Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Monday, April 20, 2026

Classical Ideological Audit — Ethical Naturalism

 

Classical Ideological Audit — Ethical Naturalism

Instrument: Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v2.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Test criteria derived from Sterling’s six philosophical commitments and the 58 Unified Stoic Propositions of Grant C. Sterling. Corpus in use: Core Stoicism, Nine Excerpts, Sterling Logic Engine v4.0, Free Will and Causation, Stoicism Moral Facts and Ethical Intuitionism, Stoicism Foundationalism and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge, Stoicism Correspondence Theory of Truth and Objective Moral Facts, Stoicism Moral Realism and the Necessity of Objective Moral Facts, The Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism, A Brief Reply Re: Dualism, Stoic Dualism and Nature, Two and One-Half Ethical Systems. Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Ideology under examination: Ethical naturalism. The ideology will be stated in propositional form in Step 1. The instrument does not audit a label; it audits the identified presuppositions.

Corpus in view: Yes. Specific documents will be cited by name and section when referenced.

Prior conclusion: None. The findings are produced by the analysis, not confirmed by it.

Note on scope: The CIA audits an ideology as a system of ideas, not as a characterization of any person. Ethical naturalism is here audited in its own right as a philosophical position with identifiable load-bearing presuppositions. Christopher Gill is the most serious contemporary advocate of applying ethical naturalism to the reconstruction of Stoic ethics, and his work provides the most developed instance of the position under audit. The philosophical relationship between his naturalist Stoicism and the Sterling framework is examined at length in the companion essay “Virtue, Assent, and the Locus of the Good: Sterling’s Stoicism and the Limits of Gill’s Naturalism.” The present instrument run addresses the ideology itself.

Self-Audit — Step 0:

  • Is the corpus in view? Yes.
  • Has the ideology been stated in propositional form before the audit begins? It will be at Step 1.
  • Is the instrument operating under a prior conclusion? No.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 1.


Step 1 — Ideology Statement and Variant Identification

Core Statement

Ethical naturalism is the philosophical position that moral facts are a species of natural facts, that moral knowledge is continuous with natural knowledge, and that the normative force of moral claims derives from facts about the natural world — specifically from facts about the nature, constitution, characteristic functions, or flourishing conditions of the kinds of beings to whom those claims apply. The position is defined by its grounding move: whatever is genuinely good for a being is so because of what kind of being it is and what that kind of being requires in order to live well as such.

Ethical naturalism is unified by four core presuppositions that any version must hold in order to be recognizable as the position:

P1 — Moral grounding in natural facts. Moral claims derive their truth conditions from facts about the natural world. What is genuinely good is determined by facts about what natural kinds are, what they require, and what constitutes their characteristic flourishing. There are no moral facts that exist independently of any natural facts. If the natural facts were radically different, the moral facts would be different too.

P2 — Continuity of moral and natural knowledge. Moral knowledge is arrived at through investigation that is, in principle, continuous with natural investigation. There is no separate, non-empirical, non-inferential faculty by which moral truths are directly apprehended prior to any investigation. Moral knowledge may be more holistic, more interpretive, or more embedded in practical experience than paradigmatic scientific knowledge, but it is not categorically different from it in its epistemic foundations.

P3 — The self as natural organism. The moral subject — the agent for whom the good is being specified — is a natural organism, a member of a natural kind, whose inner life is the inner life of a complex natural being. There is no categorical ontological gulf between the moral subject and the natural world. The agent is not a distinct substance standing prior to and independent of the natural order; he is embedded in it, constituted by it, and evaluated by standards derivable from it.

P4 — Objective moral facts grounded in natural structure. The position is realist in the sense that it holds moral claims to be objectively true or false, not merely expressions of preference or cultural consensus. However, their objectivity is grounded in the objectivity of the natural facts that support them — facts about species-characteristic flourishing, natural function, or the requirements of a kind-member’s life. Moral facts are objective because natural facts are objective, not because moral facts constitute a freestanding realm of their own.

Variant Identification

Three major variants of ethical naturalism are philosophically significant for this audit.

Variant A — Aristotelian eudaimonist naturalism (represented most fully in the work of Philippa Foot, Rosalind Hursthouse, and, in the Stoic context, Christopher Gill). This variant grounds virtue in the natural function of the human kind: living virtuously is living in a way that is characteristically excellent for a creature of this kind, as determined by an investigation of what human beings are and what they need to flourish. It is robustly realist about objective natural facts about human nature and holds that these facts have direct normative import. It is the most philosophically developed and the most hospitable to the kind of moral seriousness that Stoic ethics requires.

Variant B — Cornell realism / synthetic naturalism (Brink, Sturgeon). This variant holds that moral properties are identical to natural properties but not by conceptual analysis — the identity is synthetic and a posteriori. It holds moral realism firmly and treats moral facts as genuinely objective features of the natural world. It does not commit to any specific account of which natural properties moral properties are identical to, which gives it a more open-ended relationship to specific moral claims.

Variant C — Evolutionary or social-functional naturalism. This variant grounds moral facts in evolutionary fitness, social cooperation, or the functional requirements of stable social life. It tends toward a more deflationary account of moral objectivity — moral facts may be objective in the sense that they are determined by facts about social function or evolutionary history, but they are not objective in the stronger sense that the other variants intend. This is the variant most vulnerable to the charge that it reduces moral claims to sociological or biological claims.

Self-Audit — Step 1:

  • Have I stated the ideology’s presuppositions or merely its surface claims? I have stated four load-bearing presuppositions, not the label.
  • Have I identified core presuppositions shared across all variants? Yes. P1–P4 are held by Variants A, B, and C, though with different emphases.
  • Have I identified the variants for Stage Two? Yes. Three variants identified.
  • Have I stated any prior conclusion? No.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 2.


Step 2 — Stage One Core Audit

Commitment 1 — Substance Dualism

Test question: Does the ideology treat the inner life of the individual as categorically distinct from and prior to all external material conditions? Or does it reduce the agent to a product of natural forces?

Finding: Divergent.

Presupposition P3 is the governing presupposition here. Ethical naturalism holds that the moral subject is a natural organism, embedded in and constituted by the natural order. The agent’s inner life — his rational capacities, his evaluative responses, his characteristic mode of knowing — is the inner life of a complex natural being, not the inner life of a categorically distinct substance standing prior to and independent of the natural world. The agent is not ontologically separate from nature; he is one of nature’s products, assessed by standards derivable from facts about what natural kinds of his type require.

This presupposition directly contradicts Commitment 1. The governing proposition of the corpus (Nine Excerpts, Section 4) is: “I am my soul/prohairesis/inner self. Everything else, including my body, is an external.” The corpus requires the rational faculty to be categorically distinct from and prior to all external conditions, including the body. This distinction is not merely a useful heuristic; it is an ontological claim grounded in substance dualism. Sterling’s corpus (A Brief Reply Re: Dualism) argues that the certainty of qualitative mental experience — the feeling of pain, the operation of modus ponens — cannot be accounted for by any physical science, and that dualism is the philosophically defensible response to that explanatory gap. Ethical naturalism requires the opposite: the inner life is in principle explicable within natural terms, and the agent is embedded in rather than categorically prior to the natural order.

The contradiction is load-bearing. Ethical naturalism cannot abandon P3 without ceasing to be naturalism. The claim that the agent is a natural organism evaluated by natural standards is not a peripheral addition; it is the defining move of the position. Remove it and the naturalist grounding of moral claims dissolves.

Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free Will

Test question: Does the ideology ground its moral claims in the genuine causal power of individual rational agents to originate their own assents independently of prior determining causes?

Finding: Divergent.

Ethical naturalism is committed, by P3, to understanding the agent as a natural organism whose inner life is continuous with the natural causal order. This commits the position, at the level of embedded presupposition, to some form of compatibilism: the agent’s choices and assents are physical events within a causally ordered natural world. The most the position can offer is that those events flow through the agent’s own rational character rather than being externally compelled — a compatibilist account of freedom, not a libertarian one. Ethical naturalism cannot coherently hold that the agent is a natural organism embedded in the natural causal order and simultaneously that his assents are genuine first causes originating independently of that causal order. The two claims are structurally incompatible.

This contradicts Commitment 2. The governing proposition of the corpus (Nine Excerpts, Section 7) is: “Choosing whether or not to assent to impressions is the only thing in our control — and yet, everything critical to leading the best possible life is contained in that one act.” The corpus (Free Will and Causation, Sterling) specifies that “in our control” means genuine causal origination, not merely flowing from one’s own character without external compulsion. The dichotomy of control is not a useful distinction between different kinds of physical causation; it is an ontological boundary between what is genuinely originated by the rational faculty and what is determined by forces external to it. Ethical naturalism, by embedding the agent in the natural causal order, dissolves this boundary. What looks like an act of originating assent is, on the naturalist account, a physical event determined by the agent’s prior physical constitution and history.

The contradiction is load-bearing. An ethical naturalism that held libertarian free will would have to posit a rational faculty that stands outside the natural causal order, which is precisely what P3 denies.

Commitment 3 — Ethical Intuitionism

Test question: Does the ideology hold that there are moral facts that rational agents can know non-empirically and non-inferentially, prior to any investigation of nature?

Finding: Divergent.

Presupposition P2 is decisive here. Ethical naturalism holds that moral knowledge is continuous with natural knowledge and arrived at through a process of investigation that has empirical and inferential dimensions. Even in Variant A, the most philosophically refined version, moral knowledge is acquired through understanding what human nature is and what it requires — a process that involves natural investigation, not direct non-empirical apprehension. Moral truths are not grasped prior to any investigation of nature; they are derived from, or at minimum strongly constrained by, what that investigation yields. The naturalist moral epistemology is, in Sterling’s terms, empirical and inferential rather than intuitional and foundational.

This contradicts Commitment 3. The governing corpus (Stoicism, Moral Facts, and Ethical Intuitionism, Sterling, ISF February 24 and March 13, 2020) argues that the alternatives are intuitionism or nihilism, with no defensible third option. Moral terms cannot be heard, smelt, tasted, seen, or felt; they cannot be established by empirical investigation of any kind. The same rational faculty that gives direct knowledge of mathematical truths gives direct knowledge of moral truths. Ethical naturalism’s program of deriving moral claims from natural investigation attempts precisely the third option Sterling rules out: arriving at moral truths through empirical routes. The resulting moral knowledge, whatever its merits, is not moral knowledge in the sense the corpus requires. It is natural knowledge with moral implications, which is a different epistemic structure.

The contradiction is load-bearing. An ethical naturalism that abandoned P2 and held that moral knowledge is non-empirical and non-inferential would have no basis for calling itself naturalism, since it would have conceded that there is a categorically distinct mode of moral apprehension that operates independently of natural investigation.

Commitment 4 — Foundationalism

Test question: Does the ideology rest on first principles it treats as non-negotiable, necessary, self-evident truths not derived from empirical observation?

Finding: Partial Convergence.

Ethical naturalism, particularly in Variants A and B, is not anti-foundationalist in the strong coherentist sense. It holds that there are objective natural facts about human nature and flourishing, and that these facts function as a grounding structure for moral claims rather than being themselves derived from moral reasoning. The position is not one in which all moral and natural claims are equally revisable by any consideration that bears on them. There is a structural hierarchy: facts about natural kinds and their requirements are foundational relative to specific moral claims that are derived from them. This is Partially Convergent with Commitment 4.

The residual preventing full Convergence: the foundational principles that ethical naturalism identifies — facts about what human beings are and what they require to flourish — are themselves derived from empirical investigation of human nature. They are not self-evident first principles grasped by rational apprehension independently of any empirical inquiry. The corpus (Stoicism, Foundationalism, and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge, Sterling, January 19, 2015) specifies: “The fundamental truths of ethics are necessary, self-evident truths. They are necessary, self-evident truths that any rational faculty can apprehend directly.” Ethical naturalism’s foundational principles are not necessary or self-evident in this sense; they are empirically warranted and in principle revisable if the relevant natural investigation yields different results. The structure is foundationalist in form but empiricist in content.

Commitment 5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth

Test question: Does the ideology treat its moral claims as true or false independently of who holds them, what consequences follow, or what consensus ratifies them?

Finding: Partial Convergence.

Ethical naturalism, in its dominant forms (Variants A and B), is a realist position. It holds that moral claims are objectively true or false, determined by facts that hold independently of what anyone believes or prefers. Foot, Hursthouse, Gill, and Cornell realists all hold that there is a fact of the matter about human flourishing and virtue that is not constructed by social consensus or individual preference. In this respect the position converges with Commitment 5’s requirement that moral claims correspond to mind-independent reality.

The residual preventing full Convergence: the “mind-independent reality” to which moral claims are held to correspond is, on the naturalist account, the natural world. The governing corpus (Stoicism, Correspondence Theory of Truth, and Objective Moral Facts, Sterling) specifies that moral facts are objective facts about the structure of value that hold independently of any natural facts about human beings or the cosmos. On the naturalist account, if human beings were constituted differently, the moral facts bearing on them would be different too. On the corpus’s account, the moral fact that externals are not genuinely good or evil is not contingent on facts about human constitution; it is a necessary truth about the structure of value that any rational faculty can apprehend directly. The naturalist account grounds moral objectivity in natural objectivity; the corpus grounds moral objectivity in a freestanding moral realism. Correspondence theory is operative in both, but what the moral claims correspond to differs fundamentally.

Commitment 6 — Moral Realism

Test question: Does the ideology treat good and evil as objective properties — real features of the world that reason can discover independently of preference or cultural formation?

Finding: Partial Convergence.

Ethical naturalism in its dominant variants is robustly realist. Variant A holds that what is genuinely good for a human being is determined by objective facts about human nature and is not reducible to what any individual or community prefers. Virtue is genuinely excellent, not merely preferred or socially stipulated as excellent. This is Partially Convergent with Commitment 6.

The residual: the objectivity of moral facts on the naturalist account is derivative from the objectivity of natural facts. The governing corpus (Stoicism, Moral Realism, and the Necessity of Objective Moral Facts, Sterling) holds that moral facts “have no source, just as 2+2=4 has no source” — they are fundamental, necessary, and unalterable facts about the universe, not derived from any more basic class of facts. Sterling’s specific moral realism is non-naturalist: “only virtue is good” is not a truth derivable from facts about human nature or the natural order. It is a necessary truth about the structure of value apprehensible by the rational faculty directly. Ethical naturalism’s moral realism is real but naturalist; Sterling’s is real and non-naturalist. The difference is philosophically significant: on the naturalist account, if the natural facts about human beings were different, what counts as genuinely good for them would be different. On Sterling’s account, the good is what it is necessarily, independently of any facts about human constitution.

Variant C (evolutionary or social-functional naturalism) is further from Convergence: it grounds moral objectivity in evolutionary history or social function, which makes moral facts contingent on facts that are not only natural but specifically historical and local. For Variant C, the finding approaches Divergent on this commitment.

Self-Audit — Step 2:

  • Have I audited all core presuppositions, or selectively addressed the easier ones? All four core presuppositions have been addressed against all six commitments where they bear.
  • Have I used Orthogonal to avoid a Divergent finding? No. No Orthogonal finding appears; all commitments are operative in ethical naturalism’s domain.
  • Have I distributed findings to achieve apparent balance? No. The findings track the analysis: two Divergent (C1, C2, C3), three Partial Convergence (C4, C5, C6).
  • Have I issued findings on questions outside the corpus’s domain? No.
  • Would I issue the same findings for an ideology I find politically sympathetic? Yes.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 3.


Step 3 — Stage Two Variant Differential

Governing question: Do any variant-specific presuppositions shift the commitment-level findings from Stage One?

Variant A — Aristotelian Eudaimonist Naturalism (Foot, Hursthouse, Gill)

Variant A strengthens the objectivity and realist character of the moral claims relative to the core position. By grounding virtue in the objective natural function of the human kind, it produces a moral realism that is more robust than Variant C’s and more clearly hospitable to objective moral claims. This produces a modest upward movement on C5 (Correspondence Theory) and C6 (Moral Realism): the finding remains Partial Convergence in both cases, but the gap from Convergence is narrower in Variant A than in the core position.

On C1 (Substance Dualism) and C2 (Libertarian Free Will), Variant A does not shift the findings. Eudaimonist naturalism does not posit a categorically distinct rational substance; the agent remains a natural organism assessed by natural standards. On C3 (Ethical Intuitionism), Variant A does not shift the finding. Foot and Hursthouse ground moral knowledge in natural investigation of human function, not in non-empirical direct apprehension. Gill’s developmental account of moral knowledge — in which the agent arrives at moral understanding through the process of ethical maturation — is explicitly empirical and inferential in structure. The C3 finding remains Divergent.

Net differential for Variant A: No finding changes category. C5 and C6 move modestly upward within Partial Convergence. C1, C2, C3 remain Divergent. The baseline audit governs.

Variant B — Cornell Realism / Synthetic Naturalism

Variant B holds moral properties to be identical to natural properties by synthetic a posteriori identification, not by conceptual analysis. This produces no shift on C1 or C2: the agent is still a natural organism embedded in the natural causal order. It produces no shift on C3: moral knowledge is still arrived at through investigation rather than direct apprehension, even if the investigation is philosophical rather than straightforwardly empirical. On C5 and C6, Variant B is comparably placed to Variant A — robustly realist but grounding objectivity in natural rather than freestanding moral facts.

Net differential for Variant B: No finding changes category. The baseline audit governs throughout.

Variant C — Evolutionary or Social-Functional Naturalism

Variant C grounds moral facts in evolutionary fitness, adaptive advantage, or the functional requirements of stable social life. This produces downward pressure on C6 (Moral Realism): if moral facts are determined by evolutionary history or local social function, their objectivity is contingent in a way that the corpus’s moral realism cannot accommodate. The finding on C6 moves from Partial Convergence toward Divergent for Variant C. Variant C also produces downward pressure on C5 (Correspondence Theory): if moral claims correspond to evolutionarily or socially determined facts rather than to a mind-independent moral reality, the correspondence relation is of a different and weaker kind than the corpus requires.

On C1, C2, and C3, Variant C does not shift the findings; in fact, its more thoroughgoing naturalism deepens the divergence on C1 and C3.

Net differential for Variant C: C6 moves from Partial Convergence toward Divergent. C5 weakens within Partial Convergence. The baseline audit’s Divergent findings on C1, C2, and C3 are reinforced rather than softened. Variant C represents the most philosophically divergent form of ethical naturalism from the corpus’s standpoint.

Significance of the Variant Differential: The differential shows that the ideology’s internal variation is philosophically significant primarily on C5 and C6, where Variant A represents the most favorable form for an agent who holds the six commitments. However, no variant shifts any of the three Divergent findings (C1, C2, C3). The core divergences are invariant across all forms of ethical naturalism. An agent who adopts any form of the position must accept the C1, C2, and C3 presuppositions as load-bearing elements of the ideology, regardless of which variant he favors.

Self-Audit — Step 3:

  • Have I examined variant-specific presuppositions rather than surface differences? Yes. The differentials identified are grounded in load-bearing presuppositions specific to each variant.
  • Have I identified differentials where none exist in order to soften the baseline finding? No. The baseline Divergent findings on C1, C2, and C3 are confirmed as invariant.
  • Have I stated clearly which variant-specific presuppositions are load-bearing? Yes.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 4.


Step 4 — Dissolution Finding

Governing question: Does ethical naturalism’s architecture require the agent to dissolve himself into an external system?

C1: Divergent.
C2: Divergent.

Both Commitment 1 and Commitment 2 are Divergent. The dissolution rule applies without qualification.

Dissolution Finding: Full Dissolution.

Ethical naturalism structurally requires the agent to understand himself as a natural organism embedded in and constituted by the natural order, whose inner life is continuous with natural processes and whose assents are events within a causally ordered natural system. No residue of a categorically distinct rational faculty standing prior to and independent of those conditions remains within the ideology’s architecture. The self-governing rational faculty the corpus identifies as the agent’s true identity — the prohairesis that is categorical prior to all externals, including the body — has no place in a framework in which the agent is a natural kind member assessed by natural standards.

An agent who adopts ethical naturalism as his governing self-description must understand himself as constituted by forces external to what the corpus calls his prohairesis, and his assents as events within the causal order rather than genuine originations. This is the structure the corpus identifies as the root of pathos: the implicit placement of the agent’s identity and wellbeing in conditions external to his genuine self-governing capacity.

Variant differential applied to dissolution: No variant shifts the dissolution finding. All three variants of ethical naturalism hold P3 (the agent as natural organism) and the compatibilist account of agency that follows from it. Variant A, the most philosophically developed and most hospitable to moral seriousness, does not posit a categorically distinct rational substance. The Full Dissolution finding is invariant across all variants.

This is a philosophical finding, not a political verdict. Ethical naturalism is not thereby condemned as institutionally unjust, strategically misguided, or historically failed. The finding is narrower: it identifies what the ideology requires of an agent who adopts it as a governing self-description, specifically what it requires him to accept about the nature of his own rational faculty and its relationship to the natural world.

Self-Audit — Step 4:

  • Does the dissolution finding follow mechanically from the commitment-level findings? Yes. Both C1 and C2 are Divergent. Full Dissolution follows without adjustment.
  • Is the dissolution finding stated as a philosophical finding, not a political verdict? Yes.
  • Has the variant differential been applied correctly to the dissolution finding? Yes. No variant shifts it.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 5.


Step 5 — Summary Finding

Part A — Commitment Pattern

Commitment 1 — Substance DualismDivergent
Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free WillDivergent
Commitment 3 — Ethical IntuitionismDivergent
Commitment 4 — FoundationalismPartial Convergence
Commitment 5 — Correspondence Theory of TruthPartial Convergence
Commitment 6 — Moral RealismPartial Convergence

Pattern summary: Three Divergent (C1, C2, C3); three Partial Convergence (C4, C5, C6). No Convergent findings. No Orthogonal findings.

Deepest point of divergence: C1, C2, and C3 together constitute a structural cluster of divergences that are not independent. They are entangled: the denial of substance dualism (C1) forces the compatibilist account of agency (C2), which in turn closes off the non-empirical rational apprehension required by ethical intuitionism (C3). A faculty embedded in the natural causal order cannot be the genuine originator of its own assents (C2) and cannot have the categorically distinct mode of access to moral truth that intuitionism requires (C3). The three Divergent findings are not three separate problems; they are three expressions of the same underlying commitment to naturalizing the moral subject and moral knowledge.

Strongest point of convergence: C5 and C6 in Variant A. Aristotelian eudaimonist naturalism holds moral claims to be genuinely objectively true, determined by mind-independent facts about human nature and flourishing. This is a genuine point of convergence with the corpus’s realism and correspondence theory, even though the grounding of that objectivity differs fundamentally. An agent who holds Variant A is not a moral relativist or a constructivist; he holds a position in which moral claims have real truth conditions. This is worth acknowledging as a philosophical strength, even as the audit identifies the three structural divergences that prevent compatibility.

Part B — Dissolution Finding

Full Dissolution. Invariant across all variants.

Ethical naturalism’s architecture requires the agent to understand himself as a natural organism whose inner life is continuous with the natural causal order, whose assents are events within that order rather than genuine originations, and whose moral knowledge is derived from investigation of nature rather than directly apprehended by a categorically distinct rational faculty. No version of the position preserves the ontological boundary that the corpus requires for the dichotomy of control to be real.

Part C — Agent-Level Implication

An agent who adopts ethical naturalism as his governing philosophical self-description faces the following set of implicit commitments.

On self-description: he must understand himself as a natural organism, a member of a natural kind, whose identity is constituted by his natural capacities and their exercise in relation to others and to his natural environment. He does not have a categorically distinct rational faculty standing prior to his body and social conditions. His “inner life” is the inner life of a complex natural being, not the inner life of a self-governing soul that is genuinely external to the material world. He has, at the level of self-description, accepted what the corpus identifies as the foundational false dogma: the identification of himself with something that belongs to the external order.

On agency: he must understand his assents and choices as events within the natural causal order, flowing through his rational character but determined by the prior conditions that produced that character. His choices are genuinely his in the compatibilist sense — they flow from who he is — but they are not genuinely his in the libertarian sense the corpus requires. The guarantee of eudaimonia that the corpus places in correct assent depends on assent being a genuine origination, not a determined output. An agent who has accepted the naturalist account of agency cannot coherently claim that guarantee, because the causal story his own framework tells about his assents is one in which the assent’s character was settled before the moment of apparent choice.

On moral knowledge: he must understand moral knowledge as arrived at through a process of investigation and development, not through direct non-empirical apprehension of self-evident truths. The claim that externals are not genuinely good or evil — the foundational corrective proposition of Sterling’s Stoicism — is not available to him as a directly apprehensible moral fact. It must be derived, developed, earned through the process of ethical maturation. This means the corrective criterion by which false dogmata are identified and refused is not immediately available to his rational faculty; it is a conclusion he is working toward, which means it cannot function as the instrument of correction at the points in his development where he most needs it.

The most practically significant implication is what follows from the Full Dissolution finding for the practice of Stoicism. The practical mechanisms of Stoic self-examination — prosochē, the discipline of assent, the evening review examined in “The Relationship Between Stoicism and Personal Examination” — are practices addressed to the prohairesis as a categorically distinct self-governing faculty. They are practices of guarding and correcting assent understood as genuine origination. An agent who has accepted the naturalist account of the self is practicing techniques whose rationale requires a kind of self that his philosophical self-description has denied. He is, at the level of philosophical presupposition, using an instrument designed for a different kind of agent than the one he takes himself to be.

This does not mean that an agent who holds ethical naturalism cannot benefit from Stoic practice. The practical benefits of prosochē and the discipline of assent may accrue to him regardless of his philosophical self-description. But it does mean that his philosophical account of those practices is incoherent: he cannot provide, within his own framework, a consistent explanation of why those practices are addressed to the right thing, why the faculty they target is what they take it to be, or why the guarantee they are supposed to secure — that correct assent guarantees eudaimonia — holds for an agent whose assents are events in a causally determined natural order. The practices are borrowed from a framework whose philosophical foundations the naturalist has declined to accept.

The relationship between Gill’s naturalist Stoicism and the Sterling framework, including the precise points at which the naturalist account fails to sustain the practical requirements of Stoic ethics, is examined in detail in “Virtue, Assent, and the Locus of the Good: Sterling’s Stoicism and the Limits of Gill’s Naturalism.”

Corpus Boundary Declaration: The CIA issues no findings on whether ethical naturalism is a correct account of moral epistemology, whether the Aristotelian eudaimonist version offers the best available secular account of virtue, whether it provides a superior foundation for environmental ethics or political philosophy, or whether any of its substantive moral claims are correct. Those are questions outside the corpus’s domain and outside the CIA’s reach. The findings are restricted to the philosophical presuppositions of the ideology and their entailments for an agent who adopts it as a governing self-description.

Self-Audit — Step 5:

  • Does the summary follow from the preceding steps, or has new material been introduced? The summary follows from Steps 1–4. No new analytical finding appears at the synthesis stage.
  • Has the agent-level implication been stated without converting it into a political verdict? Yes.
  • Has the corpus boundary declaration been issued accurately? Yes.
  • Is the summary self-contained? Yes.

Self-Audit Complete. CIA run complete.


Instrument: Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v2.0. Framework: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.

Classical Presupposition Audit — Christopher Gill

 

Classical Presupposition Audit — Christopher Gill

Instrument: Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Test criteria derived from the six philosophical commitments. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling’s corpus. Corpus in use: Core Stoicism, Nine Excerpts, Sterling Logic Engine v4.0, Free Will and Causation, Stoicism Moral Facts and Ethical Intuitionism, Stoicism Foundationalism and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge, Stoicism Correspondence Theory of Truth and Objective Moral Facts, Stoicism Moral Realism and the Necessity of Objective Moral Facts, The Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism, A Brief Reply Re: Dualism, Stoic Dualism and Nature, Two and One-Half Ethical Systems. Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Figure identified: Christopher Gill (born 1946), Emeritus Professor of Ancient Thought, University of Exeter. Previously at Yale, Bristol, and Aberystwyth Universities. Specialist in ancient Greek and Roman philosophy, with sustained focus on Stoic ethics and psychology. Key publications forming the record for this audit: Personality in Greek Epic, Tragedy, and Philosophy (1996); The Structured Self in Hellenistic and Roman Thought (2006); Naturalistic Psychology in Galen and Stoicism (2010); Marcus Aurelius: Meditations Books 1–6, translated with introduction and commentary (2013); Learning to Live Naturally: Stoic Ethics and its Modern Significance (2022); Stoic Ethics: The Basics (co-authored with Brittany Polat, 2025); numerous journal articles and book chapters; public statements and interviews through Modern Stoicism and related platforms.

Source restriction confirmed. Presuppositions will be drawn from Gill’s own published arguments and stated positions. No characterizations from opponents, no ideological association reasoning, no media framing will enter the profile.

Prior conclusion: None. The findings are produced by the analysis, not confirmed by it.

Self-Audit — Step 0:

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

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 1.


Step 1 — Presupposition Profile

Stage A — Argumentative Record Summary

Gill’s argumentative record organizes around five interconnected lines of argument. Each line is stated below, followed by identification of the argumentative move it requires.

Argument 1: Psychophysical holism as the correct account of the human self. Gill argues across his major works that the self is not a Cartesian subject — a mind distinct from and ontologically prior to its body — but rather a psychophysical whole. In The Structured Self he develops the concept of “psychophysical holism” to characterize Stoic and Epicurean psychology: the person is a single cohesive unity in which psychological and bodily processes are fully interpenetrated. He explicitly contrasts this with what he calls the “subjective-individualist” model, which he traces to Descartes and finds absent from the central Greek philosophical tradition. In his account, the Stoics understood motivation as involving the whole person — not a rational core distinct from and sovereign over the body — and virtues as psychophysical states rather than conditions of a distinct rational substance.

Argumentative move required: This argument requires that there be no ontologically distinct rational faculty that stands prior to and independent of the body and its material conditions. If there were such a faculty, the Stoic-Epicurean framework as Gill presents it would not be the revolutionary advance on Platonic-Aristotelian dualism he argues it is. The anti-Cartesian move is load-bearing throughout.

Argument 2: The self is constituted through social roles and participation, not through individual interiority. In The Structured Self and in Personality in Greek Epic, Tragedy, and Philosophy, Gill develops the concept of the “objective-participant” self as contrasted with the “subjective-individualist” self. The person is not primarily an inner subject whose nature is constituted by private introspective access, but a participant in a set of social relationships and roles whose nature is constituted through that participation. The public sphere, on Gill’s reading of Stoicism and Epicureanism, shapes the self.

Argumentative move required: This argument requires that interiority — understood as a domain categorically distinct from and prior to social and material conditions — not be the primary locus of personal identity. The self’s constitution is partly external to it. This is load-bearing: without it, the contrast with Cartesian subjectivism collapses and the “objective-participant” model loses its point.

Argument 3: Virtue and happiness are grounded in nature, understood as a unified whole. In Learning to Live Naturally, Gill argues that the Stoics ground ethics in nature at two levels — human nature and universal nature — and that these two levels are not sharply separable. The rational and social capacities of human beings are natural capacities; acting in accordance with them is acting in accordance with human nature. Beyond that, universal nature — the cosmos as a structured, ordered, providential whole — provides the broader framework within which the virtuous life finds its significance. Gill argues this naturalism is not a mere slogan but a serious ethical grounding that makes Stoicism more coherent than Aristotelian virtue ethics.

Argumentative move required: This argument requires that ethical claims be derivable from facts about nature, including facts about human nature as a natural kind. Moral values are grounded in the natural structure of the cosmos and of human rationality as a natural capacity. This is a form of ethical naturalism. It is load-bearing: Gill’s case that Stoicism offers a superior alternative to Aristotelianism rests on the coherence and adequacy of this naturalist grounding.

Argument 4: Moral progress is real, and the norms governing it are objective. Throughout his record, Gill argues that the Stoic account of oikeiōsis (appropriation or ethical development) is philosophically serious. Human beings develop morally through a natural process of expanding circles of concern: from self-care, to care for others in role-relationships, to care for the wider community and cosmos. This developmental trajectory is not arbitrary — it tracks an objective structure. Gill further argues, against critics who charge eudaimonism with egoism, that Stoic ethics has a genuinely other-directed dimension grounded in this objective developmental account. He defends the objectivity of ancient ethical norms explicitly in his edited volume Virtue, Norms, and Objectivity (2004).

Argumentative move required: This argument requires that there be objective ethical truths about human development and about the proper relation of the individual to others. Without objective norms, moral progress would reduce to subjective preference change, and Gill’s defense against the egoism charge collapses. The objectivity claim is load-bearing.

Argument 5: Stoicism is therapeutically applicable today and is more than an academic historical interest. Gill has been a central figure in the Modern Stoicism movement and participated in organizing and promoting “Stoic Week” and related public engagement programs. He argues explicitly that Stoic life-guidance — including its links to cognitive behavioral therapy — offers a coherent and efficacious framework for contemporary living. He holds that happiness depends on developing the virtues, not on acquiring external goods such as health, wealth, or status, and that this is a practically actionable claim for any person.

Argumentative move required: This argument requires that the Stoic account of virtue and happiness be true in a way that applies to actual human agents now, not merely historically interesting. It also requires that the agent have sufficient rational self-governance to pursue virtue, since if behavior were entirely determined by forces outside the agent’s rational engagement, the practical applicability of the guidance would be empty.

Stage B — Domain Mapping

Two potential domain variations are noted before proceeding to audit.

Variation 1: Gill’s academic scholarship argues for psychophysical holism and the constitutive role of social participation in selfhood, which appears to deny a categorically distinct interiority. His practical and public-engagement work, however, addresses individuals as agents capable of changing their own lives through changed judgment and rational engagement. These two domains pull in different directions with respect to Commitment 1 (Substance Dualism) and Commitment 2 (Libertarian Free Will). The academic argument formally dissolves the Cartesian self; the practical argument implicitly reinstates individual rational self-governance as something real and effective. This variation will require specific handling at Step 2.

Variation 2: Gill’s naturalism (Argument 3) is a form of ethical naturalism, not moral intuitionism. He does not argue that moral truths are grasped by a non-empirical faculty of rational apprehension prior to any natural investigation. He argues that moral truths are derivable from, or grounded in, the structure of nature. This produces a distinctive profile on Commitment 3 (Ethical Intuitionism) and Commitment 5 (Moral Realism).

Self-Audit — Step 1:

  • Are the presuppositions drawn from the figure’s own public record? Yes. Each presupposition is traceable to Gill’s published arguments.
  • Have I applied the load-bearing test? Yes. Each presupposition is identified by the argumentative move it enables.
  • Have I applied the charity requirement? Yes. Where Gill’s record is ambiguous, the most philosophically favorable reading consistent with his stated positions is used.
  • Have I mapped domain variations that may produce Inconsistent findings? Yes. Two variations identified.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 2.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

Commitment 1 — Substance Dualism

Test question: Can an individual’s inner life be fully explained by reference to conditions external to it, or does Gill’s argument require a residue of interiority that those conditions do not fully constitute?

Finding: Contrary in Gill’s academic-theoretical framework; Partially Aligned in his practical-engagement framework. Because both presuppositions are load-bearing in their respective domains, the overall finding is Inconsistent.

Domain 1 — Academic argument (Contrary): Gill’s central scholarly contribution is the concept of psychophysical holism. He explicitly characterizes Stoic and Epicurean psychology as anti-dualist: the soul is not a categorically distinct substance but is itself corporeal, fully interpenetrated with the body. He contrasts this account with the Platonic-Aristotelian part-based model and with Cartesian dualism as a later development. His “objective-participant” model locates personal identity not in a categorically distinct rational interiority but in the structure of social roles and relationships. He states explicitly that the self cannot be located in individual, subjective experience alone; the public sphere shapes and constitutes the self. This argument requires that there be no ontologically distinct rational faculty categorically prior to material and social conditions. That denial is direct and load-bearing.

This presupposition directly contradicts Commitment 1. The corpus, at Nine Excerpts Section 4, states: “I am my soul/prohairesis/inner self. Everything else, including my body, is an external.” The corpus requires the rational faculty to be categorically distinct from and prior to all external conditions, including the body. Gill’s psychophysical holism requires the opposite.

Domain 2 — Practical-engagement argument (Partially Aligned): In his public-engagement and practical work, Gill argues that any person can change his life by developing the virtues, that happiness depends on the agent’s own rational engagement rather than on external acquisitions, and that Stoic guidance is efficacious because it addresses something real in the agent that is capable of self-governance. This argument implicitly presupposes that individual rational self-governance is real and effective — that there is something in the agent that is not merely the product of external social conditioning but is genuinely capable of self-direction. This is Partially Aligned with Commitment 1, though Gill’s framework does not explicitly ground this in a doctrine of a distinct rational substance.

Why both are load-bearing: The academic argument is load-bearing because Gill’s entire scholarly contribution rests on the claim that psychophysical holism is philosophically superior to Cartesian and dualist alternatives. The practical argument is load-bearing because Gill’s defense of Stoicism as applicable life-guidance rests on the claim that agents can actually redirect their lives through rational engagement.

Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free Will

Test question: Is the individual agent presented as the genuine first cause of his own judgments and choices, or as a sophisticated output of forces that precede and determine him?

Finding: Partially Aligned.

Gill does not argue for determinism or structural determinism in the domain of individual agency. His account of oikeiōsis treats moral development as something the agent undergoes through rational engagement, not something that happens to him as a mechanical output of prior causes. His practical-engagement arguments explicitly treat agents as capable of changing their lives through changed judgment — which requires genuine agency, not mere causal responsiveness. His defense of Stoicism against charges of egoism rests on the agent’s genuine orientation toward others through rational care, not on external conditioning. These moves are Partially Aligned with Commitment 2.

The residual preventing a full Aligned finding: Gill’s psychophysical holism implies that mental events, including acts of will and judgment, are themselves physical. He characterizes Stoic and Epicurean psychology as a form of “non-reductive physicalism.” On this account, all psychological processes — including assent — are physical processes, even if not reducible to merely mechanical terms. The Stoics, on Gill’s presentation, held a form of compatibilism: actions are “up to us” in that they flow through our own rational character rather than being imposed by external compulsion, but they are causally determined within a providential cosmos. Gill does not argue that this compatibilism is inadequate. He presents it as philosophically defensible. This falls short of the Commitment 2 requirement of genuine causal origination of assent independent of prior determining causes. It is Partially Aligned, not Contrary, because Gill’s framework preserves a meaningful sense of rational self-governance; but it does not preserve the libertarian origination the corpus requires.

Commitment 3 — Ethical Intuitionism

Test question: Does the figure’s record hold that there are moral facts that rational agents can know non-empirically and non-inferentially, prior to any calculation of consequences or consultation of consensus?

Finding: Contrary.

Gill’s ethical framework is naturalist, not intuitionist. He grounds moral claims in nature: in facts about what human nature as a natural kind is, in facts about the structure of the cosmos, and in facts about the developmental trajectory of rational social animals. Moral knowledge, on his account, is not a direct non-empirical apprehension of moral facts prior to any investigation of nature. It is derived from rational engagement with the natural structure of human life and its conditions. He argues in Learning to Live Naturally that living according to nature is living according to both human nature and universal nature, and that the convergence of these two levels of nature provides the ethical grounding. This is an inference from nature, not an intuitional grasp of moral facts independent of natural investigation.

Gill’s engagement with modern virtue ethics and with figures like Philippa Foot and Rosalind Hursthouse confirms this: he finds Stoicism aligned with naturalist virtue ethics, not with the intuitionist tradition. He does not invoke self-evident moral truths or direct rational apprehension as the grounds of moral knowledge.

This presupposition directly contradicts Commitment 3. The corpus grounds moral knowledge in direct rational apprehension of objective moral facts, not in naturalistic inference from facts about the structure of the cosmos. Sterling’s ethical intuitionism holds that moral truths are grasped non-empirically and non-inferentially by rational agents. Gill’s naturalism requires moral knowledge to be derived from investigation of nature. The contradiction is load-bearing: Gill’s entire case for Stoic ethics rests on its naturalist grounding, and abandoning naturalism would require him to abandon the argument.

Commitment 4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth

Test question: Does the figure’s record treat truth as alignment between propositions and a mind-independent reality, or as a function of consensus, pragmatic utility, or social construction?

Finding: Aligned.

Gill’s argumentative record consistently presupposes correspondence as the standard of truth. His scholarly work aims to identify what the ancient Stoics and Epicureans actually held, not what would be useful or popular to attribute to them. His defense of psychophysical holism is a historical-philosophical claim subject to evidential test against texts. His argument that Stoicism is more coherent than Aristotelianism is a substantive philosophical claim subject to rational assessment, not a claim about social consensus. His engagement with ancient sources — Cicero’s De Finibus and De Officiis, Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius, Chrysippus — treats textual evidence as tracking facts about what those figures actually thought. His practical arguments claim that the Stoic analysis of happiness is true, not merely that it is useful.

No significant contrary presupposition qualifies this finding. Gill does not argue for pragmatism, anti-realism, or social construction of truth anywhere in his record.

Commitment 5 — Moral Realism

Test question: Does the figure’s record treat moral facts as objective features of reality, independent of what any individual or community believes about them?

Finding: Partially Aligned.

Gill defends the objectivity of ancient ethical norms explicitly. He argues against the egoism objection partly by showing that Stoic ethics has other-directed dimensions grounded in objective facts about human nature and development. He holds that virtue is genuinely superior to external goods, not merely preferred or socially stipulated as superior. His edited volume Virtue, Norms, and Objectivity engages directly with the question of moral objectivity. These moves are Partially Aligned with Commitment 5.

The residual preventing a full Aligned finding: Gill grounds moral objectivity in nature, not in a mind-independent moral realm grasped by direct rational apprehension. His moral realism is naturalist: moral facts are real because they are grounded in the objective structure of human nature and the cosmos. This is a form of moral realism, but not the form the corpus requires. The corpus, in Sterling’s account, grounds moral realism in the direct intuition of moral facts that exist independently of any facts about nature or human development. Gill’s naturalist realism is structurally different: it ties moral facts to natural facts. This means that if nature were radically different, moral facts would be different too — a dependence the corpus’s moral realism does not accept. The point of correspondence is that moral facts are objective; the residual is that Gill’s account ties their objectivity to natural facts rather than treating them as freestanding moral truths.

Commitment 6 — Foundationalism

Test question: Does the figure’s record treat knowledge as structured on basic foundational truths, or as a web of mutually supporting beliefs with no privileged foundation?

Finding: Partially Aligned.

Gill’s ethical framework is structured hierarchically. The account of human and universal nature provides the foundational grounding for ethical claims. Moral development tracks an objective structure that is not itself derived from the conclusions of moral reasoning but provides the basis for it. The Stoic framework as Gill presents it is not a coherentist web — it is ordered from foundational claims about the nature of the cosmos and human nature to derived claims about virtue, happiness, and appropriate action. This is Partially Aligned with Commitment 6.

The residual: the foundations Gill identifies are natural facts rather than self-evident first principles grasped by rational apprehension. The corpus’s foundationalism grounds knowledge in basic truths that are known non-inferentially and independently of empirical investigation of nature. Gill’s foundational claims about nature are themselves derived from philosophical and empirical investigation of what nature is. The structure is foundationalist in form but naturalist in content, producing a residual divergence from the corpus’s foundationalism.

Self-Audit — Step 2:

  • Have I audited all presuppositions in the profile, or selectively addressed the easier ones? All five arguments have been audited against all six commitments where they bear.
  • Have I used Non-Operative to avoid a Contrary finding the analysis requires? No. Non-Operative does not appear in the findings; all commitments have been addressed.
  • Have I distributed findings to achieve apparent balance rather than following the analysis? No. The findings track the argument.
  • Have I issued findings on questions outside the corpus’s domain? No.
  • Would I issue the same findings for a figure I find politically sympathetic as for one I find unsympathetic, given identical presuppositions? Yes.
  • Have I correctly identified Inconsistent findings where the record requires contradictory presuppositions across domains? Yes. The C1 Inconsistent finding is identified and both load-bearing directions are stated.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 3.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

Governing question: Does Gill’s framework, as he has argued it, require those who adopt it to dissolve their prohairesis into an external system?

C1 finding: Inconsistent. Contrary in the academic-theoretical domain; Partially Aligned in the practical-engagement domain.

C2 finding: Partially Aligned.

Neither C1 nor C2 is uniformly Contrary. The dissolution rule therefore does not trigger Full Dissolution. The qualified dissolution formulation applies to C1’s Inconsistent finding.

Dissolution Finding: Qualified — Dissolution Where Consistent in the Academic Domain.

In the domain of Gill’s academic-theoretical argument, where C1 is Contrary, an agent who adopts Gill’s psychophysical holism and objective-participant model of selfhood as his governing self-description must understand himself as constituted through the interpenetration of his psyche with his body and through his participation in social roles and public structures. No residue of ontologically prior rational interiority remains that stands outside those conditions. In this domain, the self-governing rational faculty the corpus identifies as the agent’s true identity — the prohairesis that is categorically prior to all externals — has no place. An agent who takes up this academic framework as a governing self-description has accepted a structure that dissolves the prohairesis into the physical and social whole.

In the domain of Gill’s practical-engagement argument, where C1 is Partially Aligned and C2 is Partially Aligned, the dissolution does not fully obtain. Gill’s practical framework preserves a meaningful sense of individual rational agency and self-governance. An agent who takes up only this dimension of Gill’s framework retains the core of what the corpus requires for prohairesis, even if the grounding for it is naturalist rather than dualist.

This is a finding about what the respective domains of Gill’s framework require of those who adopt them as governing self-descriptions. It is not a finding about Gill’s own inner life or personal self-description.

Self-Audit — Step 3:

  • Does the dissolution finding follow mechanically from the commitment-level findings, or have I adjusted it? It follows mechanically from the C1 Inconsistent and C2 Partially Aligned findings.
  • Have I stated the dissolution finding as a finding about the framework’s implications for those who adopt it, not as a finding about the figure’s own inner life? Yes.
  • Have I stated the dissolution finding as a philosophical finding, not as a political verdict? Yes.
  • Have I handled the Inconsistent finding on C1 with the qualified dissolution formulation? Yes.

Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 4.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Part A — Commitment Pattern

Commitment 1 — Substance DualismInconsistent (Contrary in academic domain; Partially Aligned in practical domain)
Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free WillPartially Aligned
Commitment 3 — Ethical IntuitionismContrary
Commitment 4 — Correspondence Theory of TruthAligned
Commitment 5 — Moral RealismPartially Aligned
Commitment 6 — FoundationalismPartially Aligned

Pattern summary: One Aligned (C4); three Partially Aligned (C2, C5, C6); one Contrary (C3); one Inconsistent (C1).

Deepest point of divergence: C3 (Ethical Intuitionism) — Contrary and load-bearing throughout. Gill’s naturalist grounding of ethics is systematically incompatible with the corpus’s account of moral knowledge as non-empirical direct apprehension. This divergence is not incidental; it is the central architectonic choice of his framework.

Strongest point of alignment: C4 (Correspondence Theory of Truth) — Aligned without qualification. Gill’s scholarly and practical record consistently treats truth as a matter of alignment with reality, not as a function of consensus or utility.

Key domain variation: C1 is Inconsistent because Gill’s academic-theoretical framework formally dissolves dualism while his practical framework implicitly preserves individual rational agency. These two presuppositions cannot both be held coherently: if the self is genuinely a psychophysical whole constituted through social participation, then the individual agent as Gill’s practical guidance addresses him — capable of redirecting his life through changed judgment — requires more interiority than the holism formally permits.

Part B — Dissolution Finding

Qualified Dissolution — Dissolution Where Consistent in the Academic-Theoretical Domain.

Gill’s academic-theoretical framework, where C1 is Contrary, produces dissolution in the relevant domain. His practical-engagement framework, where C1 is Partially Aligned and C2 is Partially Aligned, does not produce dissolution. The C1 Inconsistency means that an agent who attempts to take up both domains of Gill’s framework simultaneously inherits an incoherence at the level of self-description: he cannot coherently understand himself as a psychophysical whole constituted through social participation (academic framework) and simultaneously as an individual agent capable of genuine rational self-governance over his own assents (practical framework). The corpus identifies the latter as the agent’s true condition. Gill’s framework makes it philosophically unstable.

Part C — Agent-Level Implication

An agent who takes up Gill’s framework as a governing self-description faces a philosophically significant set of implicit commitments.

First, if he takes up the academic-theoretical dimension, he must understand himself as a psychophysical whole whose inner life is fully interpenetrated with his body and constituted partly through social roles and participation. He cannot coherently maintain that his rational faculty stands categorically prior to and independent of those conditions. He has, at the level of self-description, dissolved what the corpus calls his prohairesis into the psychophysical and social whole. He retains the word “rational agent,” but the referent has been altered: the rational agent is now a sophisticated psychophysical system, not a categorically distinct self-governing faculty.

Second, on moral epistemology, an agent who takes up Gill’s framework must understand his moral knowledge as derived from investigation of natural facts about human nature and the cosmos, not from direct rational apprehension of self-evident moral truths. This has a practical implication: moral uncertainty is in principle resolvable by better investigation of nature, not by clearer rational apprehension of what is already available to the unclouded rational faculty. Moral knowledge becomes mediated rather than immediate. The corpus holds, by contrast, that the moral facts available to the rational faculty are not dependent on the results of natural investigation; they are prior to it.

Third, on individual agency, an agent who takes up Gill’s framework receives a partially credible account of individual self-governance — enough to make practical engagement meaningful — but not the full libertarian origination the corpus requires. His choices flow through his rational character rather than being imposed by external compulsion; but whether they are genuinely first-caused by his rational faculty, rather than being sophisticated outputs of the causal order, is left philosophically unresolved by Gill’s framework. The corpus requires the stronger account.

The agent considering Gill’s framework as a philosophical guide to Stoicism is in the following position: Gill’s scholarship is the most serious sustained academic engagement with Stoic ethics in current English-language philosophy. His C4 alignment is complete; his C5 and C6 alignments are substantive; his C2 partial alignment is not negligible. The divergences from the corpus are at C3 (deep and load-bearing), C1 (Inconsistent, producing domain-specific dissolution), and partially at C2 and C5. An agent who uses Gill’s work as a scholarly resource — who reads it as an expert account of the ancient texts and arguments — benefits substantially. An agent who takes Gill’s framework as a governing philosophical self-description, however, imports the C3 contrary and the C1 inconsistency into his own self-understanding, with the consequences noted above.

The most practically significant implication concerns the status of the prohairesis. Gill’s academic framework does not preserve it as the corpus conceives it. His practical framework partially reinstates it, but without philosophical grounding adequate to the corpus’s requirements. An agent who takes up Gill’s framework looking for the prohairesis — looking for the self-governing rational faculty that is categorically prior to all externals and whose condition constitutes the only genuine good — will find in Gill a sophisticated and partially illuminating engagement with the tradition, but will not find that faculty explicitly defended or philosophically secured.

Corpus Boundary Declaration: The CPA has issued findings about the philosophical presuppositions embedded in Gill’s argumentative record and their implications for agents who adopt his framework. The instrument issues no findings on whether Gill’s historical interpretation of the Stoics is accurate, whether his scholarship is of high quality, whether his practical guidance is efficacious, or whether any of his philosophical positions are correct. Those are questions outside the corpus’s domain and outside the CPA’s reach.

Self-Audit — Step 4:

  • Does the summary follow from the preceding steps, or have I introduced new material at the synthesis stage? The summary follows from Steps 1–3. No new material has been introduced.
  • Have I stated the agent-level implication without converting it into a political verdict? Yes. No political claim is made.
  • Have I addressed the implication to the agent who might adopt the framework, not to the figure whose record was audited? Yes.
  • Have I issued the corpus boundary declaration accurately? Yes.
  • Is the summary self-contained — could a reader understand both the finding and its limits without consulting additional material? Yes.

Self-Audit Complete. CPA run complete.


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

Sunday, April 19, 2026

The Classical Stoic System — How the Parts Relate

 

The Classical Stoic System — How the Parts Relate

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


The Central Logical Spine

The system is not a collection of independent instruments. It is a single logical structure in which each layer makes the layer above it possible and is constrained by the layer below it. The spine runs as follows:

Six Commitments → Three Foundational Claims → 80 Propositions → Instruments → Outputs

Nothing at any level can override what is established at a lower level. An instrument finding that contradicts a proposition is a malfunction. A proposition that contradicts a commitment is impossible by definition. The spine is the system’s governing constraint, not a historical summary of how it was built. The spine was not planned — it was identified retrospectively as the logical order that the accumulated content required.


Layer One: The Six Commitments

The six commitments are Sterling’s original contribution and the philosophical floor of the entire system. They are not derived from Stoicism — they are what makes Sterling’s reconstruction of Stoicism philosophically defensible rather than merely asserted.

C1 — Substance Dualism makes the self/external boundary ontologically real. Without it, the control dichotomy is a practical heuristic rather than a metaphysical fact. The distinction between what is “up to us” and what is not collapses into a matter of degree rather than kind.

C2 — Libertarian Free Will makes assent a genuine act of origination. Without it, the discipline of assent is an illusion — the agent appears to choose but is determined. The entire framework becomes a description of mechanisms rather than a prescription for practice.

C3 — Moral Realism makes the verdict “this impression is false” objectively true rather than merely personally preferred. Without it, the value strip is a preference declaration, not a correction. The proposition that externals are neither good nor evil is a fact about reality, not a cultural option.

C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth makes “false” mean “fails to match reality.” Without it, the correction of dogmata has no external standard to correct toward. A belief is false because it does not correspond to how things actually are, not because it is incoherent or unpopular.

C5 — Ethical Intuitionism gives the rational faculty direct epistemic access to moral truth. Without it, the agent has no way to know what virtue requires in a particular situation. Moral knowledge is not inferred from empirical observation — it is directly apprehended by the rational faculty attending to what is actually present.

C6 — Foundationalism organizes moral knowledge into a stable dependency structure with self-evident first principles at the base. Without it, the correction of a false belief has no firm ground to correct toward. Sterling’s smorgasbord warning — his insistence that you cannot pick and choose among the theorems — is foundationalism in operation.

The six commitments work simultaneously, not sequentially. Document 20 (The Six Commitments Integrated) shows all six active at once in the three foundational claims. The most philosophically demanding is Foundation Three — that right assent guarantees eudaimonia — which requires all six commitments to be simultaneously true for the guarantee to hold.


Layer Two: The Three Foundational Claims

The six commitments ground three foundational claims that are the operational heart of Sterling’s Stoicism:

Foundation One: The only things in our control are inner events — beliefs, desires, acts of will. (C1 and C2 are the philosophical warrant.)

Foundation Two: Virtue is the only genuine good; vice the only genuine evil; all externals are indifferent. (C3, C4, and C5 are the philosophical warrant.)

Foundation Three: Right assent guarantees eudaimonia. (All six commitments are simultaneously required.)

These three claims are the governing standard for everything above. Any instrument output, any blog post, any practical recommendation that contradicts one of these three is incorrect by definition — not by preference, not by majority opinion, but by the logical structure of the system.


Layer Three: The Propositional Architecture

The 80 Unified Propositions translate the three foundational claims into a closed axiom set that governs every subsequent instrument move. Sections I–VIII cover the core theoretical content: foundations, impressions and assent, value theory, causation of emotions, virtue and action, appropriate positive feelings, eudaimonia, and the Stoic path. These are the propositional expression of everything the six commitments and three foundational claims require.

Section IX — the Action Proposition Set (Props 59–80) — is Dave Kelly’s architectural addition, grounded in Sterling’s theoretical foundations. It governs the practical movement from correct value-judgment to rational action: role identification, goal selection, means selection, reservation, verification. Section IX presupposes Sections I–VIII and cannot substitute for them.

The propositions are the governing language of the instruments. Every instrument finding must cite the specific proposition that warrants it. An instrument that produces findings without propositional citation is operating from training data, not from the corpus. The source texts — Sterling’s Nine Excerpts and additional ISF writings — are the court of appeal when a proposition’s meaning is disputed.


Layer Four: The Instrument Architecture

The Logic Engine (SLE v4.0) is the self-examination instrument. It audits an individual agent’s own assents against the 80 Propositions. It asks: does this assent correspond to moral reality? It is the instrument most directly connected to the foundational claims. Every other instrument presupposes that the agent using it has either run the SLE or is operating from a position in which his own assents are already under examination.

The Decision Framework (SDF v3.3) is the procedural instrument. It takes the output of correct value-judgment and structures rational action from it. The six steps — Agent Check, Purview Check, Value Strip, Virtue Identification, Action Determination, Outcome Acceptance — are a procedural replication of what a person of correct judgment does naturally. The SDF is downstream of the SLE: correct action cannot be determined without first establishing correct value-judgment. The Factual Uncertainty Gate and the Named Failure Modes are architectural safeguards against the six most common instrument malfunctions.

The Integrated Practical Model is the operational layer beneath the SDF. Where the SDF specifies what propositions govern each step, the Integrated Practical Model specifies what the rational faculty must actually do at each moment. The corrective module (C1–C5) operationalizes Nine Excerpts Section 7 sub-steps (a) and (b). The constructive module (D1–D7) operationalizes sub-step (d). Its critical architectural limitation — that D2’s failure is undetectable by subsequent operations — is the reason Dave Kelly’s corrective layer is architecturally necessary, not merely advisable.

The Urge to Act is a supplementary practical document identifying the 7.b intervention point as the accessible entry point for the beginning prokōptōn. It is not an instrument — it produces no verdicts. It is an account of where training can practically begin and how the intervention point migrates upstream toward reception over time. It sits adjacent to the Integrated Practical Model and supplements the SDF’s Step 0 Agent Check by naming the urge as the first reliable diagnostic signal available to the early-stage practitioner.

The Corpus Evaluator (SCE v1.0) evaluates any idea against the full corpus. It is the most general-purpose instrument: where the SLE audits assents, the CIA audits ideologies, and the CPA audits public figures, the SCE can be directed at any idea, argument, or claim. Its hard limitation — that it cannot evaluate whether the corpus itself is correct — marks the outer boundary of what the system can honestly claim.

The Classical Ideological Audit (CIA v2.0) audits ideological frameworks against the six commitments. It operates at the ideology level, not the individual level. Its four verdict categories (Convergent, Partial Convergence, Divergent, Orthogonal) and dissolution criterion make it the system’s primary tool for political philosophy. The dissolution finding is a finding about what happens to those who adopt a framework, not a verdict about any individual’s inner life.

The Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA v1.0) audits named public figures’ argumentative records against the six commitments. It operates at the person level. The fifth verdict category — Inconsistent — distinguishes figures whose record requires contradictory presuppositions across domains. The Political Application Constraint governs all CPA work without exception.

The key relationship among the three audit instruments: the SLE looks inward at the agent’s own assents. The CIA looks outward at ideological frameworks as systems of ideas. The CPA looks outward at individual public figures as argumentative records. All three use the six commitments as test criteria but at different levels of analysis. None substitutes for another.


Layer Five: The Training Layer

This layer is the system’s largest gap and its practical base. The propositional warrant for training exists in Props 78–80. The Nine Excerpts supply the mechanism: repeated refusal of assent weakens false-value impressions over time; repeated correct assent strengthens correct ones. The Sage is simply someone who has controlled his assents so carefully for so long that false-value impressions no longer arrive.

What does not yet exist as a completed corpus document is a systematic training curriculum — a sequenced set of exercises grounded in the propositional architecture, organized by difficulty, and calibrated to the practitioner’s current intervention point. The Urge to Act is the first document that directly addresses where training begins. The Temperament-Based Stoic Psychology project — mapping all sixteen personality styles against the six commitments — is the other registered project direction for this layer.

Without training, the instruments can be executed nominally. The propositional verdicts can be produced. But the mental operations the commitments require may not be occurring. The training layer is what makes the instruments more than formal exercises.


Layer Six: The Role Architecture

The role architecture bridges the theoretical system and the world of action. Props 64–66 govern role identification; Props 68–71 govern role conflict resolution. Every role generates kathēkon — appropriate duties of action. Those duties are the content of rational action once the value strip has been correctly completed.

The eight economic role manuals apply the propositional architecture to specific role-contexts. They are downstream of the instruments: they presuppose correct value-judgment and apply the Section IX Action Proposition Set to role-specific situations. The MacIntyre framework — identifying the Manager, Therapist, and Aesthete as the character types produced by emotivist culture — is the diagnostic context for the role architecture. Sterling explicitly maps MacIntyre’s analysis onto the Stoic account of what happens when a culture loses virtue ethics as its organizing framework.


Layer Seven: The Political Philosophy Layer

The CIA is the instrument; the political philosophy layer is its application domain. CIA runs produce findings about ideologies and public figures. Those findings are Dave Kelly’s work, derived from Sterling’s theoretical foundations, and governed by the Political Application Constraint throughout.

The book project — systematic CIA application to nationalism, libertarianism, progressivism, conservatism, communitarianism, anarchism, and monarchism — is the major remaining gap in this layer. The CIA instrument is ready; the systematic application has not been executed.


The Governing Relationships — Summary

The six commitments govern everything. No instrument output, no blog post, no role manual can contradict what the six commitments require. They are not negotiable and not revisable from within the system.

The SLE and SDF are complementary, not redundant. The SLE audits value-judgment; the SDF structures action. The SLE must precede the SDF for the SDF to be operating correctly. An action determined without a prior value-judgment audit is structurally incomplete regardless of how well-reasoned it appears.

The Integrated Practical Model is the operational layer of the SDF, not a separate instrument. It describes what the faculty must actually do, not merely what propositions govern the output. Its undetectable failure at D2 is why the human corrective layer is architecturally necessary.

The audit instruments apply the six commitments externally; the SLE applies them to the agent himself. This is the fundamental distinction in the instrument hierarchy.

The training layer is the system’s practical base. Everything above it is available to the practitioner only insofar as his assents are actually under examination. Without training, the instruments can be executed nominally but the mental operations the commitments require may not be occurring. The training layer is what makes the instruments more than formal exercises.

The System Map (v2.6) is the authoritative governance document. When a question arises about what exists, what its status is, or how it relates to other corpus documents, the System Map is the court of first appeal.

The Classical Stoic System — Comprehensive Outline

 

The Classical Stoic System — Comprehensive Outline

Version 1.0 — April 2026. Philosophical foundations: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. System architecture and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.

This outline maps the full logical structure of the system from its philosophical foundations to its practical applications. Items marked [GAP] identify components required for comprehensiveness that do not yet exist as completed documents. Items marked [PARTIAL] exist in preliminary or incomplete form. Items marked [COMPLETE] exist as ratified corpus documents.


LAYER ONE: PHILOSOPHICAL FOUNDATIONS

The foundation layer establishes the metaphysical and epistemological commitments that make the entire system philosophically defensible. Everything above it presupposes it. Nothing in the practical layers is valid unless this layer is sound.

1.1 The Six Philosophical Commitments

The six commitments are Sterling’s original contribution. They are not derived from the system — they are what the system rests on. Each commitment does specific load-bearing work within the three foundational claims of Stoic practice.

  • C1 — Substance Dualism: the rational faculty is categorically distinct from the body and all external conditions. [COMPLETE] Source texts: Documents 12–13. Analytical essay: Document 25.
  • C2 — Libertarian Free Will: assent is a genuine act of origination, not a determined output of prior conditions. [COMPLETE] Source text: Document 15. Analytical essay: Document 26.
  • C3 — Moral Realism: there are objective moral facts independent of preference, consensus, or cultural formation. [COMPLETE] Source texts: Documents 16, 19. Analytical essay: Document 27.
  • C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: a belief is true if and only if it corresponds to mind-independent fact. [COMPLETE] Source texts: Documents 16, 18. Analytical essay: Document 28.
  • C5 — Ethical Intuitionism: moral truths are directly apprehensible by the rational faculty, non-inferentially. [COMPLETE] Source texts: Documents 16–17. Analytical essay: Document 29.
  • C6 — Foundationalism: justified moral beliefs form a hierarchy grounded in self-evident first principles. [COMPLETE] Source texts: Documents 17–18. Analytical essay: Document 30.

1.2 Architectural Integration of the Six Commitments

  • Core Vector Space: Explanation — defines the structural relationship between commitment, load-bearing concepts, and discriminative boundary. [COMPLETE] Document 24.
  • The Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism — maps each commitment to the three foundational claims (control dichotomy, false belief, assent guarantee). [COMPLETE] Document 20.
  • Dogmata, the Six Commitments, and the Structure of Sterling’s Stoicism — establishes dogmata as the mediating layer between the commitments and the three foundations; central claim: Epictetus and Sterling are the same system at two different levels of analysis. [COMPLETE] Document 31.
  • Master integration essay: a single document holding the full logical architecture from commitments through propositions through instruments through practical applications, explaining how every layer presupposes every layer below it. [GAP — Priority 4]

1.3 Framework Scope and Theological Position

  • Grant C. Sterling on What Makes a Stoic — defines the moral psychology as the essential core; physics and cosmology as non-essential. [COMPLETE] Document 14.
  • Two and One-Half Ethical Systems — situates Sterling’s Stoicism in relation to deontology, consequentialism, and virtue ethics. [COMPLETE] Document 10.
  • Stoicism Is Not Therapy, But Training — distinguishes the framework from therapeutic frameworks and comfort-restoration models. [COMPLETE] Document 9.
  • Providence language: established as optional framing only; the control dichotomy is the sufficient warrant for all claims that reference Providence. [COMPLETE] Architectural note in System Map.

LAYER TWO: THE PROPOSITIONAL ARCHITECTURE

The propositional layer translates the philosophical commitments into a formal axiom set governing all subsequent analysis. The propositions are the governing standard for every instrument in the system.

2.1 The 80 Unified Stoic Propositions

  • Section I — Foundations, metaphysics, and anthropology (Props 1–5). [COMPLETE]
  • Section II — Impressions and assent (Props 6–15). [COMPLETE]
  • Section III — Value theory (Props 16–22). [COMPLETE]
  • Section IV — Causation of emotions and desires (Props 23–31). [COMPLETE]
  • Section V — Virtue and action (Props 32–38). [COMPLETE]
  • Section VI — Appropriate positive feelings, eupatheiai (Props 39–42). [COMPLETE]
  • Section VII — Eudaimonia (Props 43–51). [COMPLETE]
  • Section VIII — The Stoic path, prokopō and askēsis (Props 52–58). [COMPLETE]
  • Section IX — Action Proposition Set (Props 59–80): structure of rational action, role identification, multiple roles and competing preferred indifferents, means selection, verification test, prospective preparation and retrospective review. [COMPLETE]

2.2 Source Texts for the Propositions

  • Core Stoicism — Grant C. Sterling’s primary theoretical text. [COMPLETE] Document 1.
  • Nine Excerpts from the International Stoic Forum — primary propositional source material. [COMPLETE] Document 3.
  • Additional ISF messages incorporated into Props 16–80 via synthesis at project direction. [COMPLETE] Provenance recorded in System Map v2.6.
  • Gmail archive mining — estimated 100–200 additional ISF discussions in which Sterling participated. Recovery ongoing. [PARTIAL — ongoing]

LAYER THREE: THE INSTRUMENT ARCHITECTURE

The instrument layer operationalizes the propositions as formal procedures for specific analytical tasks. Each instrument has a defined scope, a defined input, a defined output, and named failure modes. No instrument can operate outside its defined scope without producing a named failure.

3.1 The Logic Engine v4.0

Function: audits an individual agent’s own assents and value-judgments against the 80 Propositions. Self-examination instrument. [COMPLETE] Document 2.

  • Part 1: LLM Instructions (Core Identity; Six-Pillar Framework; Operational Framework Standard, 15 named standards; Operational Protocol, Steps 00–6)
  • Part 2: User Quick-Start Card
  • Part 3: The 80 Unified Propositions (Sections I–IX)
  • Part 4: The Scenario Architect — generates graduated friction scenarios for training (Levels 1–3). [COMPLETE] Noted: this is an LLM tool, not a structured human curriculum. A curriculum layer is missing (see Layer Five).

3.2 The Decision Framework v3.3

Function: determines correct action in a specific situation through a five-step procedure with mandatory self-audit at every step transition. [COMPLETE] Document 4.

  • Preliminary Agent Check
  • Step 1 — Purview Check
  • Step 2 — Value Strip
  • Step 3 — Virtue Identification (appropriate object of aim among preferred indifferents)
  • Step 4 — Action Determination (Factual Uncertainty Gate; Move One; Move Two verification test)
  • Step 5 — Outcome Acceptance
  • Six named failure modes; mandatory self-audit at each step transition

3.3 The Integrated Practical Model

Function: operational layer of The Decision Framework; translates its propositional structure into a step-by-step cognitive sequence the agent can execute in real time. [COMPLETE] Document 32.

  • Corrective module (C1–C5): operationalizes impression examination and assent refusal; grounded in Props 23–31
  • Constructive module (D1–D7): operationalizes role identification, aim selection, means selection, and reservation; grounded in Props 32–38 and Section IX
  • Key architectural limitation: D2 failure is undetectable by subsequent operations; human corrective layer architecturally necessary

3.4 The Manual of Assent and Execution

Function: defines the formal architecture of rational agency from impression through execution; governs the agent’s operation across a full daily cycle. [COMPLETE — core sections; PARTIAL — Situation Library] Published April 17, 2026.

  • Version 1.0: terminological rule; foundational principles; core processing sequence; structural distinction (assent / impulse / execution); action architecture post-assent; universal rule; system scope; system objective. [COMPLETE]
  • Role Taxonomy: five role classes (Fundamental, Biological, Relational, Functional, Situational); role axiom; role activation; role function in execution; role conflict handling. [COMPLETE]
  • Daily Execution Protocol: four phases (Initialization, Continuous Processing, Mid-cycle Correction, Terminal Audit); sleep transition; failure conditions; system continuity. [COMPLETE]
  • Error Taxonomy and Correction System: primary error class (false value attribution); secondary error forms (misclassification, control error, role confusion, means error, outcome attachment); pathos diagnostic; detection protocol; seven-step correction procedure; error replay. [COMPLETE]
  • Situation Library (Judgment Packets): universal packet structure; baseline activity packets (Waking, Eating, Sleep); relational role packets (Receiving Criticism, Interpersonal Conflict); functional role packets (Task Failure, Ethical Conflict in Role — truncated). [PARTIAL — Priority 2] Requires: completion of functional packets; exceptional situation packets (grief, illness, financial catastrophe, legal jeopardy, social disgrace); virtue-temptation packets (anger, envy, fear, excessive desire, pride, despair).

3.5 Analytical Audit Instruments

  • The Corpus Evaluator v1.0: evaluates any idea against the full corpus; five-step procedure; six named failure modes. [COMPLETE] Document 22.
  • The Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v2.0: audits ideological frameworks against the six commitments; verdict categories: Convergent, Partial Convergence, Divergent, Orthogonal; dissolution criterion; two-stage variant procedure. [COMPLETE] Document 21. Political Application Constraint governs all runs.
  • The Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0: audits named public figures’ argumentative records against the six commitments; five verdict categories including Inconsistent; dissolution finding reframed as framework implication; nine named failure modes. [COMPLETE] Document 33. Political Application Constraint governs all runs.

LAYER FOUR: THE ROLE ARCHITECTURE

The role layer translates the system’s abstract value structure into situated practical guidance organized by the agent’s actual social relationships. It is the bridge between the philosophical system and the concrete life of the agent.

4.1 Philosophical Bridge

  • Role-Duty: The Bridge Between the Philosopher and the World — establishes role-duty as the practical answer to the question of what the agent aims at when all externals are indifferent; grounds role-duty in each of the six commitments; addresses independence from desert, role conflict resolution. [COMPLETE] Published April 15, 2026.
  • The Correct Stoic Attitude — A Manual — governs the agent’s practical orientation across all role-situations. [COMPLETE] Document 11.

4.2 Cultural Diagnosis: MacIntyre’s Emotivist Framework

  • MacIntyre’s Emotivist Culture: The World the Philosopher Must Navigate — establishes emotivism as the cultural framework within which all practical role-discharge occurs; introduces the three characters. [COMPLETE] Published April 15, 2026.
  • Classical Ideological Audit: Emotivism — full CIA v2.0 run; six Contrary findings; maximum divergence in instrument architecture; the philosophical foundation of the MacIntyre series. [COMPLETE] Published April 15, 2026.
  • Discipline of Emotivist Value-Claim Correction — operational module for detecting and correcting culturally-generated false impressions; ten role-based emotivist claim generators; seven-step correction sequence. [COMPLETE] Published April 17, 2026.

4.3 MacIntyre’s Three Characters — Virtuous Discharge

  • The Virtuous Manager — six sections; primary role-duty as role-clarity for those beneath him; correct performance measure; relationship to subordinates, to authority, and to the reserve clause. [COMPLETE] Published April 15, 2026.
  • The Virtuous Therapist — five sections; actual duties of the therapeutic role; what the virtuous Therapist cannot do (value-neutrality); therapeutic work organized around impression and assent; relationship to the layman’s framework. [COMPLETE] Published April 15, 2026.
  • The Virtuous Aesthete — six sections; preferred indifferents and the aesthetic life; the Aesthete’s self-defeating project; social function; the paradox of fuller engagement through non-attachment. [COMPLETE] Published April 15, 2026. Includes closing synthesis of all three characters.

4.4 Functional and Economic Role Manuals

Eight manuals applying the system to specific functional roles in 2026 economic life. Each manual identifies the false value structure, the governing question, daily practice, concrete behaviors, and the governing rule. [COMPLETE] Published April 15, 2026.

  • Manual One: The Employee
  • Manual Two: The Manager
  • Manual Three: The Consumer
  • Manual Four: The Investor
  • Manual Five: The Entrepreneur
  • Manual Six: The Contractor, Freelancer, or Gig Worker
  • Manual Seven: The Job Seeker
  • Manual Eight: The Household Budget Manager, Parent, or Caregiver

4.5 Relational Role Manuals

Sustained practical manuals for primary relational roles equivalent in depth and structure to the eight economic manuals. This is the most philosophically demanding and humanly important gap in the system. The relational roles are precisely those in which false value judgments run deepest — persons in relational roles are preferred indifferents the agent is most liable to treat as genuine goods. Epictetus’s Section 30 addresses this terrain directly. No sustained practical manuals yet exist. [GAP — Priority 1]

  • Manual: The Parent [GAP]
  • Manual: The Spouse or Partner [GAP]
  • Manual: The Adult Child [GAP]
  • Manual: The Sibling [GAP]
  • Manual: The Friend [GAP]
  • Manual: The Neighbor and Community Member [GAP]
  • Manual: The Citizen [GAP]

4.6 Exceptional Situation Manuals

Sustained practical manuals for major life disruptions that cut across all roles simultaneously. These situations are where the system is most severely tested and where pre-formed judgment is most urgently needed. [GAP — Priority 2, alongside Situation Library completion]

  • Manual: Grief and Bereavement [GAP]
  • Manual: Serious Illness (own illness and caregiving for another) [GAP]
  • Manual: Financial Catastrophe [GAP]
  • Manual: Legal Jeopardy [GAP]
  • Manual: Social Disgrace or Public Humiliation [GAP]
  • Manual: Profound Injustice Suffered [GAP]

LAYER FIVE: THE TRAINING ARCHITECTURE (ASKĒSIS)

The training layer provides a progressive, graduated curriculum for building the capacities the system requires. The Scenario Architect provides LLM-generated friction scenarios but does not constitute a structured human practice. Props 78–80 supply the propositional warrant for this layer (Prospective Preparation and Retrospective Review). The Daily Execution Protocol in The Manual of Assent and Execution supplies the temporal framework. What does not yet exist is the curriculum that populates those frameworks with specific, graded exercises. This entire layer is a gap. [GAP — Priority 3]

5.1 Morning Examination Protocol

  • Corpus-governed morning initialization procedure: specific propositions to assent to; anticipation of the day’s role-situations; pre-loading of judgment packets for identified difficult situations; commitment formulation. [GAP]

5.2 Evening Review Protocol

  • Corpus-governed terminal audit procedure: systematic review of the day’s impressions and assents; error identification using the Error Taxonomy; error replay procedure; judgment packet refinement. [GAP]

5.3 Graduated Exercise Curriculum

  • Level 1 (Novice): clear-cut external loss; basic impression recognition; single-role situations. [PARTIAL — Scenario Architect Level 1]
  • Level 2 (Intermediate): social pressure; multi-role situations; ethical conflict in role; relational role situations. [PARTIAL — Scenario Architect Level 2]
  • Level 3 (Advanced): life-altering circumstances; grief and bereavement; severe injustice; long-duration situations. [PARTIAL — Scenario Architect Level 3]
  • Structured human exercises independent of LLM tool use: impression examination drills; reserve clause practice; role-conflict resolution exercises; virtue-temptation recognition. [GAP]

5.4 Temptation Pattern Library

Pre-formed recognition and correction sequences for the recurring virtue-temptation patterns that produce the most common assent failures. Structurally equivalent to the Situation Library’s judgment packets but organized by temptation type rather than situation type. [GAP]

  • Anger pattern: impression structure, typical false judgment, correction sequence [GAP]
  • Envy pattern [GAP]
  • Fear pattern [GAP]
  • Excessive desire (epithumia) pattern [GAP]
  • Pride and vanity pattern [GAP]
  • Despair and hopelessness pattern [GAP]
  • Grief and attachment pattern [GAP]

LAYER SIX: THE TEMPERAMENT LAYER

The temperament layer addresses the gap between the universal system (which applies equally to all agents) and the particular agent (who has a specific temperament making certain errors more likely and certain virtues more natural). Logic Engine Standard 7 establishes that personality style is diagnostic only — this layer cannot generate virtuous style profiles but can generate characteristic error-pattern diagnostics and role-specific guidance calibrated to temperament type. [PARTIAL — project direction registered; development not recently resumed]

6.1 Foundational Document

  • Temperament-Based Stoic Psychology: integration of Oldham’s 16 personality styles with the system’s philosophical framework; characteristic error-patterns for each style; diagnostic function only. [PARTIAL — prior content not recently surfaced; may require re-retrieval]

6.2 Style-Specific Error Pattern Guides

  • For each of the 16 Oldham styles: characteristic false value assignments; recurring role-conflict patterns; most likely pathē; recommended judgment packet emphases. [GAP]

LAYER SEVEN: THE POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY LAYER

The political philosophy layer applies the CIA systematically to the major political ideologies and to specific political figures and arguments. This layer operates under the Political Application Constraint throughout: Sterling’s name is not associated with political applications or products. All political analysis is derived from Sterling’s theoretical foundations.

7.1 Completed CIA Runs

  • Emotivism (six Contrary; Full Dissolution) [COMPLETE]
  • Globalism (six Divergent) [COMPLETE]
  • Sovereign-Nation (two Divergent, three Partial Convergence, one Orthogonal) [COMPLETE]
  • Scalia Originalism (two Divergent, one Partial Convergence, one Convergent, two Orthogonal) [COMPLETE]
  • Eric Swalwell (CIA run) [COMPLETE]

7.2 Completed CPA Runs

  • Zohran Mamdani (Full Dissolution; two Contrary on C1 and C2) [COMPLETE]
  • Jordan Peterson (No Dissolution; five Partially Aligned; Inconsistent on C5) [COMPLETE]
  • Donald Robertson (CPA) [COMPLETE]
  • Ryan Holiday (CPA) [COMPLETE]
  • Sam Harris (CPA) [COMPLETE]
  • Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (CPA) [COMPLETE]
  • Malcolm Schosha (CPA) [COMPLETE]
  • Peter Singer (CPA) [COMPLETE]
  • John Rawls (CPA) [COMPLETE]
  • Alasdair MacIntyre (CPA) [COMPLETE]
  • Steve Marquis (CPA — personal philosophical satisfaction; not for publication) [COMPLETE]

7.3 Systematic Political Ideology Book Project

Applying the CIA systematically to the full range of major political ideologies. Registered project direction. [GAP — book project]

  • Nationalism [GAP]
  • Libertarianism [GAP]
  • Progressivism [GAP]
  • Conservatism [GAP]
  • Communitarianism [GAP]
  • Anarchism [GAP]
  • Monarchism (candidate given Sterling’s Aristotelian political preference) [GAP]

LAYER EIGHT: APPLIED AND INSTITUTIONAL OUTPUTS

The applied layer produces blog posts, educational materials, and extended public-facing work derived from the system. These are outputs of the system, not components of it. They are listed here for completeness and as a record of what the project has produced publicly.

8.1 Philosophical Foundation Posts

  • The conversion point in Epictetus’s Enchiridion (Sections 1–5) [COMPLETE]
  • Choosing philosophy over the layman’s life [COMPLETE]
  • Role-duty as the bridge between philosophy and the world [COMPLETE]
  • Posts on the political philosophy implied by the six commitments [COMPLETE]
  • MacIntyre’s emotivist culture (introductory essay) [COMPLETE]
  • CIA run on emotivism [COMPLETE]

8.2 MacIntyre Character Series

  • The Virtuous Manager [COMPLETE]
  • The Virtuous Therapist [COMPLETE]
  • The Virtuous Aesthete [COMPLETE]

8.3 Economic Role Manual Series

  • Eight role manuals: Employee, Manager, Consumer, Investor, Entrepreneur, Contractor/Freelancer, Job Seeker, Household Budget Manager [COMPLETE]
  • Toward a Virtue-Facilitating Economy [COMPLETE]

8.4 Manual of Assent and Execution Series

  • Version 1.0 (Core System) [COMPLETE]
  • Role Taxonomy [COMPLETE]
  • Daily Execution Protocol [COMPLETE]
  • Error Taxonomy and Correction System [COMPLETE]
  • Situation Library (Judgment Packets) [PARTIAL]

8.5 Hoque / AI Cognitive Outsourcing Series

  • Post 1: Effortful friction [COMPLETE]
  • Post 2: Attention collapse [COMPLETE]
  • Post 3: Loss of self through narrative [COMPLETE]
  • Posts 4–6 [GAP — pending]

8.6 Educational and Creative Series

  • The Practice (philosophical novel, 15 chapters) [COMPLETE]
  • Eli Series (children’s books, 9–11 age range; six commitments dramatized) [COMPLETE]
  • Eli Series parallel (15–17 age range) [PARTIAL]

8.7 Lexical and Linguistic Work

  • Stoic 500 Lexicon (471 terms with PIE etymologies across 10 tiers) [COMPLETE]
  • Universal Template for Logical Reformulation of Stoic Texts v2.3 [COMPLETE]
  • CBT Translation System (all 15 cognitive distortions mapped) [COMPLETE]

SYSTEMATIC CONTAMINATION AUDIT

A future project direction identified during session work. The discovery of “role-clarity” as training-data vocabulary contamination in the Manager Manual (the concept is corpus-derived from Props 64–66 and Theorem 29, but the term was borrowed from management literature) established the need for a systematic audit of all practical role manuals and instruments for similar contaminations. No corpus-governed term that appears in the practitioner-facing documents should be traceable to training-data pattern-matching rather than to specific corpus derivation. [GAP — systematic audit pending]


GAP SUMMARY — PRIORITY ORDER

Priority 1 — Relational Role Manuals (Layer 4.5). Seven manuals covering Parent, Spouse/Partner, Adult Child, Sibling, Friend, Neighbor/Community Member, Citizen. Philosophically harder and humanly more important than the economic manuals. Epictetus’s Section 30 addresses this terrain directly. These are the roles where false value judgments run deepest.

Priority 2 — Situation Library Completion and Exceptional Situation Manuals (Layers 3.4 and 4.6). The Situation Library is the practical training content the Daily Execution Protocol requires. Completion requires: functional role packets, exceptional situation packets (grief, illness, financial catastrophe, legal jeopardy, social disgrace, profound injustice), and virtue-temptation packets. Exceptional Situation Manuals (Layer 4.6) are the sustained document form of the same content.

Priority 3 — The Askēsis Curriculum (Layer 5). The morning and evening examination protocols, the graduated exercise curriculum independent of The Scenario Architect, and the Temptation Pattern Library. This layer is dependent on Layer 4.5 and the Situation Library being substantially complete first — a structured training curriculum requires the situational content it trains against.

Priority 4 — The Master Integration Essay (Layer 1.2). A single document explaining how all layers relate to each other and to the system’s single governing purpose. Essential for the coherence of the project as a public-facing body of work but not blocking anything operational.

Ongoing — Gmail Archive Mining (Layer 2.2). Estimated 100–200 additional ISF discussions in which Sterling participated. Recovery of this material may revise or extend the propositional architecture.

Ongoing — Systematic Contamination Audit. All practical role manuals and instruments to be audited for training-data vocabulary contamination following the “role-clarity” discovery.


The Classical Stoic System — Comprehensive Outline v1.0. Philosophical foundations: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. System architecture and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.