Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Monday, June 22, 2026

The Moral Life and Its Ground: An Ethics Restoration

 

The Moral Life and Its Ground: An Ethics Restoration

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


I. Governing Principle

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


II. Why Ethics Is the Most Internally Contested Field

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

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

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

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


III. What the CPA Cluster Shows

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

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

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


IV. What Consequentialism Gets Wrong, Precisely

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

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

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

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


V. The Evolutionary Debunking Challenge and Its Answer

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

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


VI. Reflective Equilibrium and the Displacement of Direct Recognition

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

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


VII. What Is Restored

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

Classical Presupposition Audit — Harold Bloom

 

Classical Presupposition Audit — Harold Bloom

Instrument: Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. Instrument architecture and analysis: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude. Document 70 in the Sterling/Kelly corpus. 2026.

Subject: Harold Bloom (1930–2019), Sterling Professor of Humanities at Yale University; among the most influential literary critics of the twentieth century. Primary sources: The Anxiety of Influence: A Theory of Poetry (1973); A Map of Misreading (1975); The Western Canon: The Books and School of the Ages (1994); Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human (1998); Genius: A Mosaic of One Hundred Exemplary Creative Minds (2002); The Daemon Knows: Literary Greatness and the American Sublime (2015).

Coverage note. Bloom is the first non-philosopher audited in the Philosophy cluster and the first literary critic audited anywhere in the corpus. The CPA’s instrument architecture was designed for philosophical figures whose presuppositions are embedded in systematic argument; Bloom’s presuppositions are embedded in literary-critical practice and polemic rather than in formal philosophical argument. This difference is handled by applying the load-bearing test strictly: only presuppositions without which Bloom’s critical program could not proceed as he states it qualify for Step 2.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Corpus in view. Sources restricted to Bloom’s own published record. No prior conclusion stated. Bloom is Document 70 and the final figure in the Philosophy CPA cluster (Documents 65–70). The Non-Operative finding category appeared for the first time in this cluster at Enoch (Document 69); its appearance here is again flagged for careful handling. The positive-showing requirement is in force: any Non-Operative finding must demonstrate that the commitment genuinely does not bear on Bloom’s argumentative record rather than standing as a substitution for a harder finding avoided.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 1.


Step 1 — Presupposition Profile

P1 — The strong poet as an irreducible creative self. The Anxiety of Influence requires that there be genuinely individual, irreducible creative minds — strong poets — whose imaginations are not reducible to their historical conditions, their social formation, their political situation, or any other external determinant. The agonistic struggle between a strong poet and his precursors is a struggle between distinct, real mental powers, not between cultural positions or ideological formations. This is maximally load-bearing: without the irreducible creative self, the anxiety of influence is a historical account of cultural patterns, not a theory of poetic creation.

P2 — The Western Canon as objectively great. The Western Canon requires that the works constituting the Canon — Shakespeare above all, but also Dante, Chaucer, Cervantes, Milton, Goethe, and others — are genuinely, objectively superior to other literary works, not merely culturally privileged or institutionally imposed. Bloom is explicit: the Canon is justified aesthetically, and aesthetic greatness is real, not constructed. This is load-bearing for his entire sustained polemic against what he calls the School of Resentment — the feminist, Marxist, new historicist, and cultural-studies critics who treat canon formation as a political act rather than an aesthetic judgment.

P3 — The strong poet’s creative agency as agonistic. The Anxiety of Influence and A Map of Misreading require that the strong poet exercises genuine creative agency — his misreadings, revisions, and appropriations of precursor texts are his own acts, not merely cultural transmissions. The agonistic character of this agency is also load-bearing: the strong poet is not a free, unconstrained originator working in a vacuum but one who must struggle against the weight of the prior tradition, whose creative freedom is exercised precisely in and through that struggle rather than prior to it.

P4 — The deliberate exclusion of moral evaluation from literary criticism. Across The Western Canon, Shakespeare, and his polemical essays, Bloom consistently and explicitly argues that literature should not be evaluated by its moral teachings, its political effects, its social utility, or its representation of marginalized groups. The greatness of Shakespeare, Dante, and Chaucer is aesthetic and cognitive — an expansion of human consciousness — not moral. Bloom’s critique of the School of Resentment is precisely that it substitutes moral and political evaluation for aesthetic judgment, thereby misunderstanding what literature is and does. This is load-bearing for his entire critical program: the exclusion is principled and argued, not accidental.

P5 — Texts have real meanings that can be tracked, misread, and revised. Bloom’s theory of misreading requires that there be something to misread: a precursor text with genuine meaning, genuine force, genuine presence, against which the strong poet’s revisionary ratios operate. His sustained opposition to deconstruction — which he regarded as a form of nihilism about meaning — requires correspondence to something real in the text. At the same time, his own account insists that all strong reading is creative misreading, introducing a documented tension at exactly this point.

Stage B — Domain Mapping. P1 is mapped at C1 as the core irreducibility claim. P3 is mapped at C2 as the agency claim, with its agonistic qualification examined separately rather than merged with P1. P2 is mapped at C4 as the aesthetic foundationalism claim. P5 is mapped at C5, with the misreading tension flagged for explicit examination. P4 is mapped at C3 and C6 as the deliberate moral-exclusion claim, examined for whether it constitutes Non-Operative or requires a different finding at each commitment.

Self-Audit Complete: presuppositions drawn from Bloom’s own record; the non-philosopher format noted and handled by strict application of the load-bearing test; P3’s agonistic qualification preserved as a genuine constraint on C2 rather than discarded; P5’s internal tension flagged for examination at C5 rather than resolved by taking the more favorable reading without argument. Proceed to Step 2.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

C1 — Substance Dualism. Aligned. P1 is the most explicitly and polemically anti-reductionist position in the Philosophy cluster. Bloom’s insistence on the irreducibility of the strong poet’s creative self is not a philosophical argument but it is a sustained, argued, career-defining commitment: the self is primary; history, society, ideology, and biology are all inadequate explanations of what happens when a strong imagination encounters another strong imagination. His running polemic against new historicism, cultural studies, and feminist criticism is precisely a polemic against every form of reductionism that would dissolve the individual creative mind into its external conditions. He explicitly names this irreducibility as his central critical premise and defends it at length. The finding is Aligned rather than Partially Aligned because no qualification within Bloom’s own record softens or limits this irreducibility claim: it is stated as categorical and defended as such throughout. The philosophical architecture of C1 (substance dualism specifically) is not Bloom’s own vocabulary, but the presupposition his argument requires is precisely C1’s core claim, and it is stated with more force and less qualification than the hylomorphic Thomists in the cluster who earn only Partially Aligned at this commitment.

C2 — Libertarian Free Will. Partially Aligned. P3 requires genuine creative agency: the strong poet’s misreadings and revisions are his own acts, not cultural transmissions, and they are the location of his creative achievement. This is real correspondence with C2’s requirement for genuine origination. The residual is P3’s agonistic qualification: the strong poet’s creative freedom is not ex nihilo origination but origination-under-influence, always exercised in reaction to and struggle against the precursor tradition. This is a genuine limitation on the libertarian origination claim rather than a minor qualification: Bloom’s theory of poetic creation is built around the inevitability of influence and the impossibility of creation without it, which means the creative act is never fully self-originating in the sense C2 requires at its strongest. The finding is Partially Aligned rather than Contrary because the agonistic qualification does not deny genuine agency but specifies its conditions — the strong poet genuinely chooses his misreadings and revisions, even if those choices are always made within and against a tradition he did not choose.

C3 — Ethical Intuitionism. Non-Operative. Positive showing: P4 is not merely a silence on moral epistemology but an explicit, argued, career-defining exclusion of moral evaluation from the domain of literary criticism as Bloom practices it. His critique of the School of Resentment is precisely a critique of the intrusion of moral and political evaluation into aesthetic judgment. His claim that Shakespeare’s greatness is not a moral achievement but an aesthetic and cognitive one is a principled architectural decision about what literary criticism is for, not a failure to address moral questions. The commitment to ethical intuitionism cannot be Non-Operative due to an accident of scope in the same way Enoch’s C1 is Non-Operative; Bloom’s exclusion of the moral domain is itself a load-bearing argumentative move. The finding is Non-Operative rather than Contrary because Bloom does not argue that direct rational apprehension of moral truth is impossible — he argues that it is not the business of literary criticism, which is a domain-restriction rather than a metaphysical denial.

C4 — Foundationalism. Partially Aligned. P2 requires that genuine aesthetic greatness is real and assessable: some works are objectively superior to others, and the Western Canon represents genuine excellence rather than institutionalized power. This is foundationalist in structure: aesthetic value is not constructed by any individual, culture, or institution but discovered by the trained critical judgment of the strongest readers across centuries. The residual: Bloom’s aesthetic foundationalism is impressionistic and personalistic rather than derived from explicit first principles in the way C4’s full requirement demands. His account of what makes Shakespeare great — the invention of the human, the representation of an original cognitive style — is argued by accumulation of close readings and assertion of aesthetic force rather than by derivation from foundational aesthetic propositions. The finding is Partially Aligned rather than Aligned because the foundationalist structure is genuine and load-bearing while the explicit first-principles architecture C4 requires is absent.

C5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth. Partially Aligned. P5 requires something real in texts that can be tracked, misread, and revised: Bloom’s opposition to deconstruction and his insistence that texts have genuine presence and meaning require correspondence realism about literary meaning. His entire account of the anxiety of influence presupposes that there is a real precursor text with real force that the strong poet is really struggling against — not a free play of signifiers. The residual is P5’s documented internal tension: Bloom’s own theory of misreading holds that all strong reading is creative misreading, that no reading simply reproduces what is “in” the text, and that the strong critic’s encounter with a text is itself a creative act. This tension — between the real text that is misread and the creative misreading that is all strong reading consists of — is not resolved in Bloom’s record into a coherent position on correspondence truth for literary meaning. The finding is Partially Aligned rather than Inconsistent because the correspondence commitment is load-bearing and primary while the misreading qualification is a theoretical complication rather than an explicit counter-claim stated in a different argumentative domain.

C6 — Moral Realism. Non-Operative. Positive showing: same principled exclusion as C3. P4’s deliberate walling-off of moral evaluation from literary criticism applies at C6 as directly as at C3: Bloom does not evaluate the moral facts any work discloses or fails to disclose, does not treat moral realism or its denial as relevant to literary greatness, and does not argue for or against the objectivity of moral facts anywhere in his critical record. The Non-Operative finding is the same architectural-exclusion category as C3 rather than a mere absence: Bloom’s stated position is that moral facts are not the business of literary criticism, which means his record is genuinely silent on C6 by principled design rather than by accident of scope.

Self-Audit Complete: all five presuppositions audited against all six commitments where they bear; both Non-Operative findings were given positive showings that distinguished architectural exclusion (Bloom) from argumentative non-reach (Enoch); C1’s Aligned finding was explicitly compared to the Thomist cluster’s Partially Aligned findings and the basis for the distinction stated; P5’s tension was examined directly rather than resolved by taking the more favorable reading; no finding distributed for apparent balance. Proceed to Step 3.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

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

An agent who adopts Bloom’s framework as a governing self-description acquires the most forceful anti-reductionist account of the self in the cluster at C1 and a genuine, if agonistically qualified, account of creative agency at C2. What the framework explicitly withholds is any resource for moral and evaluative judgment beyond the aesthetic domain: the strong self Bloom defends is a creative and cognitive self, not a moral one in the sense Sterling’s framework requires. The agent who takes Bloom’s framework as governing acquires a robustly irreducible self whose moral life is simply not addressed by the framework he has adopted.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 4.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Part A — Commitment Pattern

CommitmentFinding
C1 — Substance DualismAligned
C2 — Libertarian Free WillPartially Aligned
C3 — Ethical IntuitionismNon-Operative
C4 — FoundationalismPartially Aligned
C5 — Correspondence Theory of TruthPartially Aligned
C6 — Moral RealismNon-Operative

One Aligned (C1), three Partially Aligned (C2, C4, C5), two Non-Operative (C3, C6), zero Contrary, zero Inconsistent. No Dissolution. The profile is the most unusual in the cluster: the only figure who earns Aligned at C1 while producing Non-Operative findings at the two moral commitments (C3, C6). Where Enoch’s Non-Operative findings at C1/C2 reflect an argument that never reaches the metaphysical questions by structural design, Bloom’s Non-Operative findings at C3/C6 reflect an argument that explicitly walled off the moral domain by principled critical decision. The contrast is precise: Enoch produces strong moral realism (C5/C6 Aligned) with no account of the deliberating self (C1/C2 Non-Operative); Bloom produces a strong irreducible creative self (C1 Aligned) with no account of moral reality (C3/C6 Non-Operative). Each figure supplies exactly what the other lacks and lacks exactly what the other supplies.

Part B — Dissolution Finding. No Dissolution. C1 Aligned, C2 Partially Aligned. The framework fully preserves and forcefully defends the space for an irreducible creative self whose agency is genuine.

Part C — Agent-Level Implication. An agent who adopts Bloom’s framework acquires the cluster’s most powerful anti-reductionist defense of the irreducible self (C1) and a genuine account of creative agency operating within and against a tradition (C2). What the framework explicitly does not supply is any resource for the moral half of that self’s life: the strong creative self Bloom defends is evaluated aesthetically, not morally, and the framework’s principled silence on moral evaluation means the agent looking to it for moral guidance will find nothing there by design. An agent working within the corpus who finds Bloom’s framework attractive would find C1 fully secured — more forcefully than by any Thomist in the cluster — while needing to supply C3, C4, C5, and C6’s moral content from entirely outside Bloom’s critical program. The framework’s C3/C6 Non-Operative findings are not gaps to be supplemented architecturally, as Enoch’s C1/C2 Non-Operative findings are: they are principled exclusions that the framework actively maintains, and supplementing them requires going beyond Bloom rather than extending him.

Corpus boundary. The CPA issues findings on presuppositions embedded in an argumentative record. It does not evaluate Bloom’s literary-critical judgments, the adequacy of his theory of the anxiety of influence, or his standing within literary criticism.

Self-Audit Complete: summary follows from Steps 1–3 without new material introduced; the Enoch/Bloom complementarity was stated as a structural observation about the two profiles rather than as an interpretation of either figure’s intentions; the distinction between supplementable architectural gaps and principled exclusions was stated in Part C as a genuine practical difference for a prospective adopter; corpus boundary declared; summary self-contained. CPA run complete.


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

Classical Presupposition Audit — David Enoch

 

Classical Presupposition Audit — David Enoch

Instrument: Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. Instrument architecture and analysis: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude. Document 69 in the Sterling/Kelly corpus. 2026.

Subject: David Enoch (1971–), Israeli-American moral and legal philosopher; Professor of Philosophy and Law, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem; previously held positions at NYU, Oxford, and Duke. Primary sources: Taking Morality Seriously: A Defense of Robust Realism (2011); “Why I Am An Objectivist About Ethics (And Why You Are Too)” (2011); “Not Just a Truthometer: Taking Intuitions Seriously in Ethics” (2010); “The Epistemological Challenge to Metanormative Realism: How Best to Understand It, and How to Cope With It” (2010); “How Is Moral Disagreement a Problem for Realism?” (2009).


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Corpus in view. Sources restricted to Enoch’s own published record. No prior conclusion stated. Enoch is Document 69 in the Philosophy CPA cluster (Documents 65–70). The Non-Operative finding category has not yet appeared in this cluster; its first appearance here is flagged at Step 0 for careful handling. Per instrument protocol, a Non-Operative finding requires a positive showing — a demonstration that the commitment in question genuinely does not bear on Enoch’s argumentative record, not a substitution for a harder finding that was avoided. The positive showing must be identified and stated at Step 2 before the finding is finalized.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 1.


Step 1 — Presupposition Profile

P1 — The deliberative-indispensability argument. Taking Morality Seriously’s central argument requires that robust moral realism is the best explanation of why our deliberative practice is neither mistaken nor pointless: we cannot deliberate about what to do without treating some reasons as objectively binding, and the best explanation of why this is not a systematic delusion is that moral realism is true. This is load-bearing for Enoch’s entire positive case for moral realism — the argument that moral facts are not merely posited but genuinely needed to account for what we are doing when we deliberate seriously.

P2 — Pre-theoretical moral intuitions as evidence. “Not Just a Truthometer” requires that strong, widely-shared pre-theoretical moral intuitions are genuine evidence of moral reality rather than merely psychological data about what people happen to believe. Enoch’s “companions in guilt” strategy extends this: the epistemological challenges facing moral intuitions as evidence of moral reality are structurally parallel to those facing mathematical or logical intuitions as evidence of mathematical or logical reality, and an anti-realist who accepts the latter while rejecting the former is in an inconsistent position. This is load-bearing for the epistemological dimension of Taking Morality Seriously.

P3 — Moral facts as objective and mind-independent. Enoch’s robust realism requires throughout that moral facts are not constructed by any individual will, any cultural practice, any rational procedure, or any natural fact expressible in non-normative terms: they are mind-independent features of practical reality that deliberating agents are tracking when they reason correctly about what to do. This is maximally load-bearing across his entire metaethical project.

P4 — Moral realism against all anti-realist alternatives. Taking Morality Seriously’s systematic engagement with error theory (Mackie), expressivism (Blackburn, Gibbard), quasi-realism, non-cognitivism, and relativism requires that each of these positions fails to account for moral discourse as it actually functions in genuine deliberation. This is load-bearing for the eliminative dimension of his project: establishing what moral realism requires by showing what the alternatives cannot supply.

Stage B — Domain Mapping. P1 is mapped at C4 and C6: the deliberative-indispensability argument has a foundationalist structure (deliberation requires treating some reasons as foundational) and directly establishes the need for moral realism. P2 is mapped at C3: pre-theoretical intuitions as evidence of moral reality. P3 and P4 are mapped together at C5 and C6: correspondence truth for moral claims and the systematic defense of robust moral realism. The C1 and C2 questions are examined at Step 2 specifically for whether P1’s deliberative structure requires any position on them, with the positive-showing requirement for Non-Operative in force throughout.

Self-Audit Complete: presuppositions drawn from Enoch’s own record; the Non-Operative protocol requirement stated explicitly at Step 0 and carried into Step 2; the domain mapping of P1 at C4 was flagged as requiring examination of what kind of foundationalism, if any, the deliberative-indispensability argument actually commits Enoch to. Proceed to Step 2.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

C1 — Substance Dualism. Non-Operative. Positive showing: the deliberative-indispensability argument (P1) is explicitly structured around what deliberation requires at the level of metaethics — specifically, that deliberation requires treating some reasons as objectively binding — without any commitment to what kind of substance the deliberating agent is. Enoch’s metaethical project is intentionally metaphysically minimalist about the nature of the deliberating subject: he is making a case for the objectivity of moral reasons, not a case for any particular account of what the subject grasping those reasons consists in. His companions-in-guilt strategy (P2) is similarly neutral on the metaphysics of mind: the analogy between moral and mathematical intuition is epistemological, not ontological. No engagement with substance dualism versus physicalism versus hylomorphism was found as load-bearing anywhere in Enoch’s record. This is Non-Operative rather than Partially Aligned because the absence is architectural: the argument’s stated structure never reaches the question, not merely because Enoch happens not to have written about it.

C2 — Libertarian Free Will. Non-Operative. Positive showing: the deliberative-indispensability argument requires that agents genuinely deliberate — that deliberation is not a sham — but it does not require that deliberation involves libertarian origination specifically. The argument works equally well on compatibilist, libertarian, or even hard determinist readings of agency, so long as the deliberative practice is taken seriously as a practice that commits its participants to treating reasons as objectively binding. Enoch does not take a position on free will metaphysics in his published metaethical record, and the absence is not a failure to engage a question his argument reaches: his argument’s stated structure never reaches it. This is Non-Operative for the same architectural reason as C1: the question is not addressed because the argument does not require it, not because Enoch chose not to extend it there.

C3 — Ethical Intuitionism. Partially Aligned. P2 is a genuine and argued defense of moral intuitions as evidence of moral reality rather than mere psychological data — substantial correspondence with C3’s requirement that moral truth be accessible to the rational faculty. “Not Just a Truthometer” is the most direct engagement with this question: Enoch argues explicitly that taking intuitions seriously as evidence is not a methodological failing but a requirement of honest moral epistemology. The residual: his primary argument for moral realism (P1, deliberative indispensability) is an inference to the best explanation of our deliberative practice rather than an argument from direct, non-inferential apprehension of moral truth. The intuitions function as supporting evidence within a broader epistemological package — companions in guilt, inference to the best explanation, coherentist weighting — rather than as the primary, direct access route to moral truth that C3 specifically requires. This is a genuine epistemological gap, not a minor qualification: Enoch’s approach embeds intuitions in a reflective equilibrium framework rather than treating direct apprehension as foundational.

C4 — Foundationalism. Partially Aligned. P1’s deliberative-indispensability argument has a foundationalist structure in one clear sense: deliberation presupposes that some reasons are objectively binding, and this presupposition is not itself derived from further deliberation — it is the condition that makes deliberation possible at all. This is a genuine foundationalist move, and it corresponds with C4’s requirement that moral knowledge rest on bedrock rather than on an infinite regress of justification. The residual: Enoch does not develop this foundational structure into a systematic account of moral first principles whose content is specified and defended as self-evident in the way Parfit’s supreme principles (Document 68) or Feser’s natural law first precepts (Document 67) are. The deliberative-indispensability argument establishes the need for objective moral foundations without specifying their architecture in detail, leaving the foundationalist structure implicit and structural rather than explicit and developed. The finding is Partially Aligned rather than Non-Operative because the foundationalist structure is genuinely present and load-bearing, and rather than Aligned because the explicit articulation of foundational moral content that C4’s full requirement demands is not supplied.

C5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth. Aligned. P3’s robust realism and P4’s systematic engagement with anti-realism together require correspondence truth for moral claims throughout: moral facts are mind-independent features of practical reality, moral statements are genuinely truth-apt, and what makes a moral statement true is not any natural fact, any cultural consensus, or any rational procedure but its correspondence to those mind-independent moral facts. Enoch’s explicit and sustained rejection of every form of anti-realism that would reduce moral “truth” to something other than genuine correspondence is the strongest single correspondence-realist commitment in his record.

C6 — Moral Realism. Aligned. P3 and P4 together constitute one of the most systematic and exhaustive contemporary defenses of robust moral realism available. Taking Morality Seriously is named for this commitment, organized around defending it against all major alternatives, and load-bearing throughout Enoch’s entire published record. No qualification, domain-limitation, or anti-realist concession was found as load-bearing.

Self-Audit Complete: all four presuppositions audited against all six commitments where they bear; the two Non-Operative findings were each given a stated positive showing before the finding was finalized, not after; the positive showing in both cases was the same architectural point (the argument’s stated structure never reaches the question) rather than a general silence, and this was stated precisely rather than left as an observed absence; C3 and C4 were examined independently and found to carry different residuals rather than assumed to carry the same one. Proceed to Step 3.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

C1: Non-Operative. C2: Non-Operative. The dissolution rule applies to Contrary findings at C1 and C2; Non-Operative findings at those commitments neither establish nor preclude dissolution. Per the instrument’s architecture: Non-Operative means the commitment does not bear on the figure’s record in either direction. The absence of a Contrary finding means the dissolution condition is not met. No Dissolution.

The agent-level implication of the two Non-Operative findings is nonetheless worth stating precisely, since it is different in kind from the No Dissolution finding produced by Partially Aligned C1/C2 profiles elsewhere in the cluster. An agent who adopts Enoch’s framework is not asked to accept anything about the metaphysics of the self or the will: the framework is genuinely silent on both questions. What this means practically is that Enoch’s framework does not threaten the agent’s rational self-description in the way Parfit’s does, but it also does not supply the philosophical ground for that self-description that Sterling’s framework requires. The rational subject who does the deliberating, and whose acts of will are the location of genuine good on Sterling’s account, is simply not addressed by Enoch’s metaethical project — neither secured nor denied.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 4.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Part A — Commitment Pattern

CommitmentFinding
C1 — Substance DualismNon-Operative
C2 — Libertarian Free WillNon-Operative
C3 — Ethical IntuitionismPartially Aligned
C4 — FoundationalismPartially Aligned
C5 — Correspondence Theory of TruthAligned
C6 — Moral RealismAligned

Two Aligned (C5, C6), two Partially Aligned (C3, C4), two Non-Operative (C1, C2), zero Contrary, zero Inconsistent. No Dissolution. The first Non-Operative findings produced within the Philosophy cluster. The profile is structurally distinct from every prior figure in the cluster: where Parfit (Document 68) explicitly dissolves C1 and leaves C2 under philosophical pressure, Enoch’s Non-Operative findings reflect a project that genuinely does not reach either question, producing a moral realism of equivalent strength to Parfit’s (Aligned at both C5 and C6) without the dissolution cost and without the metaphysical security the Thomist cluster (Documents 65–67) provides at C1.

Part B — Dissolution Finding. No Dissolution. C1 and C2 both Non-Operative; the dissolution condition is not met. The framework neither threatens nor secures the rational subject’s self-description at the foundational level.

Part C — Agent-Level Implication. An agent who adopts Enoch’s framework acquires a sustained, systematic defense of robust moral realism against every major anti-realist alternative (C6), correspondence truth for moral claims (C5), a defense of moral intuitions as genuine evidence (C3, partially), and the deliberative-indispensability argument as grounds for treating moral reasons as objectively binding in practical life (C4, partially). What the framework leaves unaddressed is everything Sterling’s framework requires at C1 and C2: the metaphysics of the rational subject doing the deliberating, and whether his deliberation involves genuine libertarian origination. An agent looking to Enoch’s framework for a complete philosophical self-description would find the metaethical half fully supplied and the metaphysics-of-agency half simply not there — not denied, not competed with, but absent by architectural design. That is the precise location and character of the gap the two Non-Operative findings name.

Corpus boundary. The CPA issues findings on presuppositions embedded in an argumentative record. It does not evaluate Enoch’s deliberative-indispensability argument as a contribution to metaethics, the success of his companions-in-guilt strategy, or his standing within contemporary moral philosophy.

Self-Audit Complete: summary follows from Steps 1–3 without new material introduced; the Non-Operative findings’ agent-level implications were stated as distinct from both Partial Dissolution and from Partially Aligned No Dissolution; the gap was characterized as architectural rather than as a choice or oversight; corpus boundary declared; summary self-contained. CPA run complete.


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

Classical Presupposition Audit — Derek Parfit

 

Classical Presupposition Audit — Derek Parfit

Instrument: Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. Instrument architecture and analysis: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude. Document 68 in the Sterling/Kelly corpus. 2026.

Subject: Derek Parfit (1942–2017), British analytic philosopher; Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford; Visiting Professor, New York University, Harvard, and Rutgers. Primary sources: Reasons and Persons (1984); On What Matters, Volumes 1 and 2 (2011); Volume 3 (posthumous, 2017).


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Corpus in view. Sources restricted to Parfit’s own published record. No prior conclusion stated. Parfit is Document 68 in the Philosophy CPA cluster (Documents 65–70). The profile produced by this audit is flagged at Step 0 as the cluster’s structural boundary case: the CFA identified Parfit’s combination of comprehensive moral realism with explicit reductionism about personal identity as the clearest illustration of what happens when the strongest available moral realism is pursued without C1’s ground. That characterization is to be verified from Parfit’s own record rather than assumed.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 1.


Step 1 — Presupposition Profile

P1 — The reductionist view of personal identity. Part III of Reasons and Persons requires that persons are not separately existing entities over and above their physical and psychological constituents. The “further fact” view — that there is something more to personal identity than physical and psychological continuity, some separately existing Cartesian ego or immaterial soul whose persistence is what personal identity consists in — is explicitly argued to be false. Parfit’s reductionism requires this as a load-bearing conclusion: the practical upshots he draws from reductionism (about rationality, ethics, and the insignificance of personal identity over time) all depend on the further fact view being wrong.

P2 — Personal identity is not what matters. The same argument requires the stronger claim that even if personal identity were determinate, it would not be what matters in survival. What matters is psychological continuity and connectedness — the persistence of memories, intentions, beliefs, and desires — not the persistence of any separately existing entity. This is load-bearing for the ethical and practical upshots Parfit draws in Parts I, II, and IV: rational concern for future selves, the separateness of persons, and the moral weight of personal identity all require reassessment once P1 and P2 are accepted.

P3 — Moral intuitions as evidence of moral reality. On What Matters requires that moral intuitions — the considered judgments of reflective agents about what is right, wrong, required, or forbidden — are genuine evidence about moral reality, not merely expressions of preference, cultural conditioning, or evolutionary programming. Parfit explicitly uses intuitions as data throughout: when a moral theory conflicts with strong, widely shared intuitions, that counts against the theory. This is load-bearing for the entire methodology of On What Matters.

P4 — Convergence of moral theories on objective moral truth. The Triple Theory — Parfit’s thesis that Kantian ethics, contractualism, and consequentialism, properly understood, converge on the same fundamental moral principles — requires that there are objective moral truths that multiple independent theoretical frameworks are each tracking from different directions. The convergence is not merely sociological; it is evidence that the converging theories are approaching something real. This is maximally load-bearing for On What Matters’ central thesis.

P5 — Foundational moral principles as the bedrock of practical reason. On What Matters’ structure requires supreme principles of morality that function as foundational: they are not themselves derived from further moral principles, they are what other moral conclusions are ultimately grounded in, and they are accessible to rational reflection as near-self-evident once clearly formulated. The entire project of showing convergence among three major moral traditions is a project of identifying these foundational principles as the shared ground the traditions have been independently approaching.

P6 — Robust moral realism against expressivism and error theory. Volume 2 of On What Matters is largely devoted to defending the claim that moral statements are genuine truth-apt propositions, that some of them are true, and that their truth does not consist in any natural fact expressible in non-normative terms. Parfit explicitly engages and rejects expressivism (Blackburn, Gibbard), error theory (Mackie), and relativism as accounts of moral discourse. This is load-bearing for the claim that the convergence P4 identifies is convergence on genuine moral truth rather than on widely shared but ultimately non-cognitive moral attitudes.

Stage B — Domain Mapping. P1 and P2 are mapped together at C1 as the explicit reductionist argument: P1 denies the further fact view; P2 extends the denial to what matters in survival. These are two stages of the same conclusion and are examined together at C1. P3 is mapped at C3 as the moral-epistemological mechanism. P4 and P5 are mapped at C3, C4, and C6 as the convergence-and-foundations argument. P6 is mapped at C5 and C6 as the realism defense. The C2 question is examined separately at Step 2 on the basis of what Parfit’s record does and does not require about the will specifically, rather than inferred from P1/P2’s implications.

Self-Audit Complete: presuppositions drawn from Parfit’s own record; P1 and P2 distinguished as two stages of a single argument rather than treated as one finding; C2 flagged for independent examination rather than inferred from C1; the structural-boundary characterization flagged at Step 0 is to be confirmed from the audit rather than used to determine the audit. Proceed to Step 2.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

C1 — Substance Dualism. Contrary. P1 and P2 together constitute a direct, explicit, sustained philosophical argument against C1’s core claim. The further fact view — that there is something more to personal identity than physical and psychological continuity, something separately existing whose persistence is what the self consists in — is exactly what C1 requires, and Parfit explicitly argues that this view is false. This is not a residual, an undeveloped silence, or a failure to engage the question: it is the central conclusion of the most extended and influential treatment of personal identity in twentieth-century analytic philosophy. The Contrary finding follows directly. This is the first Contrary at C1 produced within the Philosophy cluster’s Thomist and moral-realism figures (Documents 65–67) and it distinguishes Parfit’s profile structurally from every prior figure in this series.

C2 — Libertarian Free Will. Partially Aligned. Parfit’s record does not develop a systematic account of free will. He engages with questions of rationality, responsibility, and moral agency throughout Reasons and Persons and On What Matters, and his practical philosophy presupposes that agents are genuinely capable of deliberation, choice, and moral responsibility — structural alignment with what C2 requires at the practical level. The residual: his reductionism about persons creates philosophical pressure against the libertarian origination claim C2 requires at its core, since the separately existing rational subject whose genuine self-origination of assent C2 requires is precisely what P1/P2 denies. This pressure is not resolved by Parfit himself into an explicit compatibilist or libertarian position on the metaphysics of free will; he does not mount a direct argument against libertarian origination the way he mounts one against the further fact view. The finding is Partially Aligned rather than Contrary because the explicit argument was not found, and rather than Aligned because the reductionist architecture of P1/P2 is genuinely in tension with what C2 requires even in the absence of an explicit denial.

C3 — Ethical Intuitionism. Aligned. P3 is explicit, sustained, and load-bearing: moral intuitions are treated as genuine evidence of moral reality throughout On What Matters, deployed as data against theories that conflict with them, and treated as the primary access route to foundational moral principles. P4’s convergence thesis presupposes this: the intuitions that each tradition tracks are evidence that each tradition is approaching the same moral truth from a different direction. Parfit’s methodology is not merely compatible with ethical intuitionism; it requires it as a structural premise.

C4 — Foundationalism. Aligned. P5’s supreme principles of morality function as bedrock: not derived from anything more basic, accessible to reflective reason, and constituting the foundational structure from which other moral conclusions follow. The convergence of three major traditions on these same principles is itself a foundationalist result: it shows that Kant, the contractualists, and the consequentialists have each been working toward the same foundational moral truths by different routes. No coherentist or anti-foundationalist qualification of this structure was found as load-bearing in Parfit’s record.

C5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth. Aligned. P6’s defense of moral realism against expressivism requires correspondence truth for moral claims: moral statements are genuinely truth-apt, some are true, and their truth is not reducible to any natural or non-cognitive fact. Parfit’s treatment of moral reasons as objective features of practical reality presupposes that true moral claims correspond to mind-independent moral facts. No deflationary qualification of this standard was found as load-bearing.

C6 — Moral Realism. Aligned. P6’s moral realism is the most extensively argued in the Philosophy cluster. Parfit engages and explicitly rejects every major anti-realist alternative — expressivism, error theory, relativism, naturalistic reductionism — and defends the claim that moral truths are genuine, objective, mind-independent facts accessible to rational reflection. The moral realism P4 and P5 together require — that the convergence of three traditions is convergence on something real — is itself a moral realist claim of the strongest kind: not merely that some moral beliefs are justified, but that moral reality is what they are converging toward.

Self-Audit Complete: all six presuppositions audited against all six commitments where they bear; the C1 Contrary finding was derived from P1/P2’s explicit argumentative content rather than from the structural-boundary characterization flagged at Step 0; C2 was examined independently of C1 rather than inferred from P1/P2’s implications, with the distinction between explicit argument and philosophical pressure stated precisely; the four Aligned findings were checked against their respective presuppositions rather than distributed for apparent balance. Proceed to Step 3.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

C1: Contrary. C2: Partially Aligned. Per the dissolution rule: Partial Dissolution.

This is the first Partial Dissolution finding produced within the Philosophy cluster and the first Contrary at C1 in the entire cluster series. The structural consequence is precise: Parfit’s framework contains the strongest moral realism in the cluster — four Aligned findings at C3, C4, C5, C6, the most comprehensive and argued moral-realist architecture produced by any figure in this series — bundled with an explicit denial of the one commitment that grounds the subject who is to act on that moral reality. The finding is not that Parfit’s moral philosophy is weak; it is that it is a map of genuine moral destinations produced by an architect who has simultaneously argued that the traveler is not the kind of entity the map assumes. An agent who adopts Parfit’s framework is asked to accept that the moral truths On What Matters identifies are genuine, objective, and demanding — and that the self whose demands they are is not a separately existing entity whose persistence is what he consists in.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 4.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Part A — Commitment Pattern

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

Four Aligned (C3, C4, C5, C6), one Partially Aligned (C2), one Contrary (C1), zero Inconsistent, zero Non-Operative. Partial Dissolution. The profile is the cluster’s structural boundary case: the highest concentration of strong Aligned findings in the moral-realism commitments (C3–C6) combined with the first and only Contrary in the cluster at C1. This table is the structural inverse of Weber’s (Document 77): where Weber retains a fully intact rational self while making moral realism unreachable by reason, Parfit produces the most comprehensive moral realism in the series while denying the separately existing rational self whose acts of will alone, on Sterling’s account, are the location of genuine good.

Part B — Dissolution Finding. Partial Dissolution. C1 Contrary, C2 Partially Aligned. The framework explicitly dissolves the separately existing rational subject while preserving a structurally intact, if philosophically undeveloped, account of deliberation and moral agency within that dissolved self.

Part C — Agent-Level Implication. An agent who adopts Parfit’s framework acquires the most rigorously argued moral realism available in contemporary analytic philosophy (C6), an explicit and sustained defense of moral intuitions as evidence of moral reality (C3), a foundationalist architecture terminating in supreme principles of morality (C4), and correspondence truth throughout (C5). What the framework requires him to accept in exchange is P1/P2’s conclusion: that he is not a separately existing entity whose persistence is what he consists in, that personal identity is not what matters, and that the rational subject Sterling’s framework places at the center of the moral life — the prohairesis in whose acts of will alone genuine good is located — is not the kind of thing Parfit’s metaphysics of persons allows. Parfit himself noted that his reductionism, once accepted, should feel liberating rather than distressing — the dissolution of the self opens rather than closes the moral life. Sterling’s framework reads this differently: what is dissolved is precisely the ground without which the moral realism On What Matters establishes has no stable subject to whom it applies.

Corpus boundary. The CPA issues findings on presuppositions embedded in an argumentative record. It does not evaluate the success of Parfit’s personal identity arguments, the adequacy of his Triple Theory, or his standing within analytic moral philosophy.

Self-Audit Complete: summary follows from Steps 1–3 without new material introduced; the Weber inversion was stated as a structural observation about the table rather than as an interpretation of Parfit’s intentions; agent-level implication addressed to a prospective adopter; Parfit’s own stated view of his reductionism was recorded and the corpus’s differing reading stated directly rather than suppressed; corpus boundary declared; summary self-contained. CPA run complete.


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

Classical Presupposition Audit — Edward Feser

 

Classical Presupposition Audit — Edward Feser

Instrument: Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. Instrument architecture and analysis: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude. Document 67 in the Sterling/Kelly corpus. 2026.

Subject: Edward Feser (1968–), American philosopher in the Aristotelian-Thomistic tradition; Professor of Philosophy, Pasadena City College; prolific public defender of scholastic metaphysics and natural law ethics. Primary sources: Philosophy of Mind: A Beginner’s Guide (2005); The Last Superstition: A Refutation of the New Atheism (2008); Aquinas: A Beginner’s Guide (2009); Scholastic Metaphysics: A Contemporary Introduction (2014); Neo-Scholastic Essays (2015); Five Proofs of the Existence of God (2017); Aristotle’s Revenge: The Metaphysical Foundations of Physical and Biological Science (2019).


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Corpus in view. Sources restricted to Feser’s own published record. No prior conclusion stated. Feser is Document 67 in the Philosophy CPA cluster (Documents 65–70). Cross-references to Geach (Document 65) and MacIntyre (Document 66) are permitted where load-bearing for distinguishing Feser’s specific profile from the cluster’s Thomist pattern, but no finding is assumed from those precedents. The C1 question is flagged at Step 0 as requiring special attention: Feser’s explicit defense of substance dualism as such — including hylemorphic dualism explicitly framed as a form of substance dualism rather than as an alternative to it — is a potential differentiator from the C1 residual found at Geach and MacIntyre, and this claim is to be verified on Feser’s own textual record rather than assumed.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 1.


Step 1 — Presupposition Profile

P1 — Hylemorphic dualism as a genuine form of substance dualism. In Philosophy of Mind and Scholastic Metaphysics, Feser argues that hylemorphic dualism — the Aristotelian-Thomistic account of the soul as the form of the body — is not an alternative to substance dualism but a version of it: the intellective soul in particular is immaterial, not reducible to any physical description, and constitutes the person as a rational subject in a sense that no physicalist account can supply. Feser explicitly distinguishes his position from Cartesian substance dualism but defends both as forms of genuine substance dualism against physicalism and naturalism. This is load-bearing for his entire engagement with philosophy of mind and for his running refutation of the new atheism’s underlying physicalist metaphysics.

P2 — The intellect’s immateriality as argued conclusion. Feser deploys the Thomistic argument that the intellect must be immaterial because it can take on the forms of things without taking on the matter — it grasps the universal, not the particular physical instance — and that no physical system can do this, since any physical system is itself particular and materially constituted. This is load-bearing specifically for C1’s core claim that the rational faculty is not exhaustively constituted by physical conditions: the argument establishes exactly this as a conclusion rather than merely presupposing it.

P3 — Libertarian free will as required by the Aristotelian-Thomistic framework. Feser’s account of moral responsibility, sin, and the natural law’s binding force all require that human beings are genuine originators of their rational choices — not merely that their choices are undetermined by prior physical causes in some minimal sense, but that the rational will is a genuine self-moving power. This is load-bearing for his moral philosophy and for his theology of grace and merit.

P4 — Natural law epistemology: practical reason and human telos. Feser’s natural law ethics across Aquinas, Neo-Scholastic Essays, and Aristotle’s Revenge requires that moral first principles are known through practical reason recognizing the teleological structure of human nature: the first precept of the natural law (“good is to be done and pursued, and evil avoided”) is self-evident to practical reason, but the content of what counts as good is determined by what conduces to genuine human flourishing as given by nature. Moral knowledge is mediated through natural teleology rather than arrived at by direct non-inferential apprehension prior to and independent of that teleological structure.

P5 — Scholastic foundationalism: self-evident first principles. Feser’s scholastic metaphysics explicitly defends the Aristotelian account of per se nota — self-evident first principles known through the terms themselves — as the bedrock of genuine knowledge in both theoretical and practical domains. In Scholastic Metaphysics, the principle of non-contradiction, the principle of causality, and the first precepts of practical reason are all treated as foundational in exactly this sense: not themselves derived from anything more basic, recognizable by any properly functioning rational faculty. This is load-bearing for his entire critique of Humean skepticism, modern naturalism, and the new atheism.

P6 — Correspondence truth and realism throughout. Feser’s realism about universals, causal powers, teleology, and moral facts all presuppose that true propositions correspond to mind-independent states of affairs. His running argument against nominalism, mechanism, and naturalism is precisely that these positions cannot account for the correspondence relation that even their own scientific claims presuppose. No deflationary, pragmatist, or anti-realist qualification of this standard was found as load-bearing in his record.

P7 — Natural law moral realism: objective human telos. Feser’s natural law ethics requires objective moral facts: what counts as genuine human flourishing is determined by human nature and its teleological structure, not by cultural convention, subjective preference, or political consensus. His engagement with sexual ethics, bioethics, and political philosophy all treat this objectivity as the non-negotiable foundation from which applied conclusions follow.

Stage B — Domain Mapping. P1 and P2 are mapped together at C1 as the explicit substance-dualist argument: P1 establishes the framework, P2 establishes the specific philosophical argument for immateriality. P3 is mapped at C2. P4 is mapped at C3 as the specific epistemological mechanism, checked against C3’s direct-apprehension requirement rather than against the broader moral-knowledge question. P5 is mapped at C4. P6 and P7 are mapped at C5 and C6 respectively.

Self-Audit Complete: presuppositions drawn from Feser’s own record; P1/P2 distinguished from Geach’s C1 presupposition at Step 1 rather than assumed identical; P4 held specifically to C3’s direct-apprehension requirement rather than to the moral-knowledge question broadly. Proceed to Step 2.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

C1 — Substance Dualism. Aligned. P1 and P2 together constitute the most explicitly argued substance-dualist position in the Philosophy cluster. Feser is not merely presupposing a real rational faculty against physicalist reduction; he is arguing for it, defending hylemorphic dualism explicitly as a form of substance dualism, deploying the immateriality-of-the-intellect argument as a positive philosophical conclusion, and doing so in extended, systematic engagement with contemporary philosophy of mind. This distinguishes Feser’s C1 finding from Geach’s and MacIntyre’s Partially Aligned findings at this commitment: where both Geach and MacIntyre affirm a real rational principle irreducible to physical causation but resist the Cartesian specification of the soul as an ontologically independent substance, Feser explicitly defends hylemorphic dualism as substance dualism and deploys the immateriality argument as a positive philosophical result. The remaining difference from Cartesian substance dualism is noted — Feser does not hold that the intellective soul has a natural mode of existence independent of the body in the Cartesian sense — but this remaining difference does not prevent an Aligned finding because Feser’s own explicit argumentative framing identifies his position as a version of substance dualism rather than as an alternative to it.

C2 — Libertarian Free Will. Aligned. P3 is load-bearing throughout Feser’s moral philosophy and his engagement with the problem of determinism. His account of the will as a genuine self-moving rational power is argued explicitly in Scholastic Metaphysics against both hard determinism and compatibilism: compatibilist freedom, on Feser’s account, does not supply what moral responsibility requires. No contrary presupposition was found as load-bearing.

C3 — Ethical Intuitionism. Partially Aligned. P4’s natural law epistemology supplies objective, rational moral knowledge — genuine correspondence with C3’s requirement that moral truth be accessible to the rational faculty. The residual is the same Thomist residual found at C3 across the cluster: the moral knowledge Feser’s framework produces is mediated through practical reason’s recognition of natural teleological structure rather than arrived at by direct, non-inferential apprehension of moral truth independent of that natural-teleological medium. The first precept of the natural law is, on Feser’s own account, known through the terms of practical reason operating on what is naturally good — not through an immediate, self-evident recognition of moral truth prior to any engagement with human nature at all. This is C3’s genuine residual across the Thomist cluster, verified here on Feser’s own text rather than assumed from Geach’s or MacIntyre’s profiles.

C4 — Foundationalism. Aligned. P5’s explicit scholastic foundationalism is the most fully argued foundationalist architecture in the cluster. Feser defends per se nota first principles across both theoretical and practical domains, engages directly with Humean and post-Humean skepticism about self-evident principles, and treats the foundationalist structure as a positive, defended thesis rather than a presupposed background. No tradition-dependence qualification of the kind found at MacIntyre (Document 66) is load-bearing in Feser’s record: his first principles are accessible to any properly functioning rational faculty, not only to participants in a living tradition.

C5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth. Aligned. P6’s correspondence realism is argued explicitly and pervasively: against nominalism (universals are real), against mechanism (causal powers and teleology are real features of the world), and against naturalism (the correspondence relation that even scientific claims require cannot be accounted for on physicalist terms). No deflationary or pragmatist qualification was found as load-bearing.

C6 — Moral Realism. Aligned. P7’s natural law moral realism is the most extensively argued moral-realist position in the cluster by sheer volume of applied-ethics work: Feser’s engagement with sexual ethics, capital punishment, bioethics, and political philosophy all treat objective human telos as the non-negotiable foundation. The moral facts his applied work identifies are presented as genuinely discovered, not constructed, and as binding independently of cultural acceptance.

Self-Audit Complete: all seven presuppositions audited against all six commitments where they bear; the C1 Aligned finding was derived on Feser’s own explicit argumentative framing rather than assumed from the absence of Geach’s or MacIntyre’s specific resistance to the Cartesian specification; the C3 residual was verified independently on Feser’s own text; the C4 finding was explicitly distinguished from MacIntyre’s Partially Aligned finding at C4 by the absence of a tradition-dependence qualification. Proceed to Step 3.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

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

An agent who adopts Feser’s framework as a governing self-description acquires the fullest philosophical architecture for the rational soul available within the Thomist cluster: an argued, explicit substance dualism, a defended libertarian account of the will, a foundationalist epistemology reaching both theoretical and practical first principles, correspondence truth throughout, and robust natural law moral realism. What the framework leaves requiring supplementation is C3’s direct moral apprehension: the natural law’s epistemological route through teleological human nature is the one point at which the corpus requires more than Feser’s framework delivers.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 4.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Part A — Commitment Pattern

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

Five Aligned (C1, C2, C4, C5, C6), one Partially Aligned (C3), zero Contrary, zero Inconsistent, zero Non-Operative. No Dissolution. The cleanest profile in the Thomist sub-cluster and the highest Aligned count among the four Thomists audited (Geach: 4 Aligned; MacIntyre: 3 Aligned; Anscombe: 4 Aligned). The single Partially Aligned finding — C3 — carries the same natural-teleological mediation residual found across the Thomist cluster, here verified independently on Feser’s own account of the natural law’s first precept.

Part B — Dissolution Finding. No Dissolution. C1 Aligned, C2 Aligned. The framework provides the most fully secured account of the rational soul and its freedom of any figure in the cluster.

Part C — Agent-Level Implication. An agent who adopts Feser’s framework acquires an argued substance dualism (C1) rather than a merely presupposed one, the most explicit scholastic foundationalism available in contemporary analytic philosophy (C4), correspondence realism argued against nominalism and mechanism (C5), and the most extensively applied natural law moral realism in the cluster (C6). The one supplement the corpus requires is C3: the direct, non-inferential moral apprehension that Feser’s natural law epistemology approaches in its conclusions — genuine objective moral truth, accessible to reason — without reaching in its method, since the route runs through natural teleology rather than through immediate rational recognition. An agent working within the corpus who finds Feser’s framework attractive would need to supplement it at C3 alone; nothing in his record closes that gap against the corpus, and the supplement is architecturally consistent with his other five commitments.

Corpus boundary. The CPA issues findings on presuppositions embedded in an argumentative record. It does not evaluate Feser’s standing within contemporary scholastic philosophy, the success of his engagement with analytic philosophy of mind, or the merits of his applied natural law conclusions.

Self-Audit Complete: summary follows from Steps 1–3 without new material introduced; agent-level implication addressed to a prospective adopter; the C1 Aligned finding’s distinction from the Thomist cluster’s usual Partially Aligned was stated in the summary rather than left implicit; corpus boundary declared; summary self-contained. CPA run complete.


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

Classical Presupposition Audit — Alasdair MacIntyre

 

Classical Presupposition Audit — Alasdair MacIntyre

Instrument: Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. Instrument architecture and analysis: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude. Document 66 in the Sterling/Kelly corpus. 2026.

Subject: Alasdair MacIntyre (1929–), Scottish-American moral philosopher; Senior Research Fellow, University of Notre Dame; convert to Thomistic Aristotelianism and to Roman Catholicism (1983). Primary sources: After Virtue (1981; second edition 1984); Whose Justice? Which Rationality? (1988); Three Rival Versions of Moral Enquiry (1990); Dependent Rational Animals: Why Human Beings Need the Virtues (1999).


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Corpus in view. Sources restricted to MacIntyre’s own published record. No prior conclusion stated. MacIntyre is being audited as Document 66 within the Philosophy CPA cluster (Documents 65–70); the immediately prior run (Geach, Document 65) is referenced where load-bearing for distinguishing MacIntyre’s specific residuals from the Thomist cluster’s uniform pattern, but is not the basis of any finding. The C4 question is flagged at Step 0 as requiring special attention: the System Map identifies MacIntyre as the only figure in the cluster whose foundationalism itself fractures, and this finding is to be derived from MacIntyre’s own record rather than assumed from that characterization.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 1.


Step 1 — Presupposition Profile

P1 — The Enlightenment project failed, and it failed necessarily. After Virtue’s central argument requires that the Enlightenment attempt to ground morality in principles accessible to any rational agent, independent of any particular tradition, history, or community, was not merely unsuccessful but necessarily so: the project presupposed a conception of the self and of practical reason that is itself historically specific, incoherent when examined on its own terms, and incapable of supplying the moral framework it promised. This is load-bearing for every subsequent argument MacIntyre makes: if P1 fails, the entire critique of modern moral philosophy collapses.

P2 — Tradition-constituted rationality. Whose Justice? Which Rationality? and Three Rival Versions require that practical rationality is always exercised from within a living tradition — a historically extended argument about goods, practices, and human ends — and that the first principles of moral reasoning are accessible precisely through the conceptual resources a tradition develops over time, not prior to or independent of any tradition. This is load-bearing for MacIntyre’s positive account of how genuine moral knowledge is possible after the Enlightenment’s failure.

P3 — The telos of human nature as objective. Dependent Rational Animals requires that human beings have a real, objective telos — a form of flourishing proper to their kind — that is not a cultural construction, not a projection of any particular tradition’s preferences, but a fact about what human animals, given their nature and their dependencies, genuinely need in order to live and act well. This is load-bearing for the claim that tradition-constituted rationality aims at truth rather than at internal coherence alone.

P4 — The soul as the subject of rational activity. MacIntyre’s account of the rational animal in Dependent Rational Animals requires a genuine, irreducible rational faculty that is not exhaustively constituted by biological conditions: the capacity for practical reasoning, for recognizing goods and reasons, and for governing action accordingly is real and belongs to the human animal as such. His engagement with the continuity between human and animal practical reasoning does not reduce the rational to the biological but instead raises the biological toward what genuine rational dependency involves.

P5 — Virtue as tradition-mediated moral knowledge. After Virtue’s account of virtue requires that the virtues are genuinely excellent qualities of character, objectively so, that are recognized, transmitted, and refined within the practices of a living tradition. Moral knowledge — including knowledge of which character traits are genuinely virtuous — is acquired through participation in such practices, not through a-traditional direct apprehension of moral truth.

P6 — Traditions aim at truth and can be epistemically assessed. Against a relativist reading of his own position, MacIntyre argues across Whose Justice? and Three Rival Versions that traditions are not sealed against external criticism: a tradition that cannot account for its own failures and crises, or that lacks the resources to engage the strongest rival tradition’s challenges, is thereby shown to be epistemically inferior — closer to error, further from truth — rather than merely different. This is load-bearing for distinguishing his position from relativism and for the claim that tradition-constituted rationality genuinely aims at correspondence to how things are.

Stage B — Domain Mapping. P1 and P2 are mapped together at C4 as the location of the foundationalism fracture: P1 explicitly rejects ahistorical Enlightenment foundationalism; P2 affirms tradition-internal first principles as genuine, if tradition-dependent, foundations. These must be examined as two stages of the same account at C4 rather than collapsed into a simple Aligned or Contrary finding. P3 and P6 are mapped together at C5 and C6 as the objective-telos and correspondence-truth pair. P4 is mapped at C1. P5 is mapped at C3.

Self-Audit Complete: presuppositions drawn from MacIntyre’s own record across the full argumentative arc from 1981 to 1999; the C4 fracture was flagged at Step 0 and is treated as requiring its own independent derivation from P1/P2 rather than assumed from the cluster characterization; P5 is held specifically to C3’s requirement for direct non-inferential apprehension rather than to the broader question of moral knowledge. Proceed to Step 2.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

C1 — Substance Dualism. Partially Aligned. P4 requires a real, irreducible rational faculty that is not exhaustively constituted by biological conditions — genuine correspondence with C1’s anti-reductionist core. MacIntyre’s engagement in Dependent Rational Animals with the continuity between animal and human practical intelligence is careful not to reduce the rational to the biological: what distinguishes human practical reasoning is precisely the capacity for self-governance by reasons, not merely by drives. The residual is the same hylomorphic residual found across the Thomist cluster (Document 65, Geach; Document 67, Feser): the rational principle MacIntyre affirms is the form of a human animal, not a Cartesian substance with an independent natural mode of existence. Stated as a genuine residual rather than a minor qualification: MacIntyre’s own explicit engagement with animal psychology in Dependent Rational Animals is precisely designed to resist a sharp Cartesian soul-body dualism, and this is a positive theoretical commitment in his record, not merely an absence of the Cartesian claim.

C2 — Libertarian Free Will. Aligned. Virtue, vice, moral responsibility, and the possibility of moral conversion all require genuine rational freedom of the will throughout MacIntyre’s record. His account of practical reasoning as involving genuine deliberation that issues in choice — not mere computation of strongest desire — is load-bearing for the entire virtue-ethics program. No compatibilist qualification of this was found as load-bearing: MacIntyre’s account of the will requires more than mere absence of external constraint.

C3 — Ethical Intuitionism. Partially Aligned. P5 requires that the virtues are objectively excellent character traits, genuinely knowable by reason — substantial correspondence with C3’s moral-knowledge requirement. The residual is the epistemological mechanism: MacIntyre’s moral knowledge is tradition-mediated rather than directly apprehended. An agent recognizes that honesty is a genuine virtue through participation in practices that have developed the conceptual resources to see why it is — not through a direct, non-inferential rational recognition prior to and independent of any tradition’s formative resources. This residual is related to but distinct from the Thomist naturalistic-teleological residual found at C3 in Geach (Document 65): Geach’s moral epistemology mediates through natural teleology; MacIntyre’s mediates through historical tradition. Both are genuine alternatives to direct apprehension; they are not the same alternative.

C4 — Foundationalism. Partially Aligned. This is the most distinctive finding in MacIntyre’s profile and the one that distinguishes it structurally from every other figure in the Philosophy cluster. P1 and P2 together produce a fracture within foundationalism itself rather than a simple alignment or divergence. P2 affirms tradition-internal first principles: within a mature tradition, there are foundational claims that function as bedrock for further reasoning, that are not themselves derived from prior argument within that tradition, and whose abandonment would amount to abandoning the tradition altogether. This is foundationalism in structure. P1 explicitly and polemically rejects the Enlightenment version of this same structure: the project of founding morality on principles accessible to any rational agent, independent of any tradition, history, or community. MacIntyre’s argument in After Virtue is precisely that this foundationalist ambition — Sterling’s framework’s own foundationalist requirement in its Enlightenment form — is incoherent. The finding is Partially Aligned rather than Contrary because the foundationalist structure MacIntyre affirms within a tradition is genuine and load-bearing, and rather than Aligned because what C4 specifically requires — bedrock moral truth accessible to the rational faculty as such, independent of whether any particular tradition has yet reached the agent — is precisely what P1 explicitly denies is available.

C5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth. Aligned. P6 requires that traditions are epistemically assessable by how well they account for reality — closer to or further from truth in a correspondence sense — rather than merely internally coherent. MacIntyre’s explicit defense of this position against relativist readings of his own work is sustained and argued, not incidental. P3’s objective telos presupposes correspondence truth: the claim that human beings genuinely need the virtues is a truth about human nature, not a claim internal to any tradition’s self-understanding. No deflationary or pragmatist qualification was found as load-bearing.

C6 — Moral Realism. Aligned. P3 is the most direct and explicit moral realism in MacIntyre’s record: a real, objective telos for human animals, not a cultural construction. Dependent Rational Animals is precisely the work in which MacIntyre grounds the virtues in the actual biological and social conditions of human dependency rather than in any particular tradition’s self-understanding — which means the moral facts he identifies are, on his own account, facts about what human beings of any tradition genuinely need. P6 reinforces this: traditions are not epistemically equal, and what makes a better tradition better is its greater correspondence to moral truth about human flourishing.

Self-Audit Complete: all six presuppositions audited against all six commitments where they bear; the C4 finding was derived independently from P1/P2 rather than assumed from the System Map characterization, and both stages of the fracture were given full weight rather than resolved by privileging one over the other; the C3 residual was distinguished from Geach’s C3 residual as a different kind of mediation rather than assimilated to it for convenience; no finding distributed for apparent balance. Proceed to Step 3.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

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

An agent who adopts MacIntyre’s framework as a governing self-description retains a full account of genuine rational agency operating within and through a living tradition of moral inquiry. He is not asked to dissolve his prohairesis into an external system; he is asked to understand that his rational faculty operates most fully when embedded in a tradition that has the conceptual resources to disclose genuine moral truth. What he does not acquire from MacIntyre’s framework alone is the claim that moral truth is accessible to the rational faculty as such, independent of whether any tradition has yet reached him — which is what C4 requires in its strongest form, and what C3 requires throughout.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceed to Step 4.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Part A — Commitment Pattern

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

Three Aligned (C2, C5, C6), three Partially Aligned (C1, C3, C4), zero Contrary, zero Inconsistent, zero Non-Operative. No Dissolution. The profile is unique in the Philosophy cluster for the C4 fracture: no other figure in the series produces a Partially Aligned finding at foundationalism itself on grounds of an explicit internal contradiction between a tradition-internal foundationalism affirmed and an ahistorical foundationalism denied. The two other Partially Aligned findings (C1, C3) carry residuals related to but distinct from Geach’s: the C1 residual reflects MacIntyre’s deliberate engagement with animal rationality; the C3 residual reflects tradition-mediation specifically, where Geach’s reflects natural-teleological abstraction.

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

Part C — Agent-Level Implication. An agent who adopts MacIntyre’s framework acquires the most thoroughgoing contemporary critique of Enlightenment moral philosophy available in the analytic tradition (with direct bearing on the displacement the CFA series has diagnosed across all sixteen fields), a genuinely argued account of tradition-constituted rationality that explains how moral knowledge is possible without the Enlightenment’s failed foundations, genuine freedom of the will (C2), correspondence truth (C5), and robust moral realism grounded in objective human telos (C6). What the framework requires that Sterling’s own framework cannot concede is P1’s denial that the moral truth C6 identifies is accessible to the rational faculty independently of any tradition’s formative resources. An agent embedded in a rich living tradition gains the most from MacIntyre’s framework; an agent who reasons prior to or outside such a tradition is, on MacIntyre’s own account, not yet in a position to access the foundational moral knowledge the corpus requires to be available as such. That is the precise location of the gap C4 names.

Corpus boundary. The CPA issues findings on presuppositions embedded in an argumentative record. It does not evaluate MacIntyre’s account of modernity’s moral disorder, the historical accuracy of his reading of Aristotle and Aquinas, or his standing within contemporary virtue ethics.

Self-Audit Complete: summary follows from Steps 1–3 without new material introduced; the C4 fracture was described in its implications for a prospective adopter rather than left as an abstract philosophical observation; corpus boundary declared; summary self-contained. CPA run complete.


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