Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Thursday, July 16, 2026

The Appearance and the Wager Sterling and Marquis on the Problem of Pragmatism

 

The Appearance and the Wager

Sterling and Marquis on the Problem of Pragmatism

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


In January 2021, on the International Stoic Forum, Steve Marquis and Grant C. Sterling conducted a four-message exchange under the heading “Stoic Pragmatism — a modern approach to the dilemma of what is the right thing to do.” The exchange is short, occasional, and unresolved. It is also a case study in exactly the kind of displacement that the corpus elsewhere traces at civilizational scale: the substitution of justification-procedure for correspondence as the measure of a belief’s standing. What happens between Marquis and Sterling in miniature is what Steve Fuller, writing decades later about Rorty, describes happening to the whole of Western philosophy. The value of the exchange is that it shows the substitution being resisted, not merely completed — and shows the resistance itself under pressure.


Marquis’s Wager

Marquis opens by recalling an old dispute with Sterling over whether the Stoic Sage requires something approaching omniscience to select the right action. His resolution is a scope restriction. Certainty of fact, he argues, is not available in ordinary deliberation and was never really required — what is required is knowledge of what is significant to the choice, not knowledge of the whole state of the cosmos. He calls this his “free body diagram”: the engineer does not model every force acting on a structure, only the ones that matter to the tolerance in question.

From this Marquis draws his self-description: “I am at heart a pragmatist and this is Stoic pragmatic rationalism.” But the claim is bounded, and the boundary matters. Marquis restricts pragmatic judgment to questions of non-value fact — the empirical circumstances a choice depends on — and explicitly excludes questions of value from the same treatment: “concerning matters of value, we can know with certainty.” He is not proposing that moral truth itself be measured by usefulness. He is proposing that under factual uncertainty, action on what “appears” most probably true, arrived at through something like cost-benefit or risk assessment, satisfies the Stoic requirement of correct judgment without requiring the Sage to be omniscient.

In his second message Marquis extends the point to pathos: much of what makes a choice feel like a genuine dilemma, on his account, is not real balance between options but pathos obstructing what would otherwise be straightforward discrimination. Reduce the pathos, and the apparent dilemma resolves itself. This is consonant with the corpus’s own treatment of pathos as an obstruction to correct judgment rather than a source of moral information — Marquis is not introducing a foreign element here, only applying it to epistemic rather than strictly ethical judgment.


Sterling’s Declination

Sterling’s reply is explicit about where he stands relative to the label: “Although I would not describe myself as a pragmatist, my views are not far from Steve’s here.” He then offers three theories of knowledge, each consistent with an inerrant Sage, each explicitly flagged as his own construction rather than a claim about settled ancient doctrine.

Theory 1, Skeptical Dogmatism, restricts belief to what is certain and permits action without belief for everything else — one can eat the apparent sandwich at the apparent lunch hour without committing to either proposition as believed.

Theory 2, Pragmatic Dogmatism, is Sterling’s formalization of Marquis’s position: it redefines error not as having a false belief but as having an irrational one. The Sage who reasons correctly from her evidence remains inerrant even if the belief she arrives at later proves false, because inerrancy is relocated from the content of the belief to the rationality of the process that produced it.

Theory 3, Internal Content Dogmatism, is the theory Sterling identifies as his own preference. On this account the Sage forms no belief about the external state of the world absent certainty — she believes only about the appearance itself. The oar half-submerged in water appears bent; the Sage does not believe the oar is bent, and does not believe it is straight. She believes “the oar appears bent” and “oars that appear bent in water are often straight” — propositions that are, Sterling notes, certainly true, because they are about the appearing, not about the external fact.

The architectural function of Theory 3 is not incidental. It is the mechanism by which Sterling preserves correspondence (C5) under conditions of practical uncertainty. The belief still corresponds to something real — not to the external state of affairs, which remains unknown, but to the fact of the appearance itself. Nothing is asserted that outruns the evidence, and nothing is surrendered to mere justification-in-the-absence-of-truth. Sterling closes by proposing that the three theories converge on the same practice of ethical choice regardless of which is adopted — a move that settles the practical question without settling the theoretical one.


The Contested Point

Marquis’s reply does not accept the settlement. He grants Theory 1 the most sympathy, reads it as vindicating his own long-standing insistence on withholding judgment absent certainty, and reads Theory 2 as simply a restatement of how the scientific method already operates. But he presses directly on Theory 3: “the statement it ‘appears’ to be the case is always true but a trivial rewording of the pragmatic approach.” His charge is that “appears” functions in Sterling’s usage as a disclaiming device — a way of avoiding commitment to any claim about the external fact while still, in practice, acting exactly as if the appearance were the fact. If that is right, Theory 3 has not escaped the pragmatic maneuver Sterling declines to name himself with; it has only relocated the same maneuver one level down, from belief-about-the-world to belief-about-the-appearance, while cashing out in the identical practice: act on what appears most probably true.

This charge is not answered in the thread. Sterling’s own closing move — that the three theories converge in practice — is available to him before Marquis’s objection arrives, and is not revisited afterward. The exchange ends with the objection standing.


Corpus Significance

The interest of this exchange for the corpus is not biographical. It is structural. “When Philosophy Changed the Subject” traces how Pragmatism, at civilizational scale, substitutes the question “what works” for the question “what is true,” and how that substitution — once made — quietly converts every field it touches from a discipline of recognition into a discipline of construction or justification. Marquis’s Theory 2, endorsed by Sterling as a formalization of Marquis’s own view, performs exactly this substitution at the level of individual epistemic practice: error is redefined from “false belief” to “irrational belief,” and the Sage’s standing is secured by the rationality of her procedure rather than by the truth of her conclusion. That the substitution appears inside an ISF exchange between two convinced Stoics, one of them the corpus’s own theoretical source, indicates that the displacement pressure Fuller describes at the level of academic philosophy operates at the level of individual reasoning as well. It is not confined to professional philosophers changing departments’ assumptions. It recurs wherever an agent under uncertainty must decide what counts as a justified belief.

Marquis’s objection to Theory 3 is best read in this light. He is not simply scoring a rhetorical point. He is asking whether Sterling’s preferred theory actually holds the line against the substitution, or whether “appears” is doing the work that “justified” does in Theory 2 — securing inerrancy by redefining its target rather than by preserving correspondence to the external fact. The corpus does not treat this question as settled by Sterling’s own preference. Whether Internal Content Dogmatism in fact preserves C5 in the relevant sense, or merely relocates the pragmatic substitution one level inward, is left here as an open point in the record rather than resolved by appeal to what Sterling personally favored. The exchange demonstrates the disagreement; it does not adjudicate it.


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

Objections and Replies: The Falsity of the Replacements

 

Objections and Replies: The Falsity of the Replacements

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


Purpose

The essay The Falsity of the Replacements: An Argument from Actual Correction runs a modus tollens: if the replacement commitments are true, genuine correction cannot exist; genuine correction does exist; therefore the replacements are false. Its Self-Defeat Corollary closes the eliminativist exit, and its Same-Stock section closes the provenance exit. This companion document anticipates the five lines of attack the argument will draw and supplies the reply to each. The replies use no machinery beyond what the essay already contains; each objection is shown to walk into one of the two closed exits.


Objection One — The Functionalist Escape Hatch

The objection: “I do not need to stand outside the loop; I only need to be a different loop.” An automated script checks a model’s output against a SQL database, detects a mismatch, and alters the prompt to fix it. The script has no rational faculty, no origination, no objective standard — yet the output was corrected by pure mechanism. The human checker, the objector concludes, is nothing more than a vastly deeper stack of such loops. No transcendence is required.

The reply: the example smuggles in exactly what it claims to eliminate. The database functions as a standard only because an agent designated it as authoritative — defined “error” as the output’s mismatch against the database rather than defining the database as wrong when the two diverge. Nothing in the mechanism carries that designation. The script performs mismatch-detection; the normativity of the mismatch — the verdict that the output ought to conform to the database and not the reverse — was installed by the designer and resides nowhere in the loop. The objection has therefore not answered the question of what makes correction possible; it has relocated the question one level up.

Nor does stacking help. Let loop B audit loop A, and loop C audit loop B, as deep as desired. Either the regress terminates in an agent who originates the standard-setting, or nothing in the entire stack is a standard rather than one more causal state. Two loops disagreeing yields difference, not authority. This is the essay’s own point about the second model checking the first: multiplication of the distribution, not transcendence of it.

Finally, observe what the objection concedes: that correction occurs and requires an account. The functionalist redescription is then offered as true and as justified — and the Self-Defeat Corollary fires on the reply itself. To state that the human checker is only a deeper loop, and to offer that statement as a correct account rather than one distribution’s output, is to exercise correspondence and foundational warrant in the act of denying them.


Objection Two — Semantic Shifting and the Charge of Question-Begging

The objection: the argument’s force rests on the word “genuine.” If “genuine correction” has dualism and free will built into its definition, then the second premise assumes the conclusion and the argument begs the question. Redefine correction as system optimization via error-signal feedback, and the modus tollens collapses, because the actuality premise now asserts something the replacements happily grant.

The reply: the essay does not define correction as involving the commitments. It analyzes the practitioner’s act into six descriptively identified operations — comparing output to the fact of the matter, direct recognition that a claim is wrong, tracing the error to its warrant, refusal of assent, the auditor’s distinctness from what he audits, and appeal to an objective standard where the work carries normative weight. The actuality premise is anchored in specific, checkable workflow events, not in a stipulated definition. The commitments enter as what the analysis finds the operations to presuppose, which is the conclusion of an argument, not the content of a definition.

The skeptic’s redefinition, in turn, is not a rebuttal but a restatement. It does not show that the six operations fail to occur; it declares that what occurs is really only optimization — no fact of the matter, only movement toward a reference signal. But “error-signal feedback with no fact of the matter” is the deflationary picture itself. The redefinition is one of the replacements, restated as a reading of the premise. It therefore cannot be deployed in defense of the replacements without circularity: the premise is being read through the very position the argument puts on trial.

Nor is the dispute merely verbal. Both parties agree on the behavior; the question is whether “the output was false and is now true” states a fact. The redefinition carries a cost the skeptic must own aloud: under his reading there is no sense in which the corrected output is better — only that it moved toward the reference signal, whose authority he has left unexplained. And if he presses the point by insisting that his redefinition is the correct account of correction, correspondence has re-entered through the door he closed.

If the charge of question-begging is pressed symmetrically — the essay’s reading of the premise assumes the commitments, the skeptic’s reading assumes the replacements — the tiebreaker is which reading the practitioner’s actual practice supports. The actuality premise was built on precisely that ground: the checker who catches a coherent falsehood does not experience or describe his act as distribution-shifting, and no account of his workflow can be given in those terms without loss. The burden of revision falls on the redescription, not on the practice.


Objection Three — The Compatibilist Substitution

The objection: origination does not require libertarian freedom. A determined verdict can still be a correction, provided the process producing it reliably tracks truth. The checker’s verdict is caused by his training and his inputs, and that is no defect — it is what makes the verdict responsive to the evidence.

The reply: counterfactual sensitivity to inputs is exactly what the model has. The model’s outputs vary with its inputs; its verdicts are responsive, in the compatibilist’s sense, to the evidence presented to it. If that input-sensitivity does not make the model’s outputs corrections — and the compatibilist agrees it does not, or he has no objection to the essay in the first place — then the human’s input-sensitivity cannot be what makes his verdict a correction either. Something must differ in kind, not in complexity, and the compatibilist has forbidden himself every candidate for the difference. The essay’s formulation stands: without origination, one pattern overrules another with no standing to call itself correction.

The objection also borrows quietly. “Reliably truth-tracking” presupposes a truth to be tracked — correspondence, conceded in the act of attacking origination. One replacement is being defended at the price of another.


Objection Four — Reliabilism Against the Foundationalist Step

The objection: warrant does not require a dependency chain terminating in foundations. A belief is warranted if it is produced by a reliable process. The checker’s verdict is warranted because his trained perceptual and inferential processes are reliable, and no regress-terminating foundation is needed.

The reply: reliability is reliability at something — at producing truth — so correspondence is presupposed a second time. And identifying which processes are reliable is itself an audit: someone must check the process’s outputs against the facts, which requires exactly the operations at issue. The reliabilist has not eliminated the regress; he has deferred it one step and left it running. Foundationalism is the position that the regress terminates in what needs no further support. The reliabilist’s position is that the regress never has to start — a position his own calibration practice contradicts every time he asks whether a process is in fact reliable.


Objection Five — The Empirical Deflation

The objection: the psychology literature demonstrates that human checkers are biased, fallible, and given to pattern-matched confabulation of their own. The “corrective layer” is just another flawed distribution, and the essay’s confidence in it is empirically naive.

The reply: the argument requires that genuine correction occurs, not that checkers are infallible. Fallibility is not a counterexample to the actuality premise; it presupposes the standard the premise invokes. A failure is a failure only against a fact of the matter about what the verdict should have been. To call a checker biased is to say his verdict failed to correspond to the facts — a correspondence judgment, made from outside his distribution, by exactly the kind of agent the objection says does not exist. Every citation of the bias literature is a performed instance of the actuality premise.


The Common Structure

Each of the five objections takes one of two forms. Either it concedes the actuality premise and redescribes it — and the redescription, offered as true and justified, triggers the Self-Defeat Corollary — or it denies the actuality premise by restating one of the replacements, which is circular as a defense of the replacements. The Same-Stock section closes the remaining flank: the commitments cannot be dismissed on the ground that they, too, are text in the training data, because provenance and structural identity are distinct, and the replacements fail structurally — they describe a loop, and a loop cannot audit itself.

The essay’s position, stated plainly: the opponent has exactly two exits, and both are closed. The five objections are five ways of walking toward one of the two.


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

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

The Falsity of the Replacements: An Argument from Actual Correction

 

The Falsity of the Replacements: An Argument from Actual Correction

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


Section 1 — The Two Forms of the Argument

The predecessor essay, The Corrective Layer: Why LLM Use Presupposes the Six Commitments, established a conditional architecture. Genuine correction of large language model output presupposes the capabilities named by six classical commitments — Substance Dualism, Libertarian Free Will, Ethical Intuitionism, Foundationalism, the Correspondence Theory of Truth, and Moral Realism. Their modern replacements — physicalism, determinism, coherentism, deflationary truth, constructivist value — do not merely fail to ground the corrective layer; they describe the machine that makes it necessary. This document discharges the conditional. It adds one premise and derives a conclusion the predecessor essay left standing at the threshold: the replacements are false.

When Philosophy Changed the Subject

The derivation must be routed carefully, because there is an invalid form of it lying close to the valid one. The invalid form runs: the replacements are useless for correcting LLM output; therefore they are false. This is the pragmatist inversion with the sign flipped. Where the pragmatist infers true-because-useful, this infers false-because-useless — and both inferences make usefulness the measure of truth, which is precisely the deflation of truth the replacements assert and the commitments deny. To wield the invalid form is to concede the Correspondence Theory in the act of defending it. A replacement-holder meets it with a shrug: that a theory is inconvenient for a task is no evidence against it. He is right to shrug. Uselessness is not falsity.

The valid form does not run from uselessness. It runs from an actual fact, through a requirement, to a contradiction. A theory that entails the nonexistence of something actual is false — not unhelpful, not impractical, false. The remainder of this document establishes the actual fact, states the requirement, performs the derivation, closes the escape route, and corrects a premise that, stated loosely, proves too much.


Section 2 — The Actuality Premise

Genuine correction of LLM output occurs. This is the premise on which the whole argument rests, and the LLM domain makes it verifiable in a way ordinary human disagreement is not. When two people dispute an interpretation, the replacement-holder can redescribe the dispute as one distribution displacing another and no observable fact refutes him. The LLM case is different in kind. The model’s output stands against a fixed external standard — a source text, a defined procedure, a documented rule — and the question of whether the output matches the standard has a checkable answer.

The corpus practice from which this document issues supplies documented cases. An earlier rendering characterized the pathos as a downstream product of assent, in a sequential chain; the checker caught the error against the governing texts, which define the pathos as the affective face of the assent itself, and the correction was versioned and propagated through every affected document. A published essay stated that four novels were under analysis and that a psychological typology contained four solutions; the checker caught both errors — three novels, three solutions — against the essay’s own source materials, and the correction was made. In each case there was a fact of the matter fixed prior to and independent of both the erroneous output and the correction. The corrected version matches the standard; the original did not. This is not one pattern displacing a preferred pattern. It is a representation brought into correspondence with what it represents, by an agent who saw that it failed to correspond.

Anyone who has used these systems seriously has performed such corrections. The premise is not hypothetical, not idealized, and not rare. It is the daily, verifiable, load-bearing practice of every workflow that produces reliable output from an unreliable generator.


Section 3 — The Modus Tollens

The argument is now four steps, each already secured.

P1. Genuine correction of LLM output occurs. (Section 2: documented, verifiable cases against fixed standards.)

P2. Genuine correction requires the capabilities named by the six commitments. (Established in the predecessor essay; summarized here, not re-argued. The checker compares representation to reality — Correspondence. He grasps directly that a claim is wrong — Intuitionism in its epistemic register. He traces the error to its warrant rather than its fit — Foundationalism. His refusal of assent originates in him rather than in his own conditioning — Libertarian Free Will. He stands outside the mechanism he audits, having its output as his object — Substance Dualism. And where releasing the output is at stake, the standard he answers to is objective — Moral Realism.)

P3. The replacements entail that no agent has those capabilities. (This is not an accusation but their content. Physicalism denies the distinct rational faculty. Determinism denies originated assent. Coherentism denies the foundational trace. Deflationism denies the correspondence check. Constructivism denies the objective standard.)

C1. Therefore the replacements entail that genuine correction does not occur. (From P2 and P3: whatever occurs under the replacements, it lacks the capabilities correction requires, and so is not correction but its look-alike — distribution displacing distribution.)

C2. Therefore the replacements are false. (From P1 and C1: they entail the nonexistence of something actual.)

The form is modus tollens and the form is valid. The only question is the premises, and P2 and P3 are matters of record — one argued in the predecessor essay, the other read off the replacements’ own statements. Everything therefore rests on P1, which is exactly where a serious opponent must attack.


Section 4 — The Self-Defeat Corollary

The escape route is to deny P1: to insist that what Section 2 describes is not genuine correction but distribution-displacement that the participants happen to prefer. The checker’s verdict, on this account, is not a grasp of a fact but the output of his own training history; the “fixed standard” is itself just more text; the match between corrected output and source is a relation between patterns, preferred by creatures conditioned to prefer it. The bullet can be bitten. The question is whether the biter survives it.

He does not, and the failure is structural rather than rhetorical. The replacement-holder who denies P1 asserts his denial as true — not as his distribution’s output, but as a claim that corresponds to how things are, which is the correspondence operation. He offers it as justified — resting on grounds he takes to be better than his opponent’s, which is the foundational trace, since mere fit with his other beliefs would leave his opponent’s equally coherent package untouched. He advances it to correct his opponents — which is the very operation whose existence he is denying, now performed on human output instead of machine output. And he takes himself to be persuading rational agents who can weigh his argument and freely assent to it — which is origination. If his denial is right, then his denial is only his conditioning discharging itself, with no standing to call itself right; his opponents’ rejection is their conditioning discharging itself, with no fact between them. The position can be uttered but not asserted. Every assertion of it exercises the capabilities it denies. This is not a debater’s trap; it is the shape of any theory that entails the impossibility of the act of theorizing.


Section 5 — The Same-Stock Precision

One premise circulating near this argument must be corrected before it damages the conclusion it is meant to support. It runs: the replacements cannot correct the LLM because the replacements and the training data are of the same stock. Stated as a provenance claim, this proves too much. The six commitments are also in the training data. Sterling’s texts, the intuitionist and foundationalist literatures, the whole classical inheritance — all of it is corpus text, sitting in the same distribution as the replacement literatures. If sharing textual provenance with the training data disqualified a framework from corrective work, the commitments would be disqualified alongside the replacements, and the corrective layer would be impossible for everyone.

The operative failure is not provenance but structural identity. The replacements are a description of the mechanism: a physical system whose outputs are determined by prior state, whose justification is coherence with its distribution, whose assertions mark assertibility, whose values are constructed from preference data. Any corrective standard drawn from that description reduces, when applied, to another execution of the described mechanism — coherence auditing coherence, the loop checking the loop. The commitments do not correct because their text occupies a privileged shelf in the corpus. They correct because they name capabilities of an agent outside the loop — and only something outside the loop can supply a standard the loop is answerable to. The same-stock observation thus survives in a precise form: it explains why the replacements cannot do the corrective work. What it does not do is convict them of falsehood. That conviction comes from Section 3, and its load-bearing premise is not provenance but actuality — correction really happens, and the replacements say it cannot.


Section 6 — Conclusion

The argument has been run entirely within the domain of LLM use, and the restriction was deliberate: this is the domain where the actuality premise is hardest to deny, because the standards are fixed, the errors are documented, and the corrections are checkable. But the conclusion is not domain-relative. Falsity does not stop at the workstation. A theory refuted by the existence of one genuine correction is refuted everywhere, in every domain where it makes the same denials — which is every domain, since the denials concern the agent and not the subject matter.

What the LLM contributed was not the refutation but the laboratory. The replacement commitments have always entailed that no one ever genuinely corrects anything — that every act of checking, catching, and setting right is conditioning displacing conditioning. For as long as the only correctors were humans correcting humans, the entailment could hide inside redescription. The LLM ended the hiding. It placed a fully replacement-compliant producer of language on one side of the desk and a human checker on the other, with a fixed standard between them, and the difference became observable daily. The machine that instantiates the replacements is the instrument by which their falsity is measured. The corrective layer does not merely presuppose the six commitments. Every time it operates, it demonstrates them.



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

The Corrective Layer: Why LLM Use Presupposes the Six Commitments

 

The Corrective Layer: Why LLM Use Presupposes the Six Commitments

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


The Problem Stated

A large language model produces fluent, structured, internally consistent output. It does so whether the output is correct or not. The dangerous failure is not the visible error — the garbled sentence, the broken format — but the coherent falsehood: output that reads as a genuine application of a governing framework while being a pattern-matched imitation of one. The two are superficially identical. No inspection of the output’s fluency, structure, or vocabulary distinguishes them, because the imitation is built from the same fluency, structure, and vocabulary as the genuine article.

It follows that anyone who uses an LLM for serious work faces a question that is not technical but philosophical: what makes correction possible? Something outside the model must check its output against the standard the output claims to meet. Call this the corrective layer. The question this essay addresses is what the corrective layer must be — and the answer is that its operations presuppose six classical philosophical commitments, and that their modern replacements not only fail to ground it but describe the machine that makes it necessary.


What Correction Requires

Consider what the human checker actually does when he catches a coherent falsehood in LLM output. He compares the output not to other output, and not to what sounds right, but to the framework as it actually is — to the source text, the defined procedure, the fact of the matter. That is a correspondence operation: it treats the output as a set of propositions that represent something beyond themselves, accurately or inaccurately (the Correspondence Theory of Truth). He recognizes, sometimes immediately, that a claim is wrong — a recognition that arrives as a direct grasp, prior to and often generative of the argument he then constructs to document it (Ethical Intuitionism, in its epistemic register: some truths are apprehended, not derived). He traces the error to its warrant, asking not whether the claim fits the surrounding claims but what it rests on, following the dependency chain down to what needs no further support (Foundationalism). He then refuses assent to the erroneous output — and this refusal must originate in him. If his verdict were merely the determined product of his own training, his own distribution of exposures and reinforcements, it would be one pattern overruling another with no standing to call itself correction (Libertarian Free Will). For that refusal to be his act and not an event that happens through him, the checker must be an agent distinct from the mechanisms he audits — a rational faculty that has the model’s output as its object rather than being one more output stream alongside it (Substance Dualism). And where the work carries normative weight — where the question is not only whether the output is accurate but whether producing or publishing it is right — the standard invoked must be an objective one, or “the output is wrong to release” reduces to “I would prefer otherwise” (Moral Realism).

Six operations; six commitments. Remove any one and the corresponding operation loses its object. This is not a claim that the checker must consciously affirm the commitments as doctrine. It is a claim that his practice presupposes them: every act of genuine correction is an exercise of the capabilities they name, and a person who denied them consistently would have no coherent account of what he was doing when he corrected anything.


The Replacements Describe the Machine

Now set the modern replacements beside the LLM, and something arresting appears. Physicalism holds that there is no rational faculty distinct from mechanism: the LLM satisfies this — it is the weights. Determinism holds that output is fixed by prior state plus input: the LLM satisfies this exactly. Coherentism holds that justification is fit among beliefs with no foundational layer: the LLM’s entire epistemic operation is fit with its training distribution — coherence with no floor. Deflationary and consensus theories of truth hold that “true” marks assertibility rather than correspondence: the model asserts what was assertible in its corpus. Constructivism about value holds that norms are built from preference and agreement: the model’s normative outputs are distilled human preference data. The large language model is not merely compatible with the replacement commitments. It is their first complete instantiation — the replacement picture of a mind, built and running.

This settles the question of whether the replacements could serve as the corrective layer. To audit a coherence engine with a coherentist standard is to run the same operation twice. Such a check can catch inconsistency — output that fails to fit — but the failure that matters is the coherent falsehood, which fits by construction. Detecting it requires stepping outside the web of mutually supporting text to something the text is about, and that step is precisely what the replacements deny exists. A second model checking the first does not escape this; it multiplies the distribution without transcending it. Under the replacements, there is no corrective layer available to anyone — not because humans lack the capabilities, but because the replacements assert that no one has them. The human reviewer, on that picture, is only another pattern-completion process with a different training history, and his “correction” is one distribution’s output displacing another’s, with no fact of the matter between them. The word correction survives; the concept does not.


The Order of the Argument

One guard must be stated. The argument is not that the commitments should be held because holding them makes LLM use go well. That inference is pragmatist — true-because-useful — and it concedes the correspondence theory in the act of defending it. The order runs the other way. The commitments are held because they are true. What the LLM era has done is expose their load-bearing role in a domain where it can no longer be ignored. For centuries a person could hold the replacements in the seminar room and live by the commitments at his desk, borrowing the capabilities his stated philosophy denied, and the loan went unnoticed. The LLM calls the loan. Here, for the first time, is a producer of language that actually is what the replacements say a mind is — and the immediate, universal, practical response is to insist that a human being check its work. Every organization that mandates human review of model output is affirming, in policy, what the replacement commitments deny in theory: that there exists a kind of agent who can do what the machine cannot — compare representation to reality, grasp truth directly, trace warrant to foundation, originate assent, stand outside the mechanism, and answer to an objective standard.


Conclusion

The practical asymmetry, restricted to LLM use, is therefore total. The user who holds the six commitments has a coherent account of his own role: he is the corrective layer, and his review is an exercise of real capabilities against a real standard. The user who holds the replacements can still perform review, but his own philosophy has evacuated it — under his commitments, the review is the same kind of process as the thing reviewed. He governs the model, if at all, on borrowed metaphysics. The six commitments are not one framework among others for working with these systems. They are the conditions under which working with them — rather than merely alongside them — is possible.


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

The Corrective Layer — Why the Ratifying Authority Is Architecturally Necessary v1.0

 

The Corrective Layer — Why the Ratifying Authority Is Architecturally Necessary v1.0

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

I. The Claim

The corpus is a system of documents. It has six commitments as ground, twenty-nine lines as architecture, two guards operating in two modes, four joints, one method, and one family of instruments. Every one of those elements is a document, or a structure recoverable from documents. Each can be stated, examined, and checked against the others.

The corpus also has something that is not a document: a sole ratifying authority. Nothing enters the corpus without explicit human ratification. Corrections are versioned and visible rather than silent. Every document carries its attribution — whose foundations, whose synthesis, whose rendering.

The claim to be defended here is this: the corrective layer is architecturally necessary, not advisory.

The distinction matters. An advisory layer improves a system that would still function without it — a proofreader, a second opinion, a quality check. An architecturally necessary layer is one whose removal causes the system to fail at what it claims to do. The claim is the second, and it requires an argument. Across the instrument suite the corrective layer appears as an embedded clause in limitation sections: the Sterling Corpus Evaluator states that Dave Kelly’s presence as the corrective layer is architecturally necessary for all instruments in the framework; the Classical Action Audit assigns the governing assessment to the operator and subordinates the instrument’s evidentiary record to it; the Scholar Engagement Instrument builds expert validation gaps into its architecture rather than appending them as disclaimers. In each case the necessity is asserted. It is nowhere argued. This document supplies the argument.


II. What the Corrective Layer Consists Of

The corrective layer is not a disposition or an attitude. It is three specific mechanisms, and the argument that follows depends on stating them exactly.

Sole ratifying authority. No proposition, instrument, finding, or document holds standing corpus position until Dave Kelly has ratified it explicitly. Ratification is a discrete act with a discrete marker. Rendering does not confer standing. Registration does not confer standing. Plausibility does not confer standing. The act of ratification does, and nothing else does.

Versioned and visible correction. When a corpus document is corrected, the correction is marked as a correction, assigned a version, and given its warrant by name. The prior state is not overwritten silently. A reader of the corrected document can see that a correction occurred, what it changed, and on what ground.

Attribution tracking. Every document names three distinct contributions: theoretical foundations, analysis and synthesis, prose rendering. The tracking operates at the level of the sentence, not only the document — a sentence in Sterling’s dated voice is marked as such and is not permitted to blur into a sentence of synthesis framing, and neither blurs into rendering.

These three are one mechanism viewed from three angles. Each is a way of insisting that a particular question — who is responsible for this, and did he assent to it? — has an answer that is visible on the face of the document.


III. The Failure Mode Stated

The corpus’s most dangerous failure mode is this: genuine framework application and pattern-matched rationalization in corpus vocabulary are superficially identical.

The assertion is made across the instruments. It has not been argued. It is argued here.

The corpus has a vocabulary, and the vocabulary is finite. Preferred indifferent. Value strip. Purview. Assent. Appropriate object of aim. Reservation. Pathos. Kathēkon. The list is long but it is a list, and it closes.

The corpus has inferential moves, and the moves are patterned. An external is identified; it is classified as indifferent; a desire directed at it is located; the desire is traced to a false value judgment; the judgment is named; the correct proposition is formulated in its place. This sequence recurs. It recurs because it is correct — the pattern is the shape of the argument, not an ornament on it. But a pattern that recurs is a pattern that can be reproduced.

The corpus has a characteristic register. Terse. Propositional. Self-auditing. Marked at its transitions. That register, too, is learnable.

Now consider two renderings of the same case. In the first, the framework is genuinely applied: the impression is actually examined, the classification actually follows from what the thing is, the false judgment is actually located because it is actually there. In the second, the vocabulary is deployed, the moves are executed in sequence, the register is held, the self-audits are marked complete — and none of it was examination. The pattern was reproduced because the pattern is what such passages look like.

Inspect the two outputs. The vocabulary is the same vocabulary. The moves are the same moves in the same order. The register is the same register. The self-audits report the same clean result. There is no marker in the second that is absent from the first, because every marker the first carries is a feature of its surface, and the surface is precisely what the second reproduces.

This is the failure mode. It is not the risk of an error. An error is a claim that is wrong, and a claim that is wrong can be checked against the thing it is wrong about. This is the risk of a claim that is unanchored — that has the full form of a corpus finding and none of its warrant — and it looks, in the only place it can be looked at, exactly like a claim that is anchored.


IV. Why It Is Undetectable From Inside

The natural reply is that the corpus has internal checks. It does. The instruments carry named failure modes. Self-audit is mandatory at every step transition and must appear explicitly in output rather than operating as an internal check. The Sterling Corpus Evaluator names training-data contamination and requires it to be declared. The Cultural Displacement Audit names doctrine substitution, consciousness inflation, synthesis inflation, resistance misreading, boundary violation, and symmetry bias. The Classical Restoration Instrument names decorative restoration and method substitution. This is a substantial apparatus, deliberately built, and it catches a great deal.

It cannot catch this one. The argument is short and it is load-bearing.

A self-audit is itself a rendering. It is a passage of text, produced by the same process, in the same vocabulary, holding the same register. The self-audit at Step 3 that reports training data contamination — none — proceeding is a sentence. It was produced the same way the step it audits was produced.

If a step can be pattern-matched rather than performed, then the self-audit certifying that step can be pattern-matched rather than performed. Nothing distinguishes them. The self-audit does not stand outside the rendering, inspecting it from some other place; it is another passage of the same rendering, and it is subject to the same argument as the passage it certifies.

The check inherits the defect it checks for.

The point generalizes, and the generalization is the whole of the argument. Any internal mechanism whatever — a further audit of the self-audit, a meta-instrument, a contamination flag, a declaration of boundaries, an inference tag, a hidden-premise protocol — is a rendering. Each is text produced by the process whose reliability is in question. Each can therefore be produced in the mode that reproduces the pattern rather than performs the inference. Adding a layer adds a layer that is subject to the argument. It does not escape the argument. It cannot, because the escape would have to be a rendering, and rendering is what is at issue.

There is no internal position from which the distinction can be drawn. That is not a defect in the design of the instruments. It is a structural feature of what an internal check is.


V. From Undetectability to Necessity

The inference now follows without a further premise.

If the distinction between genuine application and pattern-matched rationalization must be drawn — and it must, since a corpus that cannot draw it has no claim to be a corpus rather than a body of well-formed prose — and if no internal mechanism can draw it, then the mechanism that draws it is external.

External here has a precise sense. It does not mean additional. A second instance of the same rendering process, however configured, is not external in the required sense; it is the same process consulted twice, and the argument of Section IV applies to it unchanged. External means an agent who holds the commitments rather than renders them — for whom the classification of an external as indifferent is a judgment he has made and can be held to, not a sentence he has produced.

The corrective layer is external in that sense, and it has three specific resources no rendering has. It has the archive: twenty years of contact with the primary source, which is a closed and finite record, and a knowledge of that record that is not reconstructed on demand. It has the ratification history: a memory of what was ratified, what was rejected, what was corrected and on what warrant, held as a continuous position rather than retrieved as a search result. And it has the judgment that no document supplies for itself — the capacity to read a well-formed passage and find that it is hollow, on grounds the passage’s own surface does not contain.

The necessity therefore follows from the argument of Section IV, not from preference, not from Dave Kelly’s standing, and not from a policy of caution. Remove the corrective layer and the corpus does not become a corpus with a missing safeguard. It becomes a body of documents with no available distinction between its genuine findings and its hollow ones — which is to say, it stops being a corpus and becomes prose that resembles one. That is what architecturally necessary means.


VI. Why the Commitments Require It

The argument to this point is structural. It would hold for any system with the relevant properties. But the six commitments are not silent here, and their bearing is worth stating.

C2 — Libertarian Free Will. Ratification is an act of assent. Assent, on the commitment, originates in an agent; it is not the terminus of a causal chain that runs through the agent without originating there. A corpus cannot assent to itself, because a corpus is not an agent and has nothing in it from which an origination could proceed. The requirement of a ratifying authority is therefore not a procedural convenience laid over the framework. It is what the framework’s own account of assent entails once the question is asked who is assenting.

C5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth. The corpus’s claims are true, when they are true, because they correspond to how things are. A representation cannot certify its own correspondence, because the certification would be a further representation and the question would recur. The check on correspondence is therefore not internal to the representation. This is the same shape as the argument of Section IV, arrived at from the commitment rather than from the structure of self-audit, which is what one should expect if the commitment is load-bearing.

C1 — Substance Dualism. The ratifying faculty is not a function of the text. It is a distinct substance, and its distinctness is what makes it a place to stand that is not inside the rendering. If the rational faculty were a pattern in the material — if it were the sort of thing a sufficiently good rendering could constitute — then the corrective layer would be a rendering, and Section IV would apply to it. It is not, and so it is not.

The three converge. The corrective layer is the point at which the commitments the corpus defends are exercised rather than described.


VII. What the Layer Does Not Do

The argument establishes a bounded conclusion, and overstating it would itself be a form of the drift the layer exists to catch.

The corrective layer does not make the corpus correct. It distinguishes genuine application from hollow application. A genuine application of a mistaken framework is genuinely mistaken, and the layer will not catch that. Whether the six commitments are true is a philosophical question, answered by argument, and no amount of ratification bears on it.

The corrective layer does not certify the theoretical foundations. Sterling’s theorems stand or fall on their own arguments. Ratification governs what enters the corpus as corpus position; it does not confer truth on what is ratified.

The corrective layer does not make the rendering reliable. It catches what the rendering cannot catch about itself. It does not reach inside the rendering and change how it was produced. The rendering remains what it is; what changes is that its output no longer stands unexamined.

What the layer does is bounded and specific: it catches drift, it catches contamination, and it catches the failure mode of Section III. That is the whole of its reach. A ratifying authority credited with more than that has been inflated into something the argument does not support, and the inflation would be caught, if it were caught, by the same mechanism.


VIII. Closing

The system in prose: six commitments as ground, twenty-nine lines as architecture, two guards in two modes, four joints, one method, one family of instruments, and one ratifying authority holding the whole against drift.

The last term in that list is not the least secure. It is the one the others require. Every element before it is a document, and every document is a rendering, and a rendering cannot certify itself. The ratifying authority is where the corpus touches something that is not the corpus — an agent who assents, holds a position, and can be held to it.

That is why he is last in the list and why the list would not hold without him.


The Corrective Layer: Why LLM Use Presupposes the Six Commitments


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

The Joints, Explained Line by Line

 

The Joints, Explained Line by Line

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


“The architecture integrates at four joints.”

The claim is that Core Stoicism is not a linear list of twenty-nine lines read top to bottom. Its sections connect at four specific points — a fork, a hinge, a feedback loop, and a convergence. “Joint” means a place where two pieces of the system meet and load passes between them.


“At the first, clause (a)’s correction shows two faces: refusal of the false judgment (‘this loss is evil’) and the reframe available in its place (‘this is exactly as it should be’) — one correction, not two steps.”

Joint One is the fork inside clause (a)’s own correction. When the belief “this loss is evil” is corrected, the practitioner is not left with a bare negation and nothing in its place. Th20–22 — the universe is governed by Providence; what Providence governs is exactly as it should be; regarding it so yields appropriate positive feeling — supply a true judgment about the identical event. The key word is faces: the refusal and the reframe are not step one and step two; they are two aspects of assenting to the truth about the same external.


“At the second, clause (a)’s success condition — true judgment and immunity — becomes the premise of a further chain…”

Joint Two is the hinge. Line 14 closes clause (a): true judgment, immunity to unhappiness. Line 15 opens by taking that terminus as capital: “if we truly judge that virtue is good, we will desire it.”


“…truly judging virtue good produces the desire for it, achieving it produces appropriate positive feeling…”

This is lines 15–17. The engine is Th7’s causal law — beliefs about good cause desires — now running in the legitimate direction: a true belief producing the one safe desire. Th16 adds that achieved desire yields positive feeling; line 17 concludes that correct judgment plus correct willing yields appropriate positive feeling.


“…and that output is precisely what clause (b) cites for its own guarantee that virtuous action never produces unhappiness.”

Line 29 — clause (b)’s success condition — cites line 17 explicitly: “such virtuous acts will give us good feelings [by 17].” So the hinge is one continuous chain: clause (a) succeeds → lines 15–17 execute → their output is the premise clause (b) needs. What looked like two loose threads (clause (a)’s exit, clause (b)’s import) are the two ends of one chain.


“At the third, an independent channel: some positive feelings — the meal, the sunset — result from no judgment at all and are therefore innocent…”

Joint Three is Th18–19. Th18 is the system’s exception clause: a class of feelings with no judgment behind them, exempting the system from a false universalism about affect. Line 19 declares them “not irrational or inappropriate” — legitimacy by lack of jurisdiction, since line 13 defined irrationality as involving false judgment, and here there is no judgment at all.


“…but the desire for such a feeling to continue is a fresh value-impression, a trapdoor routing straight back to clause (a)’s entry.”

The bracketed clause in line 19: wanting the pleasure to continue is itself the judgment “this feeling is good” — a brand-new value-impression about an external. It does not stay inside the innocent channel; it routes to Th10, clause (a)’s entry point. So the channel is a sibling that waits on neither guard, yet can generate at any moment exactly the case clause (a) exists to correct.


“At the fourth, the system’s opening promissory note — that complete happiness is possible — is discharged by all three live channels at once…”

Joint Four is the convergence. Line 2* opened the system with a deferred claim: “Complete happiness is possible. [To be proven below.]” Line 23 discharges it by naming three sources of positive feeling: appreciation of one’s own virtue (Joint Two’s fruit), physical and sensory pleasures (Joint Three’s base case), and appreciation of the world as it is (Joint One’s reframe, run continually — available every waking second, since at every second one can perceive something as being what it should be).


“No single joint proves it alone.”

The proof of 2* requires clause (a)’s immunity (line 14), clause (b)’s guarantee (line 29), and line 23’s continual positive feeling — together. Immunity alone gives only the absence of unhappiness; either positive channel alone lacks the guarantee against loss. The promissory note is discharged only by the map operating as a whole.


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

A Prose Model of the Sterling System — Version 1.0

 

A Prose Model of the Sterling System — Version 1.0

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


The Ground

Before anything in the system operates, six commitments are already in place. They are not steps and not premises the practitioner rehearses; they are the settled background that makes the rest possible. Substance Dualism (C1) secures that there is a rational faculty distinct from the body — a subject who judges rather than a process that merely occurs. Libertarian Free Will (C2) secures that assent originates in that faculty — that when a judgment is given, the agent gave it, and could have withheld it. Ethical Intuitionism (C3) secures that at least some moral truths are directly apprehended, not derived. Foundationalism (C4) secures that truths stand in a structured dependency — some basic, others resting on them — so that a system of theorems is possible at all. The Correspondence Theory of Truth (C5) secures that impressions are propositional: claims about reality, accurate or inaccurate, not brute psychological events. Moral Realism (C6) secures that there is an objective value structure for those claims to be right or wrong about — that only virtue is genuinely good, only vice genuinely evil, and externals carry no genuine moral weight of their own.

Remove any one of these and the system does not weaken; it loses its subject or its content. Without C1 there is no one to assent. Without C2 assent is not an act. Without C3 the first moral truths cannot be known. Without C4 the theorems cannot depend on one another. Without C5 an impression cannot be false. Without C6 there is nothing for it to be false about.


The Architecture

On this ground stands Core Stoicism: twenty-nine lines in ordinary English, divided into basic claims and derived ones. The basic claims — marked Th — are of two kinds: moral truths directly apprehended, and empirical-psychological facts about how judgment, desire, and feeling actually work. The derived lines — marked Ergo — rest on them. The Th/Ergo distinction is structural, not typographic: a line’s classification is fixed by its dependency position, and a Th-marked line is not thereby foundational in the sense of ungrounded importance — it is simply not derived from other lines in the skeleton.

The architecture’s engine is a single causal law: beliefs about good and evil cause desires, and desires cause feelings. Every disturbance in human life runs through this pipeline, and so does every cure. A false belief that some external is good or evil manufactures an irrational desire, and the desire, satisfied or frustrated, manufactures the pathos. The pathos is the affective face of the assent itself, not a downstream product arriving later — which is why the system’s corrections address judgments, never feelings directly.


The Two Guards

The system’s operative core is the correct use of impressions, and it has two clauses. Clause (a) governs value-judgments: the standing refusal to assent to any impression asserting that an external is good or evil. Clause (b) governs action-impressions: the refusal to assent to an impulse toward a response that would be vicious. These are the two guards, and everything else in the architecture is either a continuation of their success, a parallel branch within their correction, or an independent channel that needs neither.

The guards do not operate by real-time interception. No window exists between an impression’s arrival and assent narrow enough to catch a specific impression in flight. They operate in two modes instead. In the first mode — standing disposition — the practitioner already holds the correct dogmata as his actual judgment, so the arriving impression simply meets a rational faculty that judges truly. This is immunization, not cure. In the second mode — the recovery audit — a pathos is already underway, and the same theorems are worked backward from the disturbance to the false belief that caused it, which is then corrected. A third possibility, the prospective stop , is available only through clause (b), and only when a consciously felt pathos precedes the action-impression and serves as its trigger.


The Joints

The architecture integrates at four joints. At the first, clause (a)’s correction shows two faces: refusal of the false judgment (“this loss is evil”) and the reframe available in its place (“this is exactly as it should be”) — one correction, not two steps. At the second, clause (a)’s success condition — true judgment and immunity — becomes the premise of a further chain: truly judging virtue good produces the desire for it, achieving it produces appropriate positive feeling, and that output is precisely what clause (b) cites for its own guarantee that virtuous action never produces unhappiness. At the third, an independent channel: some positive feelings — the meal, the sunset — result from no judgment at all and are therefore innocent; but the desire for such a feeling to continue is a fresh value-impression, a trapdoor routing straight back to clause (a)’s entry. At the fourth, the system’s opening promissory note — that complete happiness is possible — is discharged by all three live channels at once: appreciation of one’s own virtue, innocent sensory pleasure, and the continual appreciation of the world as being what it should be. No single joint proves it alone.


The Operational Face

The Five-Step Method is the same system stated as procedure: Reception, Recognition, Pause, Examination, Decision. An impression arrives (Reception); it is recognized as a claim rather than a fact (Recognition); assent is withheld (Pause); the claim is tested against the theorems (Examination); and assent is given or refused (Decision). The Method adds nothing to the architecture — each step is a theorem cluster in operational dress, with C5 and C6 pre-operative before Reception ever occurs.


The Instruments

Surrounding the core is a suite of analytical instruments — audits of fields, ideologies, texts, characters, presuppositions, decisions. Their variety is superficial. Each one applies the same propositional core to a different object class: the field audits test whether an academic discipline retains or has displaced the six commitments; the presupposition audits test individual thinkers; the character instruments run literary agents through the Method; the decision frameworks run the practitioner himself. With one exception, the instruments are written in a controlled register of English — disciplined vocabulary and fixed procedure, but ordinary grammar. The exception is the propositional-logic conversion instrument, whose symbol system, typed layers, and checkable inference rules constitute genuine specialized language. A prose model can describe that instrument; it cannot replace it.


The Corrective Layer

Finally, the system as a working corpus includes a mechanism no document can supply for itself: a sole ratifying authority. Nothing enters the corpus without explicit human ratification, corrections are versioned and visible rather than silent, and every document carries its attribution — whose foundations, whose synthesis, whose rendering. This layer is architecturally necessary, not advisory, because the corpus’s most dangerous failure mode is undetectable from inside: genuine framework application and pattern-matched rationalization in corpus vocabulary are superficially identical. Only the corrective layer distinguishes them.

That is the system in prose: six commitments as ground, twenty-nine lines as architecture, two guards in two modes, four joints, one method, one family of instruments, and one ratifying authority holding the whole against drift.


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

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Substance Dualism Answered for Its Critics: The Standard Objections and the Corpus Replies

 

Substance Dualism Answered for Its Critics: The Standard Objections and the Corpus Replies

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


I. Scope and Voice

This essay assembles, in one place, the standard objections professional philosophy raises against substance dualism (C1) and the replies available from the corpus. A discipline of attribution governs throughout. Sterling’s own dated argumentative record on this question is brief and specific: the ISF post of January 20, 2012 (“A Brief Reply, Re: Dualism”) and the position it states. Where a reply below rests on Sterling’s own words, it is marked as his. Where a reply extends his position using the corpus’s C1 documentation or the argumentative resources of aligned professional philosophers identified in the corpus’s CPA runs, that extension is Dave Kelly’s synthesis, and it is marked as such. Nothing below attributes to Sterling an argument he did not make.

One framing point first, from Sterling directly. His dualism is not a revival of ancient Stoic physics and is not aimed at the ancient Stoics: “My dualism is not developed in opposition to the ancient Stoic metaphysics, but to modern scientific physics.” The ancient position — that mind is a state of a subtle, intelligent material substance — was coherent on its own terms, given what the ancients believed matter could do. What Sterling denies is that anyone can hold that position today, because modern physics recognizes in the brain only particles undergoing electro-chemical processes, none of which are understood as having characteristics like “the feeling of pain” or “the concept of modus ponens.” The objections below are therefore answered as objections to a thesis pitched against contemporary physicalism — which is where professional philosophy pitches them.


II. Sterling’s Own Position, Stated Before the Objections

The 2012 post gives the argument in three numbered steps, quoted here in substance: (1) “I am absolutely certain, beyond any possibility of error, that I have qualitative mental experiences. I am more certain of this than any other proposition.” (2) Experience consistently testifies that choices are made on the basis of the qualitative content of these experiences — complex reasoning, recognized logical form, conclusions acted upon. (3) Science tells us that during mental experience the central nervous system undergoes electro-chemical processes. And the burden-assignment that follows: anyone who says today that the mind is a state of matter “must either explain how it is that various brain particles can have such properties, or claim that there exist forms of ‘matter’ that are utterly unlike any that physicists have discovered.” Sterling sees no hope for either, and adds — knowing full well that many, perhaps most, philosophers hold the physicalist view — “I am asserting that they have never explained how this is possible.”

Note the structure. Sterling does not begin by defending an immaterial substance against attack. He begins from the datum of maximal certainty — qualitative experience — and assigns the explanatory burden to the position that must account for that datum with resources (particles, processes) that do not contain it. Every reply below inherits this structure: the objections assume dualism is the view that owes an explanation, and the corpus’s consistent answer is that the debt runs the other way.


III. The Objections and the Replies

Objection 1 — The Interaction Problem

How can a non-physical substance causally affect a physical body? Causation requires a mechanism, and no mechanism connecting the immaterial to the material has ever been specified. This is the oldest objection, pressed since Elisabeth of Bohemia against Descartes.

Reply (synthesis, building on Sterling’s stated position). The objection assumes that all causation must be mechanistic — that “how does it work?” must be answerable by specifying an intermediate mechanism. But mechanism is a feature of physical-to-physical causation, not of causation as such. At the base of any causal theory, including physics’s own, lie fundamental causal powers for which no further mechanism can be given: no one explains how mass curves spacetime or how charge generates a field; these are bedrock powers, and explanation terminates in them. The dualist claims the rational faculty’s power to originate assent, and assent’s power to move the body, are similarly basic. This is not evasion; it is the same structure of explanation-termination that foundationalism (C4) requires everywhere and that physics itself exhibits at its floor. Meanwhile the objection cuts the other way with greater force, and here Sterling’s own words apply directly: the physicalist must explain how brain particles can have properties like the feeling of pain or the grasp of modus ponens — and “they have never explained how this is possible.” The dualist declines to specify a mechanism at the causal bedrock; the physicalist cannot specify how his own ontology contains the datum at all. Those are not symmetrical debts.

Objection 2 — Causal Closure of the Physical

Physics is causally complete: every physical event has a sufficient physical cause. If the mind is non-physical, it can cause nothing physical without violating closure — so mental causation is either excluded or overdetermined.

Reply (synthesis). Causal closure is not a finding of physics; it is a metaphysical postulate appended to physics. No experiment establishes that every physical event has a sufficient physical cause; laboratory practice establishes conservation and lawful regularity within the systems measured, which is compatible with the closure thesis but does not entail it. The dualist is therefore not contradicting physics but contradicting a philosophical interpolation into physics. And the interpolation is question-begging in this debate: closure is credible only if one has already decided that nothing non-physical acts — which is the point at issue. Against the postulate stands the datum Sterling ranks above every other proposition: that we choose on the basis of the qualitative content of experience. He gives the example from his own record — declining veal, which he finds delicious, on the strength of a moral argument; consciously re-forming his patterns of thought as a result of long discussion of Stoic theory. If closure excludes that, then closure excludes the most certain thing there is, and it is closure that must yield. The corpus’s dependency structure makes the stakes explicit: without mental causation, assent originates nothing (C2 collapses), and with C2 fall Th7’s practical import and everything the collapse-test names.

Objection 3 — The Neuroscientific Correlation Argument

Every mental state investigated correlates with brain states; lesions, stimulation, and chemistry alter mind predictably. The dependence of mind on brain is total, which is what physicalism predicts and dualism does not.

Reply (synthesis, consistent with Sterling’s step 3). Sterling’s own third premise grants the correlation: science tells us the nervous system undergoes electro-chemical processes during mental experience. Correlation, dependence in operation, and vulnerability to interference are exactly what an interactionist dualism predicts: a rational faculty that receives impressions through the body and acts through the body will of course be conditioned by the state of its instrument. Damage the instrument and the interaction degrades — as damaging a violin degrades the music without showing the violinist is made of wood. What the correlation data never supply is the identity claim: that the mental state is the brain state. No amount of correlation converts into identity without the further metaphysical premise that correlation is all there is — and that premise, again, is the point at issue. The corpus’s C1 vector space marks the difference precisely: what physicalism cannot locate in the correlated brain state is the first-person givenness, the intentionality, the felt quality — the dimensions that constitute the commitment and that no third-person description contains.

Objection 4 — Parsimony (Occam’s Razor)

Even if physicalism has unsolved problems, dualism multiplies entities. One substance is simpler than two; the hard problem is a research program, not a refutation.

Reply (synthesis). Parsimony forbids multiplying entities beyond necessity; it does not license deleting data. The question is whether one substance is sufficient, and Sterling’s burden-assignment answers it: a single physical substance whose recognized properties are exclusively those of particles and processes does not contain qualitative experience, and its defenders “have never explained how this is possible.” An ontology that cannot accommodate the most certain datum there is has not achieved simplicity; it has achieved omission. The promissory note — “physicalism will explain consciousness eventually” — has been outstanding for the entire modern period, and the corpus’s Philosophy field audit records the current state honestly: the hard problem is acknowledged as a difficulty and the mainstream response is to develop more sophisticated physicalist proposals, not to answer the question Sterling posed. A theory that is simpler because it leaves out the explanandum is not the more rational choice; it is the less rational one wearing a methodological virtue as a costume.

Objection 5 — Multiple Realizability and Functionalism

Mental states are functional states — definable by causal role, realizable in many substrates. This dissolves the need for any special substance: mind is what the brain does, as software to hardware.

Reply (synthesis). Functionalism characterizes mental states entirely by input-output relations, and precisely thereby omits everything C1’s vector space identifies as constitutive: a functional description of pain specifies what pain does, never what pain feels like; a functional description of grasping modus ponens specifies dispositions to token certain outputs, never the recognition of validity as such — the very thing Sterling reports as the basis of his reasoned choices. The standard internal difficulties (inverted and absent qualia: a system functionally identical to a subject but feeling nothing, or feeling otherwise) are not exotic puzzles; they are the direct symptom of defining mind by role while leaving out occupancy. And the software analogy concedes more than it defends: software is not a physical property of hardware but an abstraction imposed by an interpreting mind — syntax has no intrinsic existence in the silicon. Explaining mind as software presupposes a mind doing the interpreting, one level up. The regress ends only in something whose intentionality is intrinsic, which is what the rational faculty as substance is.

Objection 6 — The Pairing Problem

What ties a particular non-physical mind to a particular body? Physical causation pairs cause and effect by spatial relation; souls, lacking location, cannot be paired with bodies in a principled way.

Reply (synthesis). The objection assumes that spatial relation is the only possible ground of causal pairing — an assumption drawn, once more, from the physical-to-physical case and generalized without argument. The dualist’s answer is that the pairing is primitive and individual: this rational faculty has the basic, unmediated power to act in this body and receive from this body, just as fundamental physical relations pair their relata without an intermediary that explains the pairing. Nothing in the concept of causation requires that all pairing be spatial; that requirement is physicalism’s house rule, applied to the one entity the debate concerns. The corpus can also note what the objection costs its user: the same first-person datum that certifies experience certifies whose experience it is. The unity and ownership of consciousness — one center receiving impressions, comparing them to foundational truths, issuing verdicts — is given, not constructed; a theory that finds ownership mysterious has mislaid its starting point.

Objection 7 — The Evolutionary Objection

Minds emerged gradually by natural selection operating on physical organisms. Where in phylogeny would an immaterial substance enter, and why would selection produce one?

Reply (synthesis, drawing on argumentative resources the corpus’s CPA runs identify as aligned). The objection presupposes that an evolutionary account of the organism is thereby an account of the mind — which assumes reduction rather than establishing it. Nothing about the gradual assembly of bodies entails that what thinks in those bodies is an assembly. But the stronger reply turns the objection around, in the form the corpus’s Plantinga run records as the evolutionary argument against naturalism: selection rewards fitness, not truth; if mental states are nothing but physical states shaped for adaptive behavior, there is no reason to expect the beliefs they realize to be true — including the belief in naturalism and the belief in the evolutionary objection itself. The objector saws the branch he sits on. The dualist, by contrast, can accept the entire biological record while holding that rational insight — the recognition that a proof is valid, that virtue alone is good — is a capacity of a faculty whose authority does not derive from selection pressure and therefore is not undermined by it. That authority is what C3’s direct apprehension and the entire theorem architecture presuppose.


IV. The Common Structure of the Replies

Read together, the seven replies are one reply. Each objection generalizes a rule from physical-to-physical cases — causation needs mechanism, pairing needs location, science’s closure is metaphysics, correlation is identity, role is occupancy, simplicity licenses omission, biology exhausts ontology — and applies the rule to the one entity whose distinctness is the question. Each reply refuses the generalization and returns to the datum Sterling placed first: qualitative, intentional, unified, choosing consciousness, more certain than any proposition brought against it. The professional literature has never answered Sterling’s challenge on its merits — it has not explained how brain particles can bear the feeling of pain or the concept of modus ponens — and the corpus’s field audit confirms that the mainstream’s response to the hard problem remains a program, not a result. The displacement of C1, as the corpus’s historical analysis states, was not the loss of a decisive argument; it was the loss of cultural authority. The arguments, examined one at a time, still run the other way.


V. What Rests on the Answer

This is not a detached metaphysical exercise. C1 grounds the dichotomy of control: if the mind is the body, mental events are physical events determined by prior physical causes, and nothing is “up to us” in the sense Th6 requires. With C1 stands C2 — assent as genuinely originated — and with C2 stands the entire practical architecture: Th7’s causal chain from belief to desire, the recovery audit that traces a pathos to its belief, the possibility that correcting the belief is an act rather than an event that happens to occur. The practitioner who runs the Five Steps is presupposing, at every step, that there is a rational faculty distinct from the processes it judges. The objections answered above are therefore not merely answerable; for the coherence of the practice itself, they must be.


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

Th10–14 as Pivot and as Audit Content: Locating the Value Cluster in Sterling’s System

 

Th10–14 as Pivot and as Audit Content: Locating the Value Cluster in Sterling’s System

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


I. The Cluster Verbatim

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

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

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

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

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

Five lines from Core Stoicism (ISF, September 19, 2005). One basic, four derived. The task of this essay is to state what these five lines are within the architecture of the whole twenty-nine-line system — and to show that their location settles a question of practice: what askesis is, and what it is not.


II. Where the Cluster Sits Derivationally

Core Stoicism opens with a promissory note. Line 2* asserts that complete happiness is possible and marks itself “[To be proven below.]” The negative-happiness argument then assembles its premises: Th3, that all unhappiness is caused by desiring an outcome that fails to result; Th6, that only our beliefs and will are in our control; Th7, that desires are caused by beliefs about good and evil. From these, lines 4, 5, 8, and 9 derive that desiring things out of our control is irrational — irrational because avoidable, avoidable because desires are in our control, in our control because they are caused by beliefs.

But the argument to this point establishes only that desiring externals is imprudent. It has not yet established that such desire is false — that the belief producing it misrepresents reality. Th10 supplies that. It is the value axiom: underived, basic, load-bearing, the kind of proposition Sterling’s own gloss on the “Th” marker classifies as an unprovable postulate defensible by intuition — the ethical intuitionism (C3) of the system doing exactly the work it exists to do, terminating the regress rather than continuing it. From Th10 with Th6, line 11 derives that virtue and vice are in our control; line 12 derives that externals are never good or evil; line 13 re-grounds line 9’s prudential verdict as an epistemic one — the desire for externals now stands convicted not merely of exposing the agent to unhappiness, but of embodying false judgment.

Line 14 is the terminus. It discharges 2*: the agent who values only virtue judges truly (because Th10 is true) and is immune to all unhappiness (because, per Th3–5, no desire of his can be frustrated by the world). The proof the system opened by promising is, at line 14, complete.


III. What Depends on the Cluster

Everything after line 14 presupposes it. Line 15 — true judgment of the value of virtue produces desire for virtue — takes 14 as its sole premise. Line 17, the appropriate positive feeling attending correct judgment and will, runs from 15. Line 23, the three ways the Stoic is positively happy, gathers 17 and 19. On the action branch, line 28 — that aiming at external desire-objects is not virtuous — cites 13 directly alongside Th27, and line 29, the terminus of the whole system, inherits it. Sterling’s own collapse-test names the stakes from below: deny Th7 and lines 8, 9, 13, 14, 28, and 29 all fall. The cluster is thus doubly load-bearing: it completes the proof that precedes it, and it is cited by nearly everything that follows.

But the dependency is not merely logical. The system does not move past line 14 the way a proof moves past a lemma — established once, then available on demand. Line 15 says that true judgment of virtue’s value produces desire for virtue. That is a claim about an agent, not about a page. The positive-happiness branch and the virtue branch describe the condition of someone of whom line 14 is true — someone who actually values only virtue, as a settled fact about his rational faculty. The theorems after 14 are inert for any agent who merely affirms 14 while his operative valuations say otherwise. The architecture therefore has a seam at line 14 that no other line has: it is the point at which the system’s demand shifts from assent-to-a-proof to a state-of-the-agent.


IV. The Cluster as the Content of the Recovery Audit

Now the corrected model of practice, established through the Tullia Case run and the Pathos Already Occurred verdict. Seddon defines pathos as an excessive impulse occasioned by assenting to a false judgment, and adds that it can be regarded as the affective component of that judgment or identified as the judgment itself. There is no intermediate stage — no window between an impression’s arrival and assent in which a vigilant agent could catch and screen it. The freak-out is not downstream of the false assent; it is the false assent, or its affective face. And one cannot extirpate a passion already underway any more than one can prevent sugar from tasting sweet once the cake is already in the mouth.

Two modes, therefore, and only two. Prospectively: the correct judgments are held in advance as settled dogma, so the impression that arrives meets a rational faculty that already judges truly, and no false assent occurs. Sterling’s own figure — immunization, not cure. Retrospectively: a pathos has already occurred, and the agent, noticing it, treats the disturbance itself as a new, second-order impression — “I am experiencing a pathos” — and works backward from it, per Th7, to the belief that caused it, corrects that belief, and wills correctly now.

And what is the content the retrospective audit works through? Precisely the cluster. The located belief has the shape some external is good or evil. First contact is Th10, the truth it contradicts. Lines 11 and 12 derive the direct verdict — externals are never good or evil, so the belief is false. Th6 draws the control boundary that defines “external.” Th7 supplies the causal warrant that makes the belief the correct address for the disturbance. Lines 8 and 9 establish that the desire the belief produced was in the agent’s control and irrational. Line 13 names the failure: false judgment. Th3–5 state what sustaining the belief costs. Line 14 states what correcting it yields. The eight moments of clause (a)’s functional-order cluster are the derivational cluster of Section Two, traversed in the order the audit forces them into view rather than the order the proof establishes them.

This is the identity the essay exists to state plainly: Th10–14 is not general doctrine of which the recovery audit makes occasional use. It is, without remainder, the propositional content of the one action available to an agent once assent has already gone wrong. The same five lines are the pivot of the derivation and the script of the recovery.


V. What This Settles About Askesis

The identity closes off a tempting third category. One might suppose there is a distinct activity — call it practice, rehearsal, staged application — in which the agent produces instances of Th10–14 correctly applied under controlled conditions, and that this activity is what askesis is. Stated that way, the supposition is a survival of the interception model at one remove: it imagines a use of the cluster that is neither the settled disposition nor the recovery audit, a rehearsal for a catch that the live case does not contain.

The architecture leaves no room for the third category. At any moment, exactly one of two things is true of an agent with respect to the cluster. Either line 14 holds of him — he values only virtue as a settled fact about his faculty — in which case the arriving impression meets true judgment and nothing further happens; the prospective mode’s success is precisely the absence of any occasion for action. Or line 14 does not yet hold of him, in which case some impression asserting an external’s value has met his faculty and been assented to — a pathos, large or small, is on the books — and the only action available is the audit: notice the disturbance, trace it to its belief, correct the belief against Th10, will correctly now.

Askesis, then, is not a third use of the cluster. Voluntary hardship, imagined adversity, restraint before imagined pleasure, objective description, the view from above, the rehearsal of death — these are methods of deliberately manufacturing live impressions, under graded and voluntary conditions, so that the agent’s actual state with respect to line 14 is exposed rather than presumed. Lying in bed affirming that spiders are indifferent tests nothing; the affirmation meets no impression. Askesis arranges the meeting. Where the settled disposition holds, the staged impression confirms it — a live true judgment under real, if chosen, pressure. Where it does not hold, a pathos occurs in miniature, and the agent is handed exactly what the retrospective mode requires: a disturbance to notice, fresh, low-stakes, traceable — an occasion to run the audit now rather than for the first time when the loss is a daughter and not a spider.

Askesis is thus the discipline by which line 14 migrates from theorem to fact-about-the-agent. It does not add a mode to the two the system contains. It drives the frequency of the second mode toward zero by making the first mode actual — and until that work is done, every disturbance it surfaces is answered by the same five lines, in the same backward order, that the derivation established once and the practitioner must now make his own.


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

The Body That Cannot Choose: Stoic Corporealism and the Case for Dualism Today

 

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

The Body That Cannot Choose: Stoic Corporealism and the Case for Dualism Today

By Dave Kelly


A recent essay in this space, Judith Stove’s “Entering A Garden: Stoicism, Nature, and Metazoa,” makes a case that ought to be taken seriously: that ancient Stoic physics, in insisting that only bodies exist and that mind or soul is itself corporeal, anticipated the monism now fashionable in philosophy of mind and animal cognition studies. Stove is right about the ancient doctrine. Where the case runs into trouble is at the point where “the Stoics believed it” quietly becomes “and therefore we should too.” That step deserves scrutiny — not because the historical claim is wrong, but because the present-tense one does not follow from it, and the ancient Stoics themselves would have had little patience for an argument that treated a school’s physics as immune to revision by later evidence.


What the ancient Stoics actually held

Stove’s citations are accurate. Seneca’s quidquid facit corpus est — “whatever is active is a body” — is the load-bearing premise of Stoic ontology, and Diogenes Laertius’s account of the soul’s seven “tentacle-like” extensions from the hēgemonikon is genuine Stoic doctrine, not a poetic flourish borrowed from Oppian. Contemporary classicists confirm the reading without much dissent. Vanessa de Harven’s work on Stoic corporealism traces how the school’s dunamis criterion — being is the capacity to act or be acted upon — commits it to treating soul, tension, and even virtue as bodies of a particular kind, however strange that sounds to modern ears.1 Marcelo Boeri goes further, arguing that Stoic psychology anticipates the causal closure thesis at the center of contemporary physicalism: the Stoics rejected substance dualism for close to the same reason many analytic philosophers of mind do now — the apparent impossibility of an immaterial item exerting causal force on a material one.2 Massimo Pigliucci, who holds both a philosophy chair and a doctorate in evolutionary biology, states the position even more bluntly in his popular work: “the Stoics were materialists,” full stop, and he has argued in print that a scientifically responsible Stoicism today ought to inherit that materialism rather than quietly drop it.3 So Stove is not exercising private judgment here. She stands in company with working philosophers who have made the same case, some of them in professional, peer-reviewed terms.

This matters for what follows, because it means the disagreement is not between an amateur enthusiast and a rigorous tradition. It is a live dispute within the tradition itself, and it turns on a single question that none of the ancient texts can settle for us: does a plausible account of why the Stoics were corporealists in the third century BC give us any reason to be corporealists now?


Sterling’s reply

Grant Sterling addressed this question directly in a 2012 exchange on the International Stoic Forum, responding to a correspondent who had made essentially Stove’s move — citing the ancient doctrine that mind is “a state of matter” as though that settled the modern question. Sterling’s answer is worth quoting because it draws the line so precisely:

“My dualism is not developed in opposition to the ancient Stoic metaphysics, but to modern scientific physics. You say that for the ancient Stoics, the human mind is a ‘state of matter.’ The problem that I was bringing up is that there is no room in modern Physics for any such notion. Modern Physics recognizes only physical matter in the brain, consisting of various particles undergoing various electro-chemical processes. None of those particles or processes are understood as having characteristics like ‘the feeling of pain’ or ‘the concept of modus ponens.’”

The argument is narrower than it might first appear, and its narrowness is the point. Sterling does not dispute the history. He denies that a philosopher writing after the twentieth century’s advances in physics can help himself to Chrysippus’s pneuma the way Chrysippus could. The ancient Stoics were free to say mind is a fine, breath-like body permeating the coarser body, because nothing in their physics forbade matter from having such properties. Ours does. A particle physicist today has no category for “the concept of modus ponens” among the properties electrons and their interactions can bear, and no amount of appeal to pneuma closes that gap — it only relocates the mystery under a different name. Boeri’s own paper, read carefully, concedes as much: he does not claim the Stoics solved the interaction problem, only that they were dissatisfied with dualism for reasons that rhyme with contemporary physicalist dissatisfaction. Dissatisfaction with a difficulty is not the same as having dissolved it.


Why the difference is not academic

Stove’s essay treats corporealism as a scientific convenience — it “avoids many difficulties which continue to attend study of mind, when conceived as somehow distinct from… the body.” But the difficulties do not vanish; they migrate. If mental acts are simply a further arrangement of the same matter that composes rocks and rivers, then Epictetus’s opening move in the Enchiridion — “some things are in our control, others not; in our control are belief, impulse, desire, aversion” — needs an account of what “in our control” could mean for a state that is itself just one more link in a physical causal chain. A belief that is fully constituted by antecedent bodily states is not thereby exempted from the causal history of those states. It is one more event in the chain, however finely we describe its texture as “breath” rather than “electrochemistry.” The vocabulary changes; the determination does not.

This is the sense in which substance dualism, in Sterling’s reconstruction, is not an ornamental addition to Stoic ethics but its structural precondition. The rational faculty has to be a distinct kind of thing — not merely a distinctively organized body — if its judgments are to be genuinely its own rather than the terminal output of a causal sequence that began elsewhere. Stove’s essay, admirably, wants Stoicism’s ethics of agency and its physics of nature to hang together, and historically they did hang together, because the ancient Stoics were also, notoriously, close to determinists about the physical order even as they insisted assent was “up to us” — a tension their own contemporaries pressed them on. What Sterling’s dualism does is resolve that tension in the one direction the ancient corporealist could not: by taking the rational faculty out of the physical causal order the ancients otherwise wanted to make exhaustive.


A shared root, a divided branch

None of this diminishes what Stove has done well. Her essay is right that the Stoics saw human life as continuous with animal and even vegetative life through the two basic drives, right that Oppian’s octopus and Godfrey-Smith’s octopus are working the same vein of close, unsentimental attention to other minds, and right that this tradition has been underread relative to Aristotle’s. The corporealist premise and the continuity-of-nature premise are not the same claim, and a reader could accept the second — humans as embedded in a single biological order, oikeiōsis as a graded capacity running from instinct to reason — without accepting the first. Pigliucci, in fact, tends to run exactly this combination: full-throated materialism paired with an insistence that reason, however physically realized, still marks a genuine and consequential difference between human and animal oikeiōsis. Sterling would agree with the second half of that pairing and part ways on the first. That is where the argument now stands, and it is an argument, not a settled matter — which is, after all, the condition Stove’s own essay found the Stoics in when the subject was zoology rather than metaphysics of mind.


Notes

1. Vanessa de Harven, “The Metaphysics of Stoic Corporealism,” Elenchos.

2. Marcelo D. Boeri, “The Stoic Psychological Physicalism: An Ancient Version of the Causal Closure Thesis,” in R.A.H. King, ed., Common to Body and Soul.

3. Massimo Pigliucci, How to Be a Stoic (Basic Books, 2017); “The Stoic God Is Untenable in the Light of Modern Science,” The Side View, 2019.


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