated Elaboration

Sterling’s elaboration is the closing paragraph that follows immediately, tying the threads of all four sections: someone who judges truly will never be unhappy, will experience continual uninterrupted appropriate positive feelings, and will always act virtuously — a life anyone would agree was happy — and since judgment is in our control, that life is not merely possible but guaranteed to anyone who judges correctly and acts on those judgments. Excerpt 10 supplies the line’s working portrait: the agent who aimed at eating at the restaurant if possible, finds it closed, and is “not in the least upset” — all his choices correct at the time, his contentment intact, and new choices now to be made. Line 29 is that afternoon stated as a theorem.


III. Dependency Position

Derived, from 28 + 17 + Th25, per the Atomic Foundation — the terminus of the entire system, and a member of Sterling’s stated collapse-set for Th7. Each premise contributes one clause: line 28 supplies the negative half of the definition (not the pursuit of desired externals); Th25 supplies the positive half (appropriate objects of aim); line 17, cited by Sterling in the skeleton’s last explicit citation — “[by 17]” — supplies the affective yield. Per the ratified Joint Two analysis, that citation is the hinge’s far end: clause (a)’s success became line 15’s premise, the chain executed through Th16 to 17, and line 29 now imports 17’s output as the ground of its own success condition. The two clauses of Sterling’s practical program meet, formally, in this one bracket.

Line 29 mirrors line 14 exactly, one section over: as 14 closed clause (a) with a double payoff — judge truly and be immune — 29 closes clause (b) with its own: positive feelings from the virtuous act and no possible unhappiness from the outcome. The skeleton’s two termini are structural twins, and each pays out truth and wellbeing together from a single act.


IV. The Mechanics of the Second Payoff

The closing clause looks paradoxical and is not, and the ratified corpus analysis of the mechanics belongs in the theorem’s own document. How can the agent aim at the outcome, care enough to act — walk to the restaurant, pursue the recovery, report the truth — and be untouched when the outcome fails? Because unhappiness, by Th3, requires a frustrated desire, and a desire, by Th7’s biconditional, requires the judgment that the outcome is genuinely good — and that judgment was never made. The aim was real: the act of will had the outcome as its content (Th24), held with reservation. But no desire regarding the actual outcome ever existed, so there is nothing for the failed outcome to frustrate. The exposure that line 4 diagnosed attaches to desires, not to aims — and the reformed agent’s acts carry aims only. “They will never produce unhappiness for us” is therefore not resilience, discipline, or rapid recovery; it is the absence, by construction, of the only mechanism unhappiness ever had.


V. Synthesis

Line 29 is the skeleton’s complete answer to its own opening. Th1 said everyone wants happiness; twenty-eight lines later, the system hands back a life in which virtue, positive feeling, and invulnerability are not three pursuits in tension but one act described three ways. The final line’s deepest feature is what it does not contain: no trade-off, anywhere, between being moral and being happy. The entire history of ethics is shadowed by the suspicion that virtue costs the agent something — that the just man finishes last, that duty and wellbeing pull apart. Line 29 closes Core Stoicism by denying the suspicion at its root: the virtuous act is the pleasant act (by 17) and is the invulnerable act (by the mechanics above), because all three properties flow from the same source — the aim rationally selected, the false valuation never made. The agent is never asked to choose between virtue and happiness because, correctly analyzed, there was never more than one thing to choose.

The line also completes the discharge structure that has organized the whole document. Every debt the skeleton opened is now repaid: 2*, redeemed at 14; line 5’s bracket, discharged at 8; Th2’s “continual,” redeemed at 23; and line 29 itself pays the last implicit note — that the immune, positively happy agent of Sections Two and Three would still need something to do. He acts, constantly and ordinarily, in the world and toward it, distinguishable from his neighbors only at the point of assent. Sterling’s one claimed virtue for his version — showing how the ideas flow — is vindicated at the terminus: the last line cites the seventeenth, the seventeenth grew from the fourteenth, the fourteenth discharged the second, and nothing in the chain is ornamental. The skeleton ends where a skeleton should: bearing weight at every joint.


VI. Series Completion Note

With this document, all twenty-nine lines of Core Stoicism have been spelled out, per Sterling’s own 2005 instruction that “obviously all the points below would need to be spelled out.” The series index carries the full map. The task Sterling left open is, at the level of first coverage, closed — subject always to revision as archival mining supplies dated elaborations for the lines whose gaps this series has recorded as findings.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Line 28: Clause (b)’s Direct Verdict v1.0

 

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Line 28: Clause (b)’s Direct Verdict v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Line Verbatim

28) Ergo, any act that aims at an [external] object of desire is not virtuous, since all desires [for externals] are irrational.

Section Four: Virtue.


II. Sterling’s Dated Elaboration

No dated elaboration located for this line specifically; its content is carried by its premises, and its working form appears in Excerpt 7’s negative half — the agent who reported truthfully must not convert keeping the job into the aim of his act, since that outcome is an object of desire under a false valuation. The gap is recorded as a finding, subject to revision.


III. Dependency Position

Derived, from Th27 + 13, per the Atomic Foundation, and a member of Sterling’s stated collapse-set for Th7. The inference: Th27 defines virtue as rational acts of will; line 13 established that desires for externals embed false judgment and are irrational; an act of will whose aim is fixed by such a desire imports the desire’s irrationality into itself; therefore the act is not virtuous. Line 28 is the point where Section Two’s diagnostic machinery crosses into Section Four — the longest reach-back in the skeleton’s derivations, and the crossing Sterling’s collapse-test traces: deny Th7 and you lose 13, and losing 13 severs exactly this line, which is why the argument that desiring acts are not virtuous falls with the causal law. Its single dependent is line 29.

Functionally, per the ratified clause (b) analyses, line 28 is met first in the action guard’s order: clause (b) operates once clause (a) has failed — the desire is present, and a further impulse names some response as appropriate. Line 28 is the direct verdict against that impulse; Th27, Th24, and Th25 are what the practitioner reaches back to for its terms.


IV. Synthesis

Line 28 is where the system’s two great subjects — happiness and virtue — are welded together, and the weld is the word “since.” Until now the false valuation of externals has cost the agent only his own immunity: a prudential and epistemic failure, self-regarding in its damage. Line 28 converts the same failure into a moral one. The act aiming at the desired external is not merely exposed and mistaken; it is not virtuous — the irrationality of the desire contaminates the act built on it, because an act of will takes its rational standing from the aim that is its content (Th24), and an aim fixed by false judgment cannot confer rational standing. One error, two ledgers: the belief that the external is good costs happiness under Section Two’s accounting and costs virtue under Section Four’s — which is exactly the double loss Sterling’s collapse-test names when it warns that denying Th7 forfeits “both virtue and happiness” together.

The line’s precision should be marked against a natural over-reading: line 28 does not condemn acts aiming at externals — Th25 just licensed those. It condemns acts aiming at external objects of desire: aims fixed by a Th7-desire, a judgment that the outcome is genuinely good. The same recovered property, pursued as a preferred indifferent with reservation, is the content of a virtuous act; pursued as a good whose loss would be an evil, it is the content of a vicious one. The two acts are behaviorally identical, and line 28’s verdict falls entirely on the assent beneath the act — the moral surface of Th27’s definition, applied. Clause (b)’s guard is thus not a filter on conduct but a filter on the judgment inside conduct: when the value guard has failed and the desire stands, the action guard’s question is whether the agent will now let the false valuation choose his aim.


V. Where the Flow Goes Next

Line 29 states the system’s terminus: virtue as the pursuit of appropriate objects of aim, yielding positive feelings by 17 and never unhappiness — the closing document of the theorem series, at fuller length per its position.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Th27: The Definition of Virtue v1.0

 

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Th27: The Definition of Virtue v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Line Verbatim

Th 27) Virtue consists of rational acts of will, vice of irrational acts of will.

Section Four: Virtue — the definition the section is named for.


II. Sterling’s Dated Elaboration

Excerpt 10 is Th27’s fullest dated elaboration, and it supplies three layers. First, the meaning of “rational”: “‘Appropriate’ means that it was rationally correct” — with the lunch example exhibiting rational correctness as an assessable property of particular choices. Second, the anatomy of the rational act of will, stated as method: identify rational goals (preferred indifferents), select rational means designed to realize them, and make both choices with reservation. Third — and most important for the theorem’s precise reading — the curly-braced passage in which Sterling marks his own position against the ancient school:

{To go beyond making appropriate choices and achieve virtue, I must make appropriate choices _and_ those choices must be connected together in a settled disposition to rationally evaluate all information that comes to me. Hence, one cannot perform _one_ virtuous action--virtuous actions come when one has reached the stage where one's inner rational development has been perfected. No-one achieves that except the Sage. I, personally, am willing to be a bit more generous and call some actions "virtuous", but most of the ancient Stoics would not.}

The passage records a deliberate choice of locus: the ancient orthodoxy reserved “virtuous” for acts flowing from the Sage’s perfected disposition; Sterling, “a bit more generous,” extends the term to particular rational acts of will — and Th27 is that generosity stated as a definition.


III. Dependency Position

Basic and load-bearing per the Atomic Foundation, with the same scoping as Th25: the pair sustains the virtue section, not the negative-happiness argument. Th27’s direct dependent is line 28 (with 13), and through 28, line 29 — both members of Sterling’s stated collapse-set for Th7, whose diagnosis arrives at 28 through line 13. Upstream, Th27 makes definitional what line 11 asserted in passing: virtue and vice are types of acts of will — the identification that placed them inside Th6’s boundary and at the intersection of the value map and the control map. Functionally, in clause (b)’s order, Th27 is the definition beneath “virtuous”: the practitioner meets line 28’s verdict first and reaches back to Th27 for what the verdict’s key term means.


IV. Commitment Grounding

C2 — Libertarian Free Will, per the ratified integration and the necessary-conditions argument: deny C2 and Th27 is emptied. The definition locates virtue and vice in acts of will, and the location does moral work only if the acts are originated. A determined output can be fortunate or unfortunate, well-formed or defective — it cannot be creditable or blameworthy, and “virtue” and “vice” are irreducibly terms of credit and blame. The agent must be the genuine first cause of the assent for the assent’s rationality to be his achievement and its irrationality his failure. C3 is engaged through the standard the definition applies: rational correctness is assessed by the faculty whose competence intuitionism asserts, and Excerpt 10’s inventory of considerations is that assessment exhibited.


V. Synthesis

Th27 completes a relocation the skeleton has been preparing since line 11: virtue is a property of acts of will — not of outcomes, not of character traits, not of track records, not of reputations. Everything the definition excludes had a claimant tradition behind it, and each exclusion earns its keep. Not outcomes: the choice is appropriate or inappropriate at the instant it is made, and the car accident, the changed mind, the closed restaurant touch nothing — otherwise virtue would hang on externals and line 11’s control claim would fail. Not consequences produced: an act aiming rationally at the right object is virtuous even when the world refuses it, and a reckless act is vicious even when the ice is safely crossed. The evaluation point is the moment of assent, because that is the only point the agent occupies.

The definition’s symmetry deserves equal weight: vice of irrational acts of will. Vice is not transgression against a rule-list, not harm caused, not social deviance — it is irrationality in the act of will itself, which per the corpus’s standing anatomy can enter at any of three points: aiming at a desired external rather than an appropriate object, pursuing an appropriate object through irrational means, or omitting reservation. The third is the subtlest: the agent who aims at the right thing, by the right route, but stakes himself on the outcome has re-smuggled a value judgment into the act, and the act is corrupted at the point of assent even though its visible conduct is impeccable. Th27 makes the moral quality of a life invisible from outside — exactly as the aim/desire distinction at Th25 promised.

Finally, the act-locus settles what the system’s promises are worth to an imperfect practitioner. On the ancient disposition view, virtue waits at the end of a perfected development no one but the Sage completes — a regulative ideal, not a present possibility. Sterling’s generosity is not a loosening of standards but a change of unit: each act of will is separately assessable, separately creditable, and separately within the agent’s control now. The prokoptōn does not approach virtue asymptotically; he performs virtuous acts today and irrational ones today, and every assent is a fresh, undamaged opportunity — the no-carryover structure the recovery audit already presupposes. The settled disposition remains the goal of training, as the curly-braced passage says; but the moral life is transacted act by act, and Th27 is the definition that makes it so.


VI. Where the Flow Goes Next

Line 28 applies the definition through line 13’s diagnosis: any act that aims at an external object of desire is not virtuous, since all desires for externals are irrational — clause (b)’s direct verdict, and the next document, brief.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Th26: The Inventory v1.0

 

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Th26: The Inventory v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Line Verbatim

Th 26) Some such objects are things like life [our own, or others'], health, pleasure, knowledge, justice, truth- telling, etc.

Section Four: Virtue.


II. Sterling’s Dated Elaboration

Excerpt 7 elaborates two of the list’s members in working form — truth-telling and work-faithfulness held as aims while the job’s loss is received as an external — and Excerpt 10’s lunch inventory shows the everyday members (food, exercise, economy, collegial conversation) being selected by plain rational assessment. No dated elaboration of the list as such has been located; the gap is recorded as a finding, subject to revision.


III. Dependency Position

Illustrative, per the Atomic Foundation — the corpus’s one line that is neither basic nor derived in the load-bearing sense: an instantiation of Th25, not an independent axiom, despite the “Th” mark. This is the standing classification principle — Th-marked does not mean foundational — at its clearest single case. Nothing downstream derives from the specific contents of the list: line 28 and line 29 run entirely on Th25’s category, and any member of Th26’s list could be struck or another added without a single derivation shifting. The “etc.” is load-bearing in exactly one sense: it marks the list as open, the category as the doctrine, and the members as examples.


IV. Synthesis

The list’s composition repays reading even though nothing derives from it, because Sterling’s six examples span the doctrine’s full range and quietly refute three misreadings at once. Life — with the bracket’s deliberate extension, “[our own, or others’]” — heads the list, answering the coldness charge before it is made: the preservation of other people’s lives is an appropriate aim of the reformed agent, whose care for others survives the value strip intact, relocated from desire to aim. Pleasure appears, confirming line 19’s acquittal from the aim side: the agent may rationally select toward the innocent pleasures, so the doctrine is not ascetic. And justice and truth-telling close the list — per the ratified precision recorded at Th25, as outcomes in the world, what just and truthful action produces, not as the virtues that produce them: even here, virtue stays off the target list.

The mixed character of the list is its second lesson. Life, health, and pleasure are objects of self-regarding aim; knowledge serves the rational faculty itself; justice and truth-telling are irreducibly social. Sterling’s examples make the preferred indifferents span the whole territory of an ordinary responsible life — body, mind, and community — which is the skeleton’s final answer to the quietist misreading: the agent who values only virtue is not thereby withdrawn from the world; the world is precisely where his appropriate aims live. What Th26 illustrates, in the end, is that Stoicism’s revision leaves the visible shape of a decent human life almost untouched — the same pursuits, the same duties, the same care — while replacing, one by one, the false judgments underneath them.


V. Where the Flow Goes Next

Th27 supplies the definition the section is named for: virtue consists of rational acts of will, vice of irrational acts of will — load-bearing for the virtue section, C2-grounded, and the next document at full treatment.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Th25: The Preferred-Indifferents Axiom v1.0

 

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Th25: The Preferred-Indifferents Axiom v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Line Verbatim

Th 25) Some things are appropriate objects at which to aim, although they are not genuinely good.

Section Four: Virtue.


II. Sterling’s Dated Elaboration

Two dated strands apply. Excerpt 10 supplies the meaning of “appropriate” directly — “‘Appropriate’ means that it was rationally correct” — and exhibits the appropriateness-determination in action: the lunch choice justified by an inventory of plain rational considerations (the need for food, the exercise, the weather, the reasonable price, the productive company), with the explicit method following — identify rational goals to pursue, select rational means designed to realize them, and hold both with reservation. Nothing in the inventory is a value claim; every item is a reason.

Excerpt 7 supplies the doctrine walking its knife-edge: the agent should report truthfully to his boss regarding the sales numbers — truth-telling is virtuous, and he has a duty to act faithfully at work — and if the boss fires him, he should remember that the job is an external, neither good nor evil. The aim (truth-telling, work-faithfulness) is held; the desire for the outcome (keeping the job) is never formed. The two Excerpts together give Th25 its full operating manual: what appropriateness is, how it is determined, and how the aim is held when the outcome goes against it.


III. Dependency Position

Basic and load-bearing per the Atomic Foundation — with the scope precisely noted: Th25 and Th27 sustain the virtue section, not the negative-happiness argument. Load-bearing weight is scoped, not uniform. Deny Th25 and line 14’s immunity stands, but Section Four collapses into paralysis: Th24 requires every act of will to have content, Th10 through 13 have disqualified every external as an object of desire, and without Th25 nothing remains for the will legitimately to aim at. Th25 is the doctrine that saves clause (b) from being a counsel of inaction. Its direct dependents: Th26 (an instantiation, not an independent axiom) and line 29, which cites it in the system’s terminus.

Functionally, Th25 is the positive content of clause (b): where clause (a) polices what may be valued, clause (b) licenses what may be aimed at, and Th25 is the license itself.


IV. Commitment Grounding

C6 — Moral Realism, per the ratified necessary-conditions argument: preferred indifferents are appropriate objects of aim as a matter of fact, which is what separates the doctrine from a taste. Appropriateness is a normative standing fixed by reason’s assessment of the agent’s nature, situation, and roles — not conferred by his preference. Deny C6 and Th25 deflates alongside Th10: “appropriate to pursue” becomes “what people like me tend to pursue,” and the distinction between the rational agent’s aims and anyone’s whims disappears. C3 is engaged in the usual terminating role: that reason is competent to determine which objects are appropriate, and to see the appropriateness directly in cases like Excerpt 10’s inventory, is intuitionism operating in the practical register.


V. Synthesis

Th25’s entire content is a gap between two normative vocabularies, and the system’s coherence lives in that gap. “Appropriate” and “good” are not degrees of the same scale — a preferred indifferent is not a lesser good, a conditional good, or a good-for-practical-purposes. It is not good at all, and it is genuinely appropriate to pursue. The two claims are of different kinds: value is a fact about where good and evil reside (Th10’s territory, exhausted by virtue and vice); appropriateness is a fact about what reason selects given an agent’s nature and circumstances (Th25’s territory, populated by externals). Because the axes are distinct, Th25 never trespasses on Th10 — the needle is threaded, not fudged: externals return as legitimate targets without returning as goods. Line 19’s bracket already ran this distinction one section early; Th25 states it as an axiom.

The practical yield is the aim/desire distinction at full operation. To desire an object is, by Th7’s biconditional, to judge it good — false, for any external. To aim at it is only to make it the content of an act of will (Th24), a selection carrying no value claim, held with reservation. Two agents can pursue the identical external — the income, the health, the recovered property — while differing entirely at the level of assent: one desires the outcome as a genuine good and is exposed; the other aims at it as a preferred indifferent and stakes nothing. The behavioral surface is indistinguishable; the difference is one judgment. This is why the reformed agent of the corpus’s standing formulation acts, in most cases, very much like an ordinary person of sound judgment — seeking food, keeping promises, telling the truth, caring for his family — with only the emotional stake in outcomes absent. Stoicism’s revision was never of conduct; it was of the judgments beneath conduct.

One precision from the ratified corpus completes the theorem’s reading: virtue itself is never among the objects of appropriate aim. Virtue is not a target the agent pursues as he pursues health; it is the quality of the pursuit itself. The agent does not aim at virtue — he aims at the preferred indifferent virtuously, and where justice and truth-telling appear in Th26’s coming list, they appear as outcomes in the world, not as the virtues that produce them. Keeping virtue off the target list protects the system from a subtle relapse: an agent who aimed at his own virtue as an outcome would have converted the one genuine good into one more result at which to grasp — and line 15’s desire for virtue, which is the true judgment in motive form, must not be confused with treating virtue as a Th24-content. The desire for virtue is satisfied in the choosing; it never waits on the world.


VI. Where the Flow Goes Next

Th26 supplies the inventory — life, health, pleasure, knowledge, justice, truth-telling — the skeleton’s one illustrative line despite its “Th” mark, and the next document, brief.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Th24: The Content Requirement v1.0

 

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Th24: The Content Requirement v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Line Verbatim

Th 24) In order to perform an act of will, the act of will must have some content. The content is composed of the result at which one aims.

Section Four: Virtue — its opening line.


II. Sterling’s Dated Elaboration

Excerpt 10 elaborates the theorem in working form. Every choice in the lunch example has content — to promise, to walk this route, to order this meal — and Sterling states the requirement as method: identify rational goals to pursue, then select a rational course of action designed to help realize them. The same text supplies the theorem’s finest precision, in the reservation doctrine: the content of Sterling’s choice was never to produce the outcome of eating at the restaurant, but to take the rational path toward it if the gods allow — content as the result aimed at, never the result guaranteed. No further dated elaboration has been located; the gap is recorded as a finding, subject to revision.


III. Dependency Position

Basic but peripheral, per the Atomic Foundation: definitional scaffolding for Section Four, grounding no proof on its own. Underived — a claim in the philosophy of action, not an inference from prior lines — and carrying no commitment grounding in the ratified integration; its status is definitional, recorded as a finding. Its work is vocabulary: “aim” and “content” enter the skeleton here, and everything after runs on them — Th25’s appropriate objects of aim, line 28’s acts that aim at objects of desire, line 29’s pursuit of appropriate aims. Without Th24, clause (b) has no grammar.


IV. Synthesis

Th24’s quiet function is to manufacture the crisis that Th25 exists to resolve — and the skeleton’s last movement cannot be understood without seeing the trap sprung. The theorem says willing is never contentless: to will at all is to aim at some result. But results are outcomes — external, per Th6’s boundary — and Section Two spent twelve lines establishing that externals carry no value and that desiring them is false judgment. The agent of line 14, immune precisely because he has withdrawn all stakes from outcomes, is now told that his every act of will must be about an outcome. If aiming were desiring, virtue would be impossible: every act of will would embed the exact false judgment the whole system exists to eliminate, and the only escape would be to stop willing — the quietism the framework everywhere refuses. Th24 thus sharpens the question the fourth section answers: what may an agent aim at, who values nothing external?

The theorem also fixes, in advance, where virtue’s evaluation happens. If the content of an act of will is the result at which one aims — not the result that occurs — then the act is complete, and evaluable, at the instant of choice. Excerpt 10’s doctrine follows directly: the choice is already appropriate or inappropriate when made, and the car accident, the changed mind, the closed restaurant are all irrelevant to its standing. Aiming is internal; producing is external; Th24’s definition places the whole of the moral act on the near side of Th6’s boundary, where line 11 already located virtue and vice. The scaffolding is peripheral in collapse-weight but exact in placement: it is the joint at which the theory of value becomes a theory of action.


V. Where the Flow Goes Next

Th25 resolves the crisis: some things are appropriate objects at which to aim, although they are not genuinely good — the preferred-indifferents axiom, load-bearing for the entire virtue section, and the next document at full treatment.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Line 23: The Three Ways v1.0

 

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Line 23: The Three Ways v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Line Verbatim

23) Ergo, the Stoic will be positively happy, will have positive feelings, in at least three ways: appreciation of his own virtue, physical and sensory pleasures, and the appreciation of the world as it is. The last of those three is something that the Stoic could experience continually, every waking second, since at every waking second one can perceive something as being what it is, and hence what it should be.

Section Three: Positive Happiness or Appropriate Positive Feelings — its closing line.


II. Sterling’s Dated Elaboration

Sterling’s own elaboration is the closing paragraph of Core Stoicism, where line 23’s yield is folded into the discharge of 2*: someone who judges truly “will in fact experience continual uninterrupted appropriate positive feelings” — the phrase that converts line 23’s “could experience continually” into the guaranteed condition of the true judge. The corpus-carried taxonomy of appropriate positive feelings matches the line’s three ways and adds a fourth class — startlement and other natural reactions — extending Th18’s territory without disturbing the count here. No separately dated elaboration of the line has been located; the gap is recorded as a finding, subject to revision.


III. Dependency Position

Derived, from 17 + 19 + Th22, per the Atomic Foundation — the terminus of the positive program, gathering the section’s three channels into one yield. Each conjunct arrives by a different causal route, per the ratified analyses: appreciation of one’s own virtue is the fruit of the chain through desire (15, Th16, 17) — clause (a)’s success bearing interest; the physical and sensory pleasures are Th18’s judgment-free base case, ruled appropriate at 19; the appreciation of the world as it is runs through Th22’s judgment-without-desire channel, licensed by Th20/21. Line 23 has no dependents within the skeleton’s derivations — its output is collected instead by Sterling’s closing paragraph, where it supplies the “continual uninterrupted appropriate positive feelings” that the discharge of 2* requires.


IV. The Continuity Claim

The second sentence is where the section earns its keep, and its argument is compressed to a single “since.” Spelled out: Th2’s bracket defined complete happiness temporally — continual, uninterrupted. Immunity (line 14) secures the uninterrupted half: nothing can break in. But immunity alone leaves the continual half unredeemed — an undisturbed life is not yet a continuously positive one, and the first two channels are episodic by nature: the virtue channel fires when one acts, the sensory channel when a pleasure occurs. Only the third channel can run perpetually, and line 23 says why: at every waking second, something is present to perception; whatever is present is what it is; and by Th21’s verdict, what it is, is what it should be. The regard therefore never lacks an object. The promise minted at Th2 in the word “continual” is redeemed here in the words “every waking second” — the longest single arc in the skeleton, twenty-one lines from coinage to payment, and the flow Sterling named as his version’s one virtue operating at full span.

The dependency structure’s finding follows at once: the maximal claim rests on the droppable premises. The practitioner who denies Th20/21 keeps immunity and keeps the two episodic channels — a life undisturbed and intermittently joyful — but forfeits the perpetual channel, and with it the full redemption of Th2’s bracket. Line 23’s “at least three ways” is thus graded merchandise: the first two ways come with the negative program; the third is purchased with the theology.


V. Synthesis

Line 23 is the skeleton’s answer to the oldest slander against Stoicism — that the price of invulnerability is greyness, that the sage buys his calm by feeling nothing. The answer is an inventory: the reformed agent’s life contains the satisfaction of the one desire that cannot fail, the whole innocent field of sensory pleasure left untouched by the value strip, and — under the providential premises — a standing appreciation available toward literally anything. Nothing in the list is compensation or substitute; each is what the corrected judgments leave standing and generate. The polemical order of the sections now shows its design: Sterling proves the fortress first (Section Two) and furnishes it second (Section Three), so that no reader can mistake the furnishing for the defense or suppose the defense precludes the furnishing.

The phrase “perceive something as being what it is, and hence what it should be” also deserves its weight: it makes the third channel an achievement of accuracy, not of optimism. The regard does not repaint the world; it sees the world rightly — under Th21, “is” and “should be” coincide, so the appreciative posture and the correct posture are one posture. This is the same conjunction line 14 established for the negative program — truth and wellbeing arriving together from the same act — now extended to the positive: the Stoic’s joy, like his immunity, is never bought at any discount on truth. With line 23, both halves of Th2’s specification are on the books, and the system’s remaining business is conduct: what the immune, positively happy agent actually does. That is Section Four.


VI. Where the Flow Goes Next

Section Four opens with definitional scaffolding: Th24 — every act of will must have content, the result at which one aims — the theorem that gives clause (b) its vocabulary. It is the next document, brief, as a basic but peripheral premise.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Th22: The Regard Law v1.0

 

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Th22: The Regard Law v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Line Verbatim

Th 22) If you regard any aspect [or, better, all aspects] of the world as being exactly as it should be, you will receive appropriate positive feelings.

Section Three: Positive Happiness or Appropriate Positive Feelings.


II. Sterling’s Dated Elaboration

No dated elaboration located for this line specifically. Its working use appears in the corpus-carried taxonomy of appropriate positive feelings — appreciation of the world as it actually is stands as the fourth class — and in Excerpt 10’s contentment at the closed restaurant, which is Th22 fired on a single aspect: the outcome, regarded as what the gods willed, received without disturbance and with settled contentment. The gap for the line as such is recorded as a finding, subject to revision.


III. Dependency Position

Basic but peripheral, per the Atomic Foundation — conditional on Th20/21, inheriting their peripheral status. Underived as a psychological law, but its license is inherited: the regard Th22 rewards is a judgment, and the judgment is true only if Th21’s verdict holds. Its single dependent is line 23, to which it contributes the third and only continual channel. Per the ratified Joint One analysis, Th22 is causally distinct from both of its siblings: the virtue channel runs through desire (15, Th16, 17); the sensory channel bypasses judgment entirely (Th18); the providential channel runs through judgment but around desire — a third causal route to feeling. Like Th16 and Th18, it carries no commitment grounding in the ratified integration as an empirical-psychological law — recorded as a finding — though its truth-condition engages C5 through Th21.


IV. Synthesis

Th22 completes the system’s affective physics. Th16 tied feeling to satisfied desire; Th18 freed some feeling from judgment altogether; Th22 ties feeling to judgment without desire — and that omission is the engineering. A route to positive feeling that ran through desire would be one more exposure under Th3; a route that runs through regard alone stakes nothing on any outcome, because regarding what has already happened as it should be involves no outcome still pending. The channel is therefore invulnerable in exactly the way line 14 requires: it can be exercised toward any event whatsoever, including the ones that would have been pathē under the old valuations. The word “receive” is exact — the feelings are not achieved, as Th16’s are; they arrive with the regard, as the affective face of a true judgment about the world.

The bracket — “[or, better, all aspects]” — is the whole difference between a consolation and a life. Regarding an aspect as it should be is the recovery audit’s strongest exit, applied to the occasion of a pathos; regarding all aspects so is a standing orientation, available at every moment toward whatever is present. The bracket thus prepares line 23’s decisive escalation — every waking second — and marks the practice’s mature form: not a technique reached for in trouble, but the reformed agent’s default posture toward a world he holds to be justly governed. The “appropriate” in the consequent carries the same license it carried at line 17: the feelings are justified because the causing judgment is true — which is also the channel’s honest fragility, since if Th20/21 were false, the regard would be a false judgment and its comforts pathological. The channel is exactly as sound as its theology, and the skeleton, having marked that theology droppable, never pretends otherwise.


V. Where the Flow Goes Next

Line 23 gathers all three channels — appreciation of one’s own virtue, the sensory pleasures, the regard of the world as it is — into the positive program’s terminus, with the continuity claim that redeems Th2’s bracket. It is the next document, at fuller length per its position as the section’s terminus.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Th21: The Providential Verdict v1.0

 

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Th21: The Providential Verdict v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Line Verbatim

Th 21) That which is Natural, or is governed by Providence, God, or the gods is exactly as it should be. [Zeus is just, or however you wish to express this.] {Nota bene that this produces a problem for those stoics who are strict determinists, since it would mean that even acts of vice were somehow correct, and are not actually in our control in any important sense. But I don't think strict determinism about internal states is a core belief of Stoicism.}

Section Three: Positive Happiness or Appropriate Positive Feelings. The longest annotation Sterling attaches to any line in the skeleton.


II. Sterling’s Dated Elaboration

The elaboration is internal: the nota bene is Sterling annotating his own theorem at the moment of stating it, and it is dated with the document. Beyond it, his closing remarks pair Th21 with Th20 in the one droppability grading he states directly (quoted in the Th20 document). Excerpt 10’s working theology applies here as to Th20 — “the all-wise gods” whose will takes precedence is Th21’s verdict in practical form: what the gods will is received as right, not merely as settled. No further dated elaboration has been located; the gap is recorded as a finding, subject to revision.


III. Dependency Position

Basic but peripheral, per the Atomic Foundation — paired with Th20 by Sterling as droppable. Underived: the theorem converts Th20’s governance premise into a normative verdict — the governed world is exactly as it should be — and offers no argument beyond the bracket’s gesture at divine justice (“Zeus is just, or however you wish to express this”). Its single dependent is Th22, which converts the verdict into an affective channel; through Th22 it feeds line 23’s continual third way. The detachability finding recorded at Th20 covers the pair jointly: their denial damages only the providential channel, leaving both guards and full immunity standing, while forfeiting the system’s only perpetual positive channel.


IV. The Nota Bene — Sterling’s Own Boundary Against Determinism

The curly-braced note deserves separate treatment, because it is the skeleton’s only moment of open doctrinal surgery on the ancient school. Sterling sees the collision exactly: if strict determinism held for internal states, then acts of vice would themselves be governed outcomes — and Th21 would certify them as “exactly as they should be,” while Th6’s control boundary would collapse from the inside, since assent would no longer be originated “in any important sense.” A fully deterministic providence makes Th21 devour Th10 and Th6 together: nothing could be genuinely vicious, and nothing genuinely in our control.

Sterling’s resolution is a scope restriction: providence governs the external world; it does not determine internal states. “I don’t think strict determinism about internal states is a core belief of Stoicism” — a deliberate departure from the ancient school’s physics where necessary, in favor of its ethics. This is C2 — Libertarian Free Will — operating as an interpretive constraint on theology: whatever Th20’s governor governs, it stops at the boundary of the prohairesis. The verdict “exactly as it should be” therefore ranges over what befalls the agent, never over what the agent originates. Excerpt 10 observes the same line in practice: outcomes are in the hands of the gods; the choice is the agent’s own, and it is the choice, not the outcome, that is appropriate or inappropriate. The nota bene is thus the moment the skeleton chooses its commitments over its ancestry — and says so in print.


V. Synthesis

Th21 is the strongest claim in the skeleton’s theology, and its strength is what the third channel runs on. Th20 alone says the universe is governed; a governed universe might still be governed badly. Th21 adds the verdict that closes the gap: what the governance delivers is exactly as it should be — not endurable, not acceptable on balance, but right. The regard Th22 will license is only as strong as this verdict: one can be resigned to a merely governed world; one can be grateful only toward a just one. The bracket’s flexibility (“however you wish to express this”) again leaves the metaphysical dress to the practitioner while holding the normative content fixed.

The verdict also completes the recovery audit’s strongest exit, per the ratified Joint One analysis. The audit that ends at “not evil” has recovered; the audit that ends at “exactly as it should be” has recovered and converted the very occasion of the pathos into material for appropriate positive feeling. Th21 is the theorem that makes the second ending available — the difference between a negation and an affirmation, between a fortress and a home. That the system marks it droppable does not make it decorative: what is optional for immunity is load-bearing for joy.


VI. Where the Flow Goes Next

Th22 converts the verdict into psychology: regarding any aspect of the world as being exactly as it should be produces appropriate positive feeling — the third channel’s causal law, and the next document, brief.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Th20: The Providential Premise v1.0

 

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Th20: The Providential Premise v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Line Verbatim

Th 20) The universe is, or is governed by, Nature, Providence, God or the gods. [Different Stoics approach this idea differently.]

Section Three: Positive Happiness or Appropriate Positive Feelings.


II. Sterling’s Dated Elaboration

Two dated strands apply. First, Sterling’s own grading of the theorem, in the closing remarks of Core Stoicism itself:

For example, one could deny theorem 20, or 21, and this would undermine a great deal of the Stoic view of positive happiness, but would not obvious damage the views on virtue or avoiding unhappiness too seriously.

Th20 is thus one of only two collapse-weightings Sterling states directly — the other being Th7’s — and it is the light one: the skeleton’s author telling the reader which stone can come out of the wall.

Second, Excerpt 10 shows the premise in working use: all outcomes are “in the hands of the gods,” the doctrine of reservation is choosing rational means “if God (the gods) will allow it to occur,” and Sterling reaches for the Gethsemane prayer — not my will but yours be done — as the nearest familiar analogue. The closed restaurant is received without disturbance because “the gods did not will it.” Th20 is the premise that lets reservation be an act of trust rather than mere probabilistic hedging.


III. Dependency Position

Basic but peripheral, per the Atomic Foundation — the one peripheral classification that is Sterling-stated rather than inferred. Underived: no argument for the divine governance of the universe appears anywhere in the skeleton; the bracket instead acknowledges internal plurality (“Different Stoics approach this idea differently”), offering four formulations — Nature, Providence, God, the gods — as a disjunction any one of which suffices. Its dependents are exactly two: Th21, which adds the normative claim that what is providential is as it should be, and through Th21 and Th22, the third of line 23’s three channels of positive feeling.

The detachability finding, ratified in the Joint One analysis, states the load precisely: deny Th20 and Th21, and only Section Three’s providential channel is damaged — nothing in clause (a) or clause (b) falls; line 14’s immunity is untouched. But the detachable branch is also the branch that converts positive happiness from episodic to continuous: the virtue channel fires when one acts, the sensory channel when a pleasure occurs, and only the providential regard can run every waking second. Th20 is optional for the negative program and load-bearing for the maximal positive one.


IV. Synthesis

Th20 is the skeleton’s honesty about its own theology. Sterling neither argues for the premise, nor conceals its presence, nor pretends the system needs it more than it does. The bracket’s ecumenism is deliberate: the argument downstream requires only that the universe be governed such that what happens is as it should be — whether the governor is called Nature, Providence, God, or the gods is left to the practitioner’s own metaphysics, and the pantheist, the theist, and the pious agnostic can each supply their own reading of the disjunction. What cannot be supplied from nothing is the disjunction itself: some form of the premise must be affirmed, or Th22’s regard has no warrant and line 23 loses its perpetual channel.

This is also where the series can name what the droppability marker was for. Sterling’s closing warning against Smorgasbord Stoicism does not forbid selection; it demands that selection track the dependency structure — and Th20 is his own worked example of a safe removal, exactly as Th7 is his worked example of a fatal one. The practitioner who cannot affirm any reading of Th20 is thereby told, by the system’s author, what he keeps: the entire negative program, full immunity, both guards, the whole of virtue. And what he forfeits: the reframe that turns every event into material for appropriate positive feeling, and with it the “every waking second” continuity that redeems Th2’s bracket in full. The choice is left where the skeleton always leaves choices — with the agent’s own assent.


V. Where the Flow Goes Next

Th21 converts the premise into a verdict: that which is Natural, or governed by Providence, God, or the gods, is exactly as it should be — carrying Sterling’s own nota bene about strict determinism, which the next document takes up.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Line 19: The Ruling on Unbidden Feelings v1.0

 

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Line 19: The Ruling on Unbidden Feelings v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Line Verbatim

19) Ergo, such positive feelings are not irrational or inappropriate. [Though if we desire to achieve them or desire for them to continue beyond the present, then that would involve the judgment that they are good, and hence that would be irrational.]

Section Three: Positive Happiness or Appropriate Positive Feelings.


II. Sterling’s Dated Elaboration

No dated elaboration located; as a derivation, its content is carried by Th18 and, in the bracket, by Th7’s causal law running in reverse. The gap is recorded as a finding, subject to revision.


III. Dependency Position

Derived, from Th18, per the Atomic Foundation. The inference rests on a category point: rationality and irrationality are predicates of judgment, and what arises from no judgment stands outside their jurisdiction entirely. A sunset’s pleasure cannot be irrational for the same reason a sneeze cannot be false. Through line 23, line 19 contributes the second of the Stoic’s three routes to positive feeling; its bracket, meanwhile, guards the route against the corruption that would forfeit it.


IV. Synthesis

The main clause acquits; the bracket indicts — and the bracket is where the philosophical work happens. The feelings themselves are innocent because judgment-free; but the moment the agent desires to achieve them or desires their continuation beyond the present, judgment has entered. By Th7’s biconditional, a desire just is a value judgment in motive form: to want the pleasure to continue is to judge it good — and it is an external, so the judgment is false, and the agent has manufactured, out of an innocent sensation, exactly the belief-shape clause (a) exists to catch. The bracket is the precise anatomy of hedonism’s error: not that pleasure is bad, but that claiming it converts a causal gift into a doxastic stake.

“Beyond the present” is the bracket’s finest precision. The present feeling is a fact, already given, not an outcome pending; a claim on the next moment’s feeling is a stake in an outcome no act of will entails — the sunset fades, the meal ends, the warmth passes, on no schedule of ours. The border between enjoyment and attachment is thus temporal as well as doxastic: receive what is given while it is given, and let the claim on its continuation die unassented. This is the skeleton’s own version of the discipline the tradition attaches to impermanence, derived here in one bracket from Th7 alone.

One clarification the bracket demands, ahead of Section Four: pleasure will appear in Th26’s list of appropriate objects of aim. There is no conflict. What line 19’s bracket forbids is Th7-desire — wanting under a judgment of genuine value. What Th25 will permit is aim — selection of an appropriate object with no value claim attached, held with reservation. The agent may rationally choose the meal; he may not need it to be good. The aim/desire distinction on which the entire fourth section runs is thus already operating here, one section early, in a bracket.


V. Where the Flow Goes Next

The section’s third route requires theology: Th20 introduces the providential premise — the universe is, or is governed by, Nature, Providence, God or the gods — the theorem Sterling marks as approached differently by different Stoics, and the corpus records as droppable. It is the next document, brief.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Th18: The Unbidden Feelings v1.0

 

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Th18: The Unbidden Feelings v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Line Verbatim

Th 18) Some positive feelings do not result from desires, and hence do not result from judgments about value. [E.g., the taste of a good meal, the sight of a beautiful sunset, etc.]

Section Three: Positive Happiness or Appropriate Positive Feelings.


II. Sterling’s Dated Elaboration

The nearest dated material is the corpus-carried record of Sterling’s taxonomy of appropriate positive feelings, which includes physical and sensory pleasures not based on value judgments, and “startlement” and other natural reactions — the Th18 class extended to involuntary responses generally. No dated elaboration of the line as such has been located; the gap is recorded as a finding, subject to revision.


III. Dependency Position

Basic but peripheral, per the Atomic Foundation: underived, low collapse-weight. Its single dependent is line 19, which rules on the standing of the feelings Th18 identifies; through 19 it contributes the second of line 23’s three routes to positive feeling. Its structural function is to bound Th16’s scope from outside: Th16 gave a sufficient condition for positive feeling, and Th18 asserts the condition is not necessary — the two theorems partition the positive affective field without overlap.

As an empirical-psychological observation, Th18 carries no commitment grounding in the ratified integration — the same status as Th1 and Th16, recorded as a finding, not an oversight. Its second clause, however, silently uses Th7: feelings not resulting from desires do not result from value judgments because value judgments reach the affective life only through the desires they cause. The “hence” is Th7’s contrapositive in miniature.


IV. Synthesis

Th18 is the theorem that keeps the reformed agent human. Without it, the value strip would appear to entail sensory flatness: if all feeling flowed from value judgment, and all value judgments about externals are false, then every pleasure in a meal, a sunset, a warm bath would be a symptom of error, and the sage would live anesthetized. Th18 blocks the entailment at its premise. These feelings flow from no judgment at all — they are causal, not doxastic; the nervous system’s response, not the rational faculty’s verdict. What carries no judgment can carry no false judgment, and what carries no false judgment needs no correction. The bracket’s examples are chosen for their ordinariness: the framework’s answer to the caricature of the joyless Stoic is a good meal and a sunset, left exactly where common experience finds them.

The theorem also sharpens, by contrast, what the system actually attacks. The target was never pleasure; it was valuation. Tasting the meal with pleasure involves no claim; judging that the meal is a genuine good — desiring it as good, grieving its absence as an evil — involves a false one. The line between enjoyment and attachment falls exactly at the line between feeling and judgment, and Th18 is where the skeleton draws it. Line 19’s bracket will police the same border from the other side: the moment the agent desires these feelings’ continuation, judgment has entered, and with it the possibility of error. The pleasure is innocent; the claim on the pleasure is not.


V. Where the Flow Goes Next

Line 19 issues the ruling Th18 sets up: such feelings are not irrational or inappropriate — with the boundary-marking bracket on desiring their continuation. It is the next document, brief.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Line 17: The First Yield v1.0

 

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Line 17: The First Yield v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Line Verbatim

17) Ergo, if we correctly judge and correctly will, we will have appropriate positive feelings as a result.

Section Three: Positive Happiness or Appropriate Positive Feelings.


II. Sterling’s Dated Elaboration

No dated elaboration located for this line specifically; its content is carried by its premises. The gap is recorded as a finding, subject to revision.


III. Dependency Position

Derived, from 15 + Th16, per the Atomic Foundation. The inference: the agent who truly judges desires virtue (15); virtue, chosen, is achieved; achieved desire yields positive feeling (Th16); so correct judgment and correct will yield positive feeling as a result. Its dependents run in two directions. Within Section Three, line 23 cites it as the first of the Stoic’s three routes to positive feeling. Across the skeleton’s widest span, line 29 — the terminus of the entire system — imports it directly: “such virtuous acts will give us good feelings [by 17].” Per the ratified Joint Two analysis, line 17 is double-ended: its input is clause (a)’s success restated as a premise, and its output is the premise clause (b) needs for its own success condition. The hinge between the two clauses runs through this line.


IV. Synthesis

Two words enter the skeleton at line 17 and both matter. The first is will: “correctly judge and correctly will.” Line 15 needed only judgment; line 17 quietly adds the second member of Th6’s pair, because the desire for virtue is satisfied not by holding the judgment but by acting on it — virtue is an act of will, and the achieving that Th16 requires is the willing itself. This is the skeleton’s first gesture toward Section Four: the positive feelings of the reformed life are not contemplative rewards for believing correctly but the accompaniment of correct agency.

The second word is appropriate — its first appearance applied to feelings, and the section title’s own term arriving in the argument. The word does normative work: these positive feelings are not merely pleasant but licensed, because the judgment they flow from is true. The contrast class is exact. A pathological feeling and an appropriate one can be phenomenologically similar; what distinguishes them is the truth-value of the causing belief. Delight in a promotion and joy in one’s own virtue are both Th16 payouts — but the first flows from a false valuation of an external and the second from a true valuation of the one genuine good. The system never asks feelings to be suppressed; it asks their causes to be corrected, and line 17 is the proof that correction leaves the affective life not emptied but justified. The ancient eupatheiai — the sage’s well-feelings — are this line’s territory, and the skeleton reaches them by derivation rather than by stipulation.


V. Where the Flow Goes Next

Th18 opens the second route: positive feelings that arise from no desire and no value judgment at all — the taste of a meal, the sight of a sunset — and line 19 will rule on their standing. Th18 is the next document, brief, as a basic but peripheral premise.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Th16: The Satisfaction Law v1.0

 

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Th16: The Satisfaction Law v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Line Verbatim

Th 16) If you desire something, and achieve it, you will get a positive feeling.

Section Three: Positive Happiness or Appropriate Positive Feelings.


II. Sterling’s Dated Elaboration

No dated elaboration located. Th16 belongs to the class Sterling’s preface marks as empirical propositions the Stoics thought were obvious, and the archive, as presently mined, contains no message spelling it out. The gap is recorded as a finding, subject to revision.


III. Dependency Position

Basic but peripheral, per the Atomic Foundation: genuinely underived, but carrying low collapse-weight. Its single dependent is line 17, reached jointly with line 15. Th16 is the mirror of Th3 — Th3 gave the affective consequence of frustrated desire; Th16 gives the affective consequence of achieved desire — but the two differ sharply in load: Th3’s totality clause (“all human unhappiness”) bears the entire immunity guarantee, while Th16 claims only a sufficient condition for a positive feeling and grounds only the positive chain’s first link. Deny Th16 and line 14’s immunity stands untouched; the system loses one of its three positive-feeling routes, not its core.

As an empirical-psychological premise, Th16 carries no commitment grounding in the ratified integration — the same status as Th1, and recorded as a finding, not an oversight.


IV. Synthesis

Th16’s work is to make the immune life positively rewarding rather than merely undisturbed. Section Two ended with a fortress; Section Three must show the fortress is worth living in, and Th16 is the first supply line. Its logic is deliberately ordinary: everyone already grants that getting what you want feels good. The Stoic novelty is not the law but the input the reformed agent feeds it. The agent of line 15 desires virtue; virtue, an act of will, is achieved whenever chosen; Th16 then pays out — and pays out reliably, because this is the one desire whose achievement cannot be blocked. The same psychological law that made ordinary life a lottery — satisfaction contingent on cooperative outcomes — makes the reformed life a guarantee, because the object of desire has changed from what fortune holds to what the agent does.

Note the precision of scope: Th16 states a sufficient condition, not a necessary one. It does not claim all positive feelings come from achieved desires — Th18 will immediately assert the contrary, carving out feelings that arise from no desire at all. The two theorems partition the positive affective field between them, and neither trespasses on the other: Th16 grounds the joy in one’s own virtue (line 23’s first route), Th18 the sensory pleasures (its second). The skeleton’s positive psychology is built from these two small, uncontroversial observations — a deliberate economy, spending no intuitionist capital where common experience suffices.


V. Where the Flow Goes Next

Line 17 collects lines 15 and Th16 into the section’s first yield: correct judgment and correct will produce appropriate positive feelings — the line clause (b) will eventually cite as the ground of its own success condition. It is the next document, brief.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Line 15: The Causal Law in the Legitimate Direction v1.0

 

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Line 15: The Causal Law in the Legitimate Direction v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Line Verbatim

15) Ergo, if we truly judge that virtue is good, we will desire it.

Section Three: Positive Happiness or Appropriate Positive Feelings — its opening line.


II. Sterling’s Dated Elaboration

No dated elaboration located for this line specifically; its engine is Th7, whose dated defenses are recorded in the Th7 document. The gap is recorded as a finding, subject to revision.


III. Dependency Position

Derived, from line 14, per the Atomic Foundation — and the derivation marks the sharpest boundary in the skeleton. Line 14 closed the negative program: immunity secured, 2* discharged. Line 15 opens with the same words — “truly judge” — but points them forward: what clause (a) achieved as a terminus becomes a premise. Per the ratified Joint Two analysis, this is the promissory structure of the system in miniature: nothing in Section Two hinted that true judgment would produce anything beyond immunity; line 15 reveals it was also capital. Its immediate dependent is line 17, reached with Th16; line 17’s output is, in turn, exactly what clause (b)’s line 29 will cite.


IV. Synthesis

The Ergo’s engine is Th7 running in the legitimate direction. Everywhere in Section Two, the causal law appeared as the failure mechanism — false belief manufacturing irrational desire. Line 15 is the identical law fed a true input: judge truly that virtue is good, and by the biconditional bracket of Th7, the desire follows — not by instruction, resolution, or discipline layered on top of the judgment, but as what the judgment is. The system’s single causal mechanism thus needs no exception for the reformed agent; the machinery that produced every pathos now produces the one desire the framework endorses.

And it is the one safe desire — the engineering deserves stating. Under Th3, every desire is exposure: a stake in an outcome that can fail. The desire for virtue is the unique desire whose object, being an act of will inside Th6’s boundary (line 11), cannot be withheld by anything but the agent himself. Line 15 therefore does not reintroduce the vulnerability Section Two spent twelve lines eliminating; it installs the single desire that carries no exposure, which is why line 14’s immunity and line 15’s motivation coexist without tension. The agent is not left desireless and inert after the value strip — the quietist misreading dies here, three lines before Th25 finishes it off.


V. Where the Flow Goes Next

Th16 supplies the psychological law the chain needs next — achieved desire yields positive feeling — so that line 17 can convert correct judgment and correct will into appropriate positive feelings. Th16 is the next document, brief, as a basic but peripheral premise.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Line 14: The Terminus of Negative Happiness v1.0

 

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Line 14: The Terminus of Negative Happiness v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Line Verbatim

14) Ergo, if we value only virtue, we will both judge truly and be immune to all unhappiness.

Section Two: Negative Happiness — its closing line, and the discharge point of 2*.


II. Sterling’s Dated Elaboration

Sterling’s own elaboration is the closing paragraph of Core Stoicism itself, where the discharge is stated and strengthened (quoted in full in the Th2 document): someone who judges truly will never be unhappy, will experience continual uninterrupted appropriate positive feelings, and will always act virtuously — and since judgment is in our control, perfect continual happiness is not merely possible but guaranteed to anyone who judges correctly and acts on those judgments. The strengthening matters: 2* promised possibility; the closing paragraph delivers possibility plus control. No separately dated elaboration of line 14 has been located; the gap is recorded as a finding, subject to revision.


III. Dependency Position

Derived, from Th10 + 12 + 13, per the Atomic Foundation — the terminus of the negative-happiness proof, and the line that discharges Section One’s deferred claim that complete happiness is possible. It stands in Sterling’s stated collapse-set for Th7, its diagnosis arriving through line 13. Everything in Section Two converges here: Th3’s causal thesis and its dependents supplied the stakes; Th6 and Th7 supplied controllability; Th10 through 13 supplied the value truth and the diagnosis. Downstream, line 15 opens Section Three directly from it.

Per the ratified non-circularity finding: line 14’s derivation chain runs through 13’s independent warrant (12 and Th7), nowhere requiring 2*, so the discharge is constructive and non-circular — the promissory note is redeemed by exhibiting the thing promised, not by borrowing against it.


IV. The Immunity Mechanism

The word “all” in line 14 is licensed by the word “all” in Th3, and the two totalities lock together with nothing left over. Th3: all unhappiness is caused by a desire paired with an outcome that fails to result. The agent who values only virtue sustains, by Th7’s biconditional, only one desire — for virtue. And virtue, per line 11, is an act of will inside Th6’s boundary: the one object of desire that fortune cannot withhold. The desire for virtue can fail only through the agent’s own choosing otherwise — and the agent who genuinely values only virtue does not choose otherwise. Every possible cause of unhappiness has been removed, not managed; the immunity is total because the cause was single. This is why the corpus’s standing formulation for clause (a)’s prospective face is immunization, not cure: line 14 is the immunization thesis itself — settled correct valuation held in advance, leaving nothing for any arriving event to frustrate.


V. Synthesis

The deepest claim in line 14 is its conjunction. The agent who values only virtue gets two things — true judgment and immunity to unhappiness — and the system’s most distinctive commitment is that these arrive together, from the same act. There is no trade-off anywhere in the framework between accuracy and wellbeing: the agent is never asked to believe something consoling, adopt a useful fiction, or reframe events into a more bearable story. He is asked to stop believing something false. The happiness is not purchased with any discount on truth; it is what the truth, fully assented to, leaves standing. This sets Sterling’s Stoicism categorically apart from every therapeutic program that selects beliefs for their effects — on this framework, the effect follows precisely and only because the belief corresponds to moral reality. C5 and C6 are visible in the conjunction itself: judging truly is a correspondence achievement, and immunity is what that achievement causally yields under Th3 and Th7.

The conditional’s demandingness should be stated plainly rather than softened. “If we value only virtue” — the exclusivity is the entire mechanism. Valuing virtue supremely but not solely leaves residual value-beliefs about externals in place, each one a standing desire, each desire a live exposure under line 4. The guarantee is not graded: partial revaluation yields reduced frequency of unhappiness, but the immunity of line 14 belongs only to the complete case. This is Th10’s bivalence operating at the practical terminus — there is no stable middle standing, and the skeleton’s honesty about this is of a piece with its honesty about 2* and the bracket at line 5: the extraordinary promise is never detached from its exact condition.

Finally, the discharge itself repays a last look. Sterling proves that complete happiness is possible by constructing the person who has it: value only virtue, and the continual, uninterrupted condition Th2’s bracket specified is exhibited rather than postulated. Section Two thus ends by paying Section One’s debt in full — and with it, the negative half of the system is complete. Nothing yet has been said about what the immune agent’s life is positively like; immunity to unhappiness is not yet happiness. That is Section Three’s business.


VI. Where the Flow Goes Next

Line 15 opens Section Three — Positive Happiness or Appropriate Positive Feelings — directly from line 14: the true judgment that virtue is good produces, by Th7’s own causal law now running on a true belief, the desire for virtue. The negative argument’s machinery begins generating positive content. Line 15 is the next document, brief.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Line 13: The Diagnosis v1.0

 

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Line 13: The Diagnosis v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Line Verbatim

13) [cf 9, above] Desiring things out of our control is irrational, since it involves false judgment.

Section Two: Negative Happiness.


II. Sterling’s Dated Elaboration

The Smith case (recorded in the Th7 document) is line 13 performed: Smith’s belief that having a job is good is diagnosed as false — false because it fails to match where value actually resides, not because it produces bad outcomes for her. No dated elaboration of the line as such has been located; the case carries its content, and the gap is recorded as a finding, subject to revision.


III. Dependency Position

Derived. Sterling’s own marker is a cross-reference — “[cf 9, above]” — and per the ratified non-circularity finding (Th2 document, Section VI), the marker denotes convergence, not dependence: line 13’s warrant runs through line 12 (externals are never good or evil) and Th7 (a desire embeds a value judgment), an independent route that nowhere passes through line 5 or its citation of 2*. A desire for an external therefore contains a judgment that the external is good or evil; line 12 says no such judgment is ever true; the desire involves false judgment. Line 14 draws directly on this, and the independence of 13’s route is what makes the eventual discharge of 2* non-circular.

The line inherits C5 — Correspondence Theory — as its operative grounding: the word “false” is available only if the embedded judgment is genuinely truth-apt and fails to match the actual structure of value. Every occurrence of “false judgment” in the corpus is a correspondence claim in exactly this sense. Th10’s C6 supplies the value-facts the judgment fails to match; Th7’s causal claim supplies the judgment’s presence inside the desire.


IV. Synthesis

Line 13 adds no new derivation; it adds a diagnosis — and the word doing the work is false. Not unwise, not maladaptive, not suboptimal: false. Line 9 convicted the desire of imprudence; line 13 convicts it of error. The upgrade forecloses the one defense the prudential charge left open. Against line 9, the romantic reply is available: the exposure is conceded and the price accepted — better to love and risk losing. That reply discounts a cost; it cannot discount a falsehood. Once the desire is shown to contain a judgment that fails to correspond to moral reality, keeping the desire is no longer a brave bargain but a decision to go on believing what is not true — and no agent can coherently claim that as rational. The two routes converging on one verdict, cost and truth, are the double securing the corpus has tracked since line 5; line 13 completes the second.

The diagnosis is also what the practical program actually uses. The recovery audit does not correct a strategy; it corrects a belief. Its entire backward walk — from pathos to causing judgment to Th10 — terminates in line 13’s verdict rendered on a particular assent: this judgment, that this external is good or evil, is false. The correction that dissolves the pathos is nothing but the withdrawal of that false assent and the substitution of the true one. Line 13 is thus the clause (a) guard stated as a finding: where line 12 gives the truth the guard protects, line 13 names the failure the guard exists to catch.


V. Where the Flow Goes Next

Line 14 collects everything Section Two has earned — the value axiom, the swept axis, the diagnosis — into the terminus: value only virtue, and you will both judge truly and be immune to all unhappiness. It discharges 2*, closes the negative-happiness proof, and is the next document, at fuller length than its derived status alone would suggest, given its position as the section’s terminus.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Line 12: The Guard’s Direct Content v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Line Verbatim

12) Ergo, things that are not in our control [externals] are never good or evil.

Section Two: Negative Happiness.


II. Sterling’s Dated Elaboration

Line 12 states in general form what Sterling’s dated material elaborates case by case. The semi-truck case (recorded in the Th10 document) is line 12 applied to the hardest instance: the child’s death is an external, therefore not a genuine evil, however deeply the contrary is believed. The Smith case (recorded in the Th7 document) is line 12 doing diagnostic work: having a job is an external, so the belief that it is good is false. And Sterling’s ISF statement that the heart and soul of Stoicism is the elimination of the belief that externals have value is line 12 named as the doctrine’s center. No dated elaboration of the line as such has been located; the applications carry its content.


III. Dependency Position

Derived, from Th10 + 11, per the Atomic Foundation. The derivation is the reverse and outward run of line 11’s bridge: Th10 fixed all value to virtue and vice; line 11 placed virtue and vice inside the control boundary; line 12 concludes that everything outside the boundary is off the value axis entirely. Its immediate dependents: line 13’s diagnosis (desiring externals involves false judgment) and, through it, line 14’s terminus. As a derived line it inherits its grounding through Th10 (C3, C6) and the C1/C2 boundary work of Th6 arriving via line 11.

Functionally, line 12 is the guard’s direct content: the exact proposition every belief targeted by clause (a) denies. The audited belief says “this external is good” (or evil); line 12 says no external is either. At this line the contradiction becomes explicit rather than implicit in Th10 — which is why the recovery audit’s First Contact sequence runs Th10, then 11–12, before reaching back to Th6 for the definition beneath “external.”


IV. Synthesis

The bracket introduces a technical term: “[externals]” is defined here, by ostension to Th6’s complement — an external just is whatever is not belief, not will, and not entailed by either. The definition matters because it makes line 12’s scope exhaustive and non-negotiable: body, property, reputation, other persons, outcomes, life and death themselves. The classification is categorical — no exceptions carved for especially significant externals, no scaling by emotional weight. Any softening would reintroduce the false value judgments through the back door.

Two words carry the line’s force. Never: not “rarely,” not “less than commonly supposed” — the exclusion from the value axis is permanent and total, which is what makes line 12 usable as a guard: the practitioner needs no case-by-case deliberation about whether this external might be the exception. And the pairing good or evil: the line strips both poles at once. The belief that an external is evil — the shape most pathē take — is exactly as false as the belief that one is good. Grief, fear, and anger are corrected by the same line that corrects greed and craving.

What line 12 does not say completes its meaning: it does not say externals are worthless, nonexistent, or beneath attention. It removes false moral weight; the things themselves remain, and their standing as appropriate or inappropriate objects of aim — preferred and dispreferred indifferents — is Th25’s business, not a qualification of anything here. Line 12 and Th25 never conflict, because “appropriate to pursue” and “genuinely good” are claims of different kinds — the distinction on which the entire fourth section of the skeleton will run.


V. Where the Flow Goes Next

Line 13 converts line 12 into a diagnosis: desiring things out of our control is irrational because it involves false judgment — the same verdict line 9 reached from cost, now re-derived from truth. It is the next document, brief, before line 14 closes Section Two.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

 

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Line 12: The Guard’s Direct Content v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Line Verbatim

12) Ergo, things that are not in our control [externals] are never good or evil.

Section Two: Negative Happiness.


II. Sterling’s Dated Elaboration

Line 12 states in general form what Sterling’s dated material elaborates case by case. The semi-truck case (recorded in the Th10 document) is line 12 applied to the hardest instance: the child’s death is an external, therefore not a genuine evil, however deeply the contrary is believed. The Smith case (recorded in the Th7 document) is line 12 doing diagnostic work: having a job is an external, so the belief that it is good is false. And Sterling’s ISF statement that the heart and soul of Stoicism is the elimination of the belief that externals have value is line 12 named as the doctrine’s center. No dated elaboration of the line as such has been located; the applications carry its content.


III. Dependency Position

Derived, from Th10 + 11, per the Atomic Foundation. The derivation is the reverse and outward run of line 11’s bridge: Th10 fixed all value to virtue and vice; line 11 placed virtue and vice inside the control boundary; line 12 concludes that everything outside the boundary is off the value axis entirely. Its immediate dependents: line 13’s diagnosis (desiring externals involves false judgment) and, through it, line 14’s terminus. As a derived line it inherits its grounding through Th10 (C3, C6) and the C1/C2 boundary work of Th6 arriving via line 11.

Functionally, line 12 is the guard’s direct content: the exact proposition every belief targeted by clause (a) denies. The audited belief says “this external is good” (or evil); line 12 says no external is either. At this line the contradiction becomes explicit rather than implicit in Th10 — which is why the recovery audit’s First Contact sequence runs Th10, then 11–12, before reaching back to Th6 for the definition beneath “external.”


IV. Synthesis

The bracket introduces a technical term: “[externals]” is defined here, by ostension to Th6’s complement — an external just is whatever is not belief, not will, and not entailed by either. The definition matters because it makes line 12’s scope exhaustive and non-negotiable: body, property, reputation, other persons, outcomes, life and death themselves. The classification is categorical — no exceptions carved for especially significant externals, no scaling by emotional weight. Any softening would reintroduce the false value judgments through the back door.

Two words carry the line’s force. Never: not “rarely,” not “less than commonly supposed” — the exclusion from the value axis is permanent and total, which is what makes line 12 usable as a guard: the practitioner needs no case-by-case deliberation about whether this external might be the exception. And the pairing good or evil: the line strips both poles at once. The belief that an external is evil — the shape most pathē take — is exactly as false as the belief that one is good. Grief, fear, and anger are corrected by the same line that corrects greed and craving.

What line 12 does not say completes its meaning: it does not say externals are worthless, nonexistent, or beneath attention. It removes false moral weight; the things themselves remain, and their standing as appropriate or inappropriate objects of aim — preferred and dispreferred indifferents — is Th25’s business, not a qualification of anything here. Line 12 and Th25 never conflict, because “appropriate to pursue” and “genuinely good” are claims of different kinds — the distinction on which the entire fourth section of the skeleton will run.


V. Where the Flow Goes Next

Line 13 converts line 12 into a diagnosis: desiring things out of our control is irrational because it involves false judgment — the same verdict line 9 reached from cost, now re-derived from truth. It is the next document, brief, before line 14 closes Section Two.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Line 11: The Bridge v1.0

 

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Line 11: The Bridge v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Line Verbatim

11) Ergo, since virtue and vice are types of acts of will, they are in our control.

Section Two: Negative Happiness.


II. Sterling’s Dated Elaboration

No dated elaboration located for this line specifically; its central claim — that virtue and vice are located in acts of will — receives Sterling’s fullest dated treatment in Excerpt 10, recorded in the Th6 document, where action is identified with choice and each choice is appropriate or inappropriate at the instant it is made. The gap for line 11 itself is recorded as a finding, subject to revision.


III. Dependency Position

Derived, from Th10 + Th6, per the Atomic Foundation. Line 11 is a bridge: it carries virtue and vice from Th10’s evaluative vocabulary into Th6’s control vocabulary, by way of a substantive claim about what virtue and vice actually are — types of acts of will. Acts of will fall inside Th6’s boundary by the entailment clause; therefore virtue and vice fall inside it. Its immediate dependent is line 12, which runs the same move in reverse and outward; downstream, Th27 will make the identification of virtue with rational acts of will definitional.

The bridge leans on C2 — Libertarian Free Will: only a genuinely originated act, not a caused event, can be creditable or blameworthy in the way virtue and vice require. If acts of will were determined outputs, they would be in us but not up to us, and line 11’s conclusion would name a location, not a control.


IV. Synthesis

The quiet premise is the important one. “Since virtue and vice are types of acts of will” is presented as an aside, but it is a substantive identification — the first appearance of the doctrine Th27 will later state as a definition. Virtue is not a possession, a track record, a reputation for acting well, or a set of outcomes produced; it is a kind of act of will. Everything the identification excludes matters: on it, virtue cannot be given, taken, damaged by fortune, or left incomplete by a failed outcome — the choice is already virtuous or vicious at the instant it is made, exactly as Excerpt 10’s lunch example has it.

What line 11 purchases is the single most consequential intersection in the system: the one region where Th10’s value map and Th6’s control map coincide. Everything genuinely valuable is in our control; everything outside our control carries no genuine value. The first half is line 11’s content; the second half is line 12’s. Together they mean the moral life is conducted entirely on home territory — nothing that matters is ever hostage to fortune, and nothing fortune holds ever matters. Line 14’s immunity guarantee is already visible from here: it will simply collect what this intersection makes possible.


V. Where the Flow Goes Next

Line 12 completes the intersection from the other side: everything not in our control — every external — is never good or evil. It is the guard’s direct content, the exact proposition every audited belief denies, and the next document in the series.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Th10: The Value Axiom v1.0

 

Core Stoicism Spelled Out — Th10: The Value Axiom v1.0

Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.


I. The Line Verbatim

Th 10) The only thing actually good is virtue, the only thing actually evil is vice.

Section Two: Negative Happiness. The value axiom of the entire system, and the direct content of clause (a).


II. Sterling’s Dated Elaboration

Three dated strands apply.

First, Sterling’s own statement of centrality, from the ISF exchanges: the heart and soul of Stoicism is precisely the elimination of the belief that externals have value. Th10 is that elimination stated as an axiom — by fixing the entire extension of “good” and “evil” to virtue and vice, it leaves every external categorically off the axis.

Second, the self-interest argument — Sterling’s eliminative defense, preserved in the archive: the Smith/Jones case, the Ring of Gyges, and the dying molester, each stripping away one layer of the instrumental account of virtue’s value until nothing remains. The only position surviving all three cases is that virtue is intrinsically and definitionally the only good — not good as a means, not good because it reliably produces preferred indifferents, not good because idealized agents would agree to value it. The conclusion, in the corpus’s formulation: virtue as the only good is not an axiom adopted for convenience but the position every attempt to ground morality non-morally fails to reach.

Third, the semi-truck case — Sterling’s illustration of how pervasively Th10 is denied in ordinary belief:

It would be really bad for my child to be run over by a semi-truck. Virtually everyone with children believes, deep down, that this is true, when in fact it isn't.

The belief feels certain, is near-universal, and is deeply held — and it is false, because it contradicts the truth that death is a dispreferred indifferent, not a genuine evil. The case fixes the scale of the revisionary project Th10 demands.


III. Dependency Position

Basic and load-bearing per the Atomic Foundation: the second of the two intuitionist termination points (with Th2), and the base of the entire value structure. Its immediate dependents: line 11 (with Th6) reclassifies virtue and vice into control terms; line 12 (with 11) sweeps every external off the good/evil axis; line 13’s diagnosis of false judgment presupposes it; line 14 — the terminus of the negative-happiness proof — derives from Th10 + 12 + 13. Downstream, Th27’s definition of virtue and the whole of Section Four operate within the value space Th10 fixes.

Functionally, Th10 is First Contact in the recovery audit: the located belief claims an external is good or evil, and the first thing the rational faculty meets, tracing backward, is the truth that makes the claim false on its face. Nothing about externals is even mentioned yet — Th10 simply fixes the extension of “good” and “evil” to two things, and whatever the audited belief is about, if it is not virtue or vice, it has already been excluded.


IV. Commitment Grounding

C3 — Ethical Intuitionism: Th10 terminates the justificatory regress by direct apprehension. No empirical observation could establish that only virtue is genuinely good; the trained rational faculty, attending to the proposition, sees it to be true. The eliminative self-interest argument does not compromise this status — elimination defeats rivals rather than deriving Th10 from prior premises, so the axiom remains underived while being far from undefended. Th10 thus stands with Th7 as a theorem whose argument-strength exceeds the skeleton’s unargued presentation, per the refined asymmetry finding ratified at Th7.

C6 — Moral Realism: the word “actually” carries the commitment’s entire weight. Th10 is a claim about moral reality — mind-independent, bivalent, normative. Mind-independent: the sincere, culturally formed, near-universal belief that externals are valuable is still false; wide sharing does not confer truth. Bivalent: value is exhaustive and objective, either present or absent, with no middle standing available — which is why Sterling deploys Th10 as a reductio elsewhere, since any belief clause (a) targets always tries to smuggle a third thing onto the axis. Normative: the demand to correct false value judgments binds the agent regardless of his endorsement.

C4 — Foundationalism — is engaged architecturally: Th10 sits at the base of the value dependency structure, and every value verdict in the framework derives from it.


V. Synthesis

Th10 is where the skeleton changes registers. Through line 9, the argument was prudential: uncontrolled desires forfeit available happiness, chargeably so. A reader could grant all of it while holding that health, wealth, and loved ones are genuinely valuable — merely risky to stake happiness on. Th10 eliminates that position. The desires are not expensive attachments to real goods; they are false beliefs about where value resides. The indictment relocates from cost to truth, and everything after — line 13’s “false judgment,” line 14’s “judge truly,” the whole diagnostic vocabulary of the practical program — is spending what Th10 mints.

The operative word is actually. It concedes the appearance while denying the fact: externals seem good, are believed good, are treated as good by virtually everyone — and are not. The semi-truck case is chosen to make the concession maximally costly: not a belief held by the foolish or the distant, but one held “deep down” by virtually every parent. Sterling’s framework does not flinch from the consequence — the revisionary project is rational rather than contrarian precisely because the agent is not asked to trade one valid value system for another, but to recognize that the values he holds are factually false. The harshness is the precision: an account that softened the verdict for especially significant externals would reintroduce false value judgments through the back door, and the corpus’s record of Sterling’s own testimony — finding Epictetus harsh, and beautiful for that reason — marks the harshness as load-bearing, not incidental.

Two boundaries keep Th10 from being misread. First, it strips value, not existence or effect: externals remain, affect the body, and may be rationally pursued or avoided — what is removed is only the false moral weight placed on them. Second, Th10 does not yet say what may be aimed at. Read alone, it invites the nihilist or quietist misreading: if nothing external is good, why do anything? The skeleton’s answer is deferred to Th25, where appropriateness of aim is restored without value being restored — the division of labor between the two theorems is the system’s protection against both the false-value error and the do-nothing error. Th10 evacuates; Th25 repopulates, on different terms.

Finally, the asymmetry inside the line itself repays notice: virtue is the only good, vice the only evil — and these are not symmetrical absences of each other but the agent’s own success or failure at being what he is as a rational being. This is why the distinction between the grief that follows a false value judgment and the appropriate regret that follows a genuinely vicious act survives the value strip: the corrective structure of the whole practice turns on vice being genuinely evil while no external ever is.


VI. Where the Flow Goes Next

Lines 11 and 12 carry Th10’s verdict outward: virtue and vice, being acts of will, are in our control — and everything not in our control is therefore never good or evil. They are the next documents, brief, completing the guard’s direct content before line 13’s diagnosis and line 14’s terminus close Section Two.


Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.