Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Friday, May 01, 2026

Sterling and the Contemporary Proponents — Argument Correspondence Map C6 — Foundationalism: Sterling and Chisholm

 

Sterling and the Contemporary Proponents — Argument Correspondence Map

C6 — Foundationalism: Sterling and Chisholm

Analysis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude.


I. The Sterling Argument

The governing corpus passages are Stoicism, Foundationalism, and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge (Sterling, ISF January 19, 2015 and June 5, 2017), Stoicism, Correspondence Theory of Truth, and Objective Moral Facts (Sterling, ISF January 10, 2022), and the C6 analytical essay (Kelly, 2026 from Sterling’s theoretical foundations).

Sterling’s argument for foundationalism proceeds on three tracks: an argument from the four-source taxonomy of knowledge, an argument from the structure/connection distinction, and an argument from the regress problem.

The four-source taxonomy argument:

Premise One: There are four sources of knowledge: sensory experience (a), extra-sensory experience (b), rational perception of self-evidence (c), and purely innate knowledge (d). Category (a) gives knowledge of contingent truths through sensory input. Category (b) gives knowledge of contingent truths through non-sensory input. Category (d) gives knowledge of truths received at birth. Category (c) is categorically distinct from all three: it gives knowledge of necessary truths without any new input.

Premise Two: Category (c) is the key category. A self-evident necessary truth is self-evident to any rational faculty that attends to it — it does not vary between persons the way (b) and (d) vary. Knowing a truth through category (c) is not learning it through any experience, even a non-physical one. It is gaining a new understanding without having new information inputted. This is what makes category (c) uniquely suited to ground foundational knowledge: the foundation does not rest on any particular input received, and therefore cannot be undermined by the absence of that input.

Premise Three: The fundamental truths of ethics are necessary, self-evident truths. Sterling’s direct statement: “I think the fundamental truths of ethics are necessary, self-evident truths. They are necessary, self-evident truths that any rational faculty can apprehend directly.” Theorem 10 — that virtue is the only genuine good and vice the only genuine evil — is known through category (c), not derived from prior premises, not received through sensory or extra-sensory input.

Conclusion A: The foundational moral truths are known through rational perception of self-evidence — category (c). This is the epistemological home of foundationalism. All other moral knowledge depends on these foundational truths in an ordered structure of derivation.

The support/connection distinction argument:

Premise One: There is a distinction between beliefs that logically support each other and beliefs that are merely connected — each making the other more coherent as a whole without either being the logical ground of the other. Mutual support creates a dependency: if one collapses, the other loses its ground. Mere connection does not: if one is refuted, the other stands independently.

Premise Two: Stoic ethics and Stoic theology are connected, not mutually supporting. The foundational ethical propositions — that virtue is the only genuine good, that externals are neither good nor evil — do not derive their justification from Stoic theology or cosmology. Ethics cannot be grounded in the will of God: the Euthyphro problem shows that divine ethics becomes either arbitrary or redundant. The foundational moral truths are known through rational perception of self-evidence independently of theology.

Conclusion B: The foundational moral propositions stand independently. Dissolving Stoic theology or cosmology — which Sterling endorses as necessary for the modern reconstruction — does not touch the foundational ethical propositions. Those propositions were not logically grounded in the theology. They were merely connected to it. The connections are severed by the reconstruction; the propositions remain. This establishes that the foundations are genuinely foundational — they do not rest on anything that has been dismantled.

The regress argument:

Premise One: Any claim to moral knowledge raises the question of justification. What justifies the claim? The justifying belief raises the same question. The regress must terminate somewhere or moral knowledge is impossible.

Premise Two: The termination point cannot be a belief that is justified by a prior belief — that continues the regress. The termination point cannot be a belief that is justified by itself — that is circular. The termination point must be a belief whose justification consists in the direct self-evidence of its content to the rational faculty that attends to it.

Premise Three: The point in Sterling’s 2022 ISF message on correspondence theory applies here as well: at some point something must be accepted as fundamental. The demand to define or justify foundational categories in terms of something more basic misunderstands what foundational categories do. Foundational propositions are not unjustified — they are justified by rational perception of their necessary truth. That is a different kind of justification from inferential justification, not an absence of justification.

Conclusion C: The regress of moral justification terminates at self-evident necessary truths known through rational perception — category (c). These are the foundations. Their justification is not inferential but perceptual: the rational faculty that attends to them recognizes their truth directly.

Sterling’s argument compressed:

  1. There are four sources of knowledge; category (c) — rational perception of self-evidence — is categorically distinct from sensory and extra-sensory input.
  2. Category (c) gives knowledge of necessary truths without any new input; what is self-evident is self-evident to any rational faculty that attends to it.
  3. The fundamental truths of ethics are necessary, self-evident truths apprehensible by any rational faculty directly.
  4. Stoic ethics and theology are connected not mutually supporting; the foundational propositions stand independently of the theology that has been dissolved.
  5. The regress of justification must terminate at beliefs whose justification consists in rational perception of their necessary truth.
  6. Foundationalism is the correct account of the structure of moral knowledge.

II. The Chisholm Argument

The governing texts are Roderick Chisholm, Theory of Knowledge (first edition 1966; third edition 1989) and Person and Object (1976).

Chisholm defends classical foundationalism through his account of directly evident propositions and his systematic refutation of coherentism and infinitism. His argument proceeds by establishing what justification requires, showing that coherentism and infinitism fail to provide it, and then defending the directly evident as the proper foundation.

The directly evident argument:

Premise One: A proposition is directly evident for a rational subject S if S is justified in believing it and S’s justification does not depend on any other proposition. The directly evident is the epistemological category of beliefs that terminate the regress — not by being believed without justification, but by being justified through something other than inference from prior beliefs.

Premise Two: The directly evident is not arbitrary. Chisholm identifies the class of directly evident propositions as those whose justification consists in their immediate self-presentation to the rational faculty — propositions that, when attended to, carry their justification with them. The rational subject who attends to a directly evident proposition recognizes its truth without needing to infer it from anything else.

Premise Three: The existence of directly evident propositions is not an assumption added to the epistemological framework. It is required by the structure of justification itself. If no proposition is directly evident, then every proposition requires justification from a prior proposition, and the regress cannot terminate. Knowledge becomes impossible. Since knowledge is not impossible, some propositions must be directly evident.

Conclusion A: There are directly evident propositions. Their justification consists in rational self-presentation rather than inferential derivation. They are the foundation of all other knowledge.

The refutation of coherentism:

Premise One: Coherentism holds that justification is a matter of coherence among beliefs — a belief is justified if it fits coherently with the rest of the belief system. No belief is more basic than any other; all beliefs mutually support each other.

Premise Two: Coherentism cannot account for the difference between a coherent system of true beliefs and a coherent system of false beliefs. Both are equally coherent. Coherence alone cannot guarantee correspondence to reality. An agent whose entire belief system is internally consistent but systematically disconnected from the world has maximally coherent beliefs and no knowledge.

Premise Three: Coherentism is also circular: the justification of any belief in the system depends on the coherence of the system as a whole, which depends on the justification of the beliefs in it. The circularity is not small and local but global and structural — the entire system rests on itself.

Conclusion B: Coherentism fails to account for justified true belief. It cannot distinguish a maximally coherent false belief system from genuine knowledge. Foundationalism is required.

The refutation of infinitism:

Premise One: Infinitism holds that the regress of justification is infinite — every belief is justified by a prior belief, and the chain never terminates.

Premise Two: An infinite chain of justifications cannot be completed by any finite rational faculty. If knowledge requires completing the justification chain, and the chain is infinite, knowledge is impossible. Since knowledge is not impossible, infinitism must be rejected.

Conclusion C: Infinitism makes knowledge impossible. Foundationalism is the only remaining option: the regress terminates at directly evident propositions whose justification consists in rational self-presentation.

Chisholm’s argument compressed:

  1. A proposition is directly evident if it is justified and its justification does not depend on any prior proposition.
  2. Directly evident propositions are justified through rational self-presentation — the rational faculty recognizes their truth without inference.
  3. The existence of directly evident propositions is required by the structure of justification — without them, knowledge is impossible.
  4. Coherentism cannot distinguish true coherent belief systems from false ones and is globally circular.
  5. Infinitism makes the completion of justification impossible for any finite rational faculty.
  6. Foundationalism — the directly evident as the termination of the justification regress — is the only account that makes knowledge possible.

III. Correspondence Finding

Point of structural identity — the directly evident as the termination of regress: Both Sterling and Chisholm identify the same structural requirement: the regress of justification must terminate at propositions whose justification consists in something other than inference from prior propositions. Sterling’s category (c) — rational perception of self-evidence — is precisely Chisholm’s directly evident: propositions known without new input, self-evident to any rational faculty that attends to them, justified through direct rational recognition rather than inferential derivation. The argumentative move is identical: the regress must stop somewhere; the stopping point must be justified but not inferentially; rational self-evidence is the only candidate that meets both requirements.

Point of structural identity — the refutation of coherentism: Both Sterling and Chisholm make the same objection to coherentism. Sterling’s route: a web of mutually supporting beliefs has no external standard against which to detect error; a false belief that fits coherently with other beliefs is not thereby corrected. Chisholm’s route: coherentism cannot distinguish a maximally coherent false belief system from genuine knowledge; the circularity is global and structural. Both are making the same claim: coherentism has no mechanism for detecting correspondence failure because it has no external standard — only internal consistency. For the Stoic corrective practice this matters directly: without foundationalism, the agent can detect that something is wrong only if it fails to cohere with his other beliefs. With foundationalism, the agent can trace the failure back to the foundational truth the false impression contradicts — and the foundational truth is not itself a member of the web that might cohere with the false impression.

Point of structural identity — universality of the foundation: Both Sterling and Chisholm hold that the directly evident or self-evident is universally accessible — not variable between persons the way extra-sensory or innate knowledge varies. Sterling’s explicit statement: a self-evident necessary truth is self-evident to any rational faculty that attends to it; what is self-evident does not depend on what inputs you have received. Chisholm’s account: the directly evident is a function of rational self-presentation, not of the particular history or constitution of the individual subject. Both are making the same structural claim: the foundations are universally accessible to rational agents as such, not restricted to those with particular experiences or inputs.

Point of divergence — the support/connection distinction: Sterling’s most architecturally distinctive contribution to C6 is the distinction between beliefs that logically support each other and beliefs that are merely connected. This distinction does the specific work of establishing that the foundational ethical propositions stand independently of Stoic theology and cosmology — that dissolving the theology leaves the ethics intact. Chisholm does not make this distinction and does not address the specific problem of reconstructing a classical philosophical system whose original metaphysical foundations have been dissolved. The support/connection distinction is Sterling’s original contribution to C6 — required by the specific project of Stoic reconstruction and not present in Chisholm.

Point of divergence — the four-source taxonomy: Sterling’s explicit four-source taxonomy — (a) sensory experience, (b) extra-sensory experience, (c) rational perception of self-evidence, (d) purely innate knowledge — provides a more structured account of what makes category (c) distinctive than Chisholm’s account of the directly evident. Chisholm identifies what the directly evident is and how it functions. Sterling additionally locates it within a systematic taxonomy of knowledge sources and shows precisely how it differs from each of the others. The taxonomy is Sterling’s own organizational contribution to C6 — not present in Chisholm in this form.

Overall correspondence finding: The load-bearing argumentative moves are structurally equivalent. Both Sterling and Chisholm identify rational self-evidence as the termination of the justification regress, make the same objection to coherentism, and hold that the foundational truths are universally accessible to rational agents as such. Chisholm’s systematic defense of the directly evident against both coherentism and infinitism provides comprehensive analytic corroboration for Sterling’s foundationalist commitment argued from within the Stoic framework. The support/connection distinction and the four-source taxonomy are Sterling’s distinct and original contributions — required by the specific project of Stoic reconstruction and not present in Chisholm. These contributions are not carried over by the correspondence and stand independently in the corpus.


Sterling and the Contemporary Proponents — Argument Correspondence Map. C6: Foundationalism. Analysis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude.

Sterling and the Contemporary Proponents — Argument Correspondence Map C5 — Ethical Intuitionism: Sterling and Huemer

 

Sterling and the Contemporary Proponents — Argument Correspondence Map

C5 — Ethical Intuitionism: Sterling and Huemer

Analysis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude.


I. The Sterling Argument

The governing corpus passages are Stoicism, Moral Facts, and Ethical Intuitionism (Sterling, ISF March 13, 2020 — Message Five), Stoicism, Foundationalism, and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge (Sterling, ISF January 19, 2015), and Stoicism, Moral Realism, and the Necessity of Objective Moral Facts (Sterling, ISF May 26, 2021). The C5 analytical essay (Kelly, 2026 from Sterling’s theoretical foundations) provides the systematic elaboration.

Sterling’s argument for ethical intuitionism proceeds on three tracks: an argument from the nature of moral properties, an argument from the elimination of alternatives, and an argument from the mathematical analogy.

The argument from the nature of moral properties:

Premise One: Moral terms — good, evil, right, wrong, virtue, vice — cannot be heard, smelt, tasted, seen, or felt. They are not sensory properties. No accumulation of empirical observations, however large, produces a moral conclusion without a moral premise already present in the chain.

Premise Two: If moral properties cannot be sensed, then moral knowledge cannot be grounded in sensory experience. The is/ought gap cannot be bridged by any accumulation of empirical premises without a non-sensory moral premise. Any account of moral knowledge that grounds it in sensory experience either imports a moral premise covertly or fails to produce moral knowledge at all.

Premise Three: Moral truths are necessary, not contingent. They have no source in the way empirical facts do, just as 2+2=4 has no source. They could not have been otherwise. Necessary truths are not the kind of thing discovered by sensory observation of how things contingently are.

Conclusion A: Moral knowledge is not empirical knowledge. It requires a non-sensory epistemic access to necessary moral truths. That access is direct rational apprehension — the same rational faculty that grasps mathematical and logical truths grasps moral truths.

The elimination of alternatives argument:

Premise One: Sterling identifies four sources of knowledge: sensory experience (a), extra-sensory experience (b), rational perception of self-evidence (c), and purely innate knowledge (d). Moral knowledge is not (a) — moral properties cannot be sensed. It is not (b) — Sterling does not invoke extra-sensory perception. It is not (d) — it is not built into the mind at birth without any rational act.

Premise Two: Category (c) — rational perception of self-evidence — is foundationalism’s and intuitionism’s epistemological home. It is the category of knowledge in which the rational faculty directly apprehends truths that are self-evident: truths whose denial produces immediate recognition of impossibility or absurdity.

Conclusion B: Moral knowledge belongs to category (c). The alternatives to intuitionism are intuitionism or nihilism — there is no third option. Either moral truths are directly apprehensible by the rational faculty, or there is no moral knowledge at all.

The mathematical analogy:

Premise One: We know that 2+2=4 and that from “If p, then q” and “p” we can deduce “q.” We know these things by using Reason — not by sensory experience, not by empirical observation, not by social consensus. The rational faculty directly apprehends necessary truths.

Premise Two: Moral truths are necessary truths of the same modal status as mathematical and logical truths. They could not have been otherwise. They have no empirical source.

Conclusion C: We know moral truths by Reason in the same way we know mathematical and logical truths — by the same rational faculty, exercising the same direct apprehension of necessary truth. The moral case is complicated by the fact that we have developed bad habits since childhood of believing that things that benefit us are good, so we tend to deny obvious moral truths when they are inconvenient. But the faculty that apprehends them is the same.

Sterling’s argument compressed:

  1. Moral properties cannot be heard, smelt, tasted, seen, or felt.
  2. The is/ought gap cannot be bridged by empirical premises alone.
  3. Moral truths are necessary, not contingent — they have no empirical source.
  4. The alternatives to intuitionism are intuitionism or nihilism — no third option.
  5. We know moral truths by Reason in the same way we know mathematical and logical truths.
  6. Moral knowledge is direct rational apprehension of necessary moral truths — intuitionism.

II. The Huemer Argument

The governing text is Michael Huemer, Ethical Intuitionism (Palgrave Macmillan, 2005).

Huemer defends ethical intuitionism through his principle of phenomenal conservatism and a systematic refutation of alternative metaethical positions. His argument proceeds by establishing that moral intuitions are evidence for moral claims, then defending this claim against the standard objections.

The phenomenal conservatism argument:

Premise One: Phenomenal conservatism is the epistemological principle that if something seems true to a rational agent in the absence of any defeater, that seeming constitutes prima facie justification for believing it. The seeming is evidence for the truth of what seems to be the case.

Premise Two: Moral intuitions are seemings — things that seem morally true to a rational agent. When an action seems wrong, that seeming is evidence that it is wrong. The evidence is defeasible — it can be overridden by stronger contrary evidence — but it is genuine evidence. It is not mere feeling, mere preference, or mere cultural conditioning.

Premise Three: The alternative to phenomenal conservatism is global skepticism. If seemings never constitute prima facie justification, then no belief is ever justified — because all justification ultimately rests on something that seems true to the rational agent. Rejecting phenomenal conservatism universally destroys the possibility of justified belief, including the belief that phenomenal conservatism is false. The position is self-defeating.

Conclusion A: Moral intuitions constitute genuine prima facie evidence for moral claims. The rational agent who withholds all weight from moral intuitions has no principled basis for his withholding that does not equally destroy the justification of his empirical beliefs.

The refutation of alternatives:

Against non-cognitivism: Non-cognitivism holds that moral claims do not express beliefs but attitudes, emotions, or prescriptions. Huemer argues that moral discourse has the logical structure of cognitive discourse — moral claims can be negated, embedded in conditionals, and used in valid arguments. Non-cognitivism cannot account for the logical behavior of moral language.

Against subjectivism: Subjectivism holds that moral claims report the speaker’s attitudes. Huemer argues that moral disagreement would then be impossible — two people reporting their different attitudes are not disagreeing. But moral disagreement is real. Subjectivism cannot account for it.

Against relativism: Relativism holds that moral claims are true or false relative to a culture or individual. Huemer argues that this makes moral progress impossible — a culture that changes its moral views has not improved; it has merely changed. But moral progress is real. Relativism cannot account for it.

Against naturalism: Naturalism holds that moral properties are identical to natural properties. Huemer endorses Moore’s open question argument: for any natural property N, it remains an open question whether N is genuinely good. Moral properties are not natural properties.

Conclusion B: The alternatives to intuitionism all fail. Intuitionism — the view that moral intuitions are genuine evidence for moral truths apprehended directly by the rational faculty — is the only metaethical position that accounts for the logical behavior of moral language, the reality of moral disagreement, the possibility of moral progress, and the non-identity of moral and natural properties.

Huemer’s argument compressed:

  1. Seemings constitute prima facie evidence for what seems to be the case (phenomenal conservatism).
  2. Rejecting phenomenal conservatism universally destroys justified belief — the position is self-defeating.
  3. Moral intuitions are seemings and therefore constitute genuine prima facie evidence for moral claims.
  4. Non-cognitivism, subjectivism, relativism, and naturalism all fail to account for the logical behavior of moral discourse.
  5. Intuitionism is the only metaethical position that survives the elimination of alternatives.
  6. Moral truths are directly apprehensible by the rational faculty — intuitionism is correct.

III. Correspondence Finding

Point of structural identity — the elimination of alternatives: Both Sterling and Huemer make the same foundational argumentative move: the alternatives to intuitionism are eliminated, leaving intuitionism as the only surviving account of moral knowledge. Sterling’s elimination is compact — intuitionism or nihilism, no third alternative. Huemer’s elimination is comprehensive — non-cognitivism, subjectivism, relativism, and naturalism are each refuted in turn. Both arrive at the same conclusion by the same method: the alternatives fail, and intuitionism is what remains. This eliminative structure is the architecturally decisive argumentative move that both philosophers share.

Point of structural identity — the non-sensory character of moral knowledge: Both Sterling and Huemer establish that moral knowledge is not sensory knowledge. Sterling’s route: moral terms cannot be heard, smelt, tasted, seen, or felt; moral properties are not accessible through sensory experience; the is/ought gap cannot be bridged by empirical premises alone. Huemer’s route: the open question argument establishes that moral properties are not natural properties; since natural properties are what sensory experience tracks, moral properties are not accessible through sensory experience. Both arrive at the same structural conclusion: moral knowledge requires a non-sensory epistemic access to moral reality.

Point of structural identity — moral intuitions as genuine evidence: Both Sterling and Huemer hold that direct rational apprehension of moral truth constitutes genuine knowledge rather than mere feeling or preference. Sterling’s claim: we know moral truths by Reason in the same way we know mathematical and logical truths — the direct apprehension is knowledge in the strict philosophical sense. Huemer’s claim: moral intuitions are prima facie evidence for moral claims through phenomenal conservatism — the seeming is genuine evidence, not mere feeling. Both are making the same claim: what the rational faculty directly apprehends morally is not mere psychological state but epistemic contact with moral reality.

Point of divergence — the mathematical analogy: Sterling’s most distinctive contribution to C5 is the mathematical analogy: the same rational faculty that gives knowledge of mathematical and logical truths gives knowledge of moral truths. This analogy establishes the modal status of moral knowledge — necessary, a priori, non-empirical — by connecting it to the clearest case of non-empirical necessary knowledge. Huemer does not make this analogy central to his account. His phenomenal conservatism is a general epistemological principle that applies to all seemings, not specifically to the class of necessary truths. Sterling’s account is more restrictive and more precise: moral knowledge is specifically the direct apprehension of necessary truths, not just any seeming that lacks a defeater. The mathematical analogy is Sterling’s original contribution to C5 and is not carried over by the correspondence.

Point of divergence — the Stoic application: Sterling’s intuitionism is specifically applied to the foundational Stoic theorems: Theorem 10 (virtue is the only genuine good), Theorem 12 (externals are neither good nor evil), and their derivatives. The rational faculty’s direct apprehension of these theorems is what makes the Examination step possible and authoritative. Huemer’s intuitionism is general — it applies to any moral intuition that lacks a defeater, across any moral content. The Stoic-specific application of C5 to the foundational theorems is Sterling’s own contribution and is not present in Huemer.

Overall correspondence finding: The load-bearing argumentative moves are structurally equivalent. Both Sterling and Huemer eliminate the alternatives to intuitionism, establish the non-sensory character of moral knowledge, and hold that direct rational apprehension of moral truth constitutes genuine evidence rather than mere feeling. Huemer’s phenomenal conservatism provides a rigorous epistemological grounding for the prima facie evidential status of moral intuitions that supplements Sterling’s more compact argument. Sterling’s mathematical analogy — establishing the necessary, a priori character of moral knowledge by connecting it to the clearest case of non-empirical necessary knowledge — is a distinct and original contribution not present in Huemer and not carried over by the correspondence. Sterling’s application of C5 to the specific foundational theorems of Core Stoicism is equally original and not carried over.


Sterling and the Contemporary Proponents — Argument Correspondence Map. C5: Ethical Intuitionism. Analysis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude.

Sterling and the Contemporary Proponents — Argument Correspondence Map C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: Sterling and Devitt

 

Sterling and the Contemporary Proponents — Argument Correspondence Map

C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: Sterling and Devitt

Analysis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude.


I. The Sterling Argument

The governing corpus passages are Stoicism, Correspondence Theory of Truth, and Objective Moral Facts (Sterling, ISF August 20, 2015 and January 10, 2022) and the C4 analytical essay (Kelly, 2026 from Sterling’s theoretical foundations).

Sterling’s argument for correspondence theory proceeds on two tracks: an argument from the internal requirements of Stoicism, and an argument that fact is the fundamental ontological category against which any regress demand must stop.

The internal requirement argument:

Premise One: Stoicism is built on the claim that most human impressions about good and evil are false. Not unhelpful, not unconventional, not suboptimal — false. That word carries the entire normative weight of the system. It is what justifies the demand to correct rather than merely adjust, to examine rather than merely manage, to refuse assent rather than merely redirect attention.

Premise Two: For “false” to carry that weight, it must mean what it says: a belief is false when it fails to correspond to how things actually are. Only correspondence theory delivers this. Coherence theory makes truth a matter of internal consistency — a coherent set of false value judgments would not be in error but merely holding a different coherent system. Pragmatism makes truth a matter of what works — the belief that wealth is a genuine good might be pragmatically true for an agent whose purposes are served by pursuing it. Deflationism makes “true” a mere linguistic device with no real content — stripping the normative force from the Stoic verdict entirely.

Premise Three: The heart and soul of Stoicism is that most of our impressions about good and evil do not match how good and evil really are in the universe. This is Sterling’s direct statement from the 2015 ISF message. The word “match” is the correspondence relation stated plainly. Without correspondence theory, this claim has no content.

Conclusion A: Correspondence theory is a necessary condition of the Stoic project. Remove it and the system loses the normative force of “false” — and with it the justification for examination, correction, and refusal of assent.

The foundational category argument:

Premise One: Truth is correspondence of a statement with the facts. This is a complete definition of truth.

Premise Two: The demand to further define “fact” is a regress demand that misunderstands foundational categories. At some point the definitional process must stop at something accepted as fundamental. Facts are that stopping point.

Premise Three: A universe without thinking beings would contain facts but no truths. This establishes the priority of facts over truth: facts are what is — the way the world really is independently of how we think it is. Truth is a relation between a statement and that prior reality.

Conclusion B: Fact is the fundamental ontological category. Correspondence theory correctly identifies truth as the relation between a statement and the facts. The demand that “fact” be further defined in more fundamental terms is not a refutation of correspondence theory but a failure to see that foundational categories must terminate the regress.

Sterling’s argument compressed:

  1. Stoicism requires that value impressions be factually false, not merely unhelpful or unconventient.
  2. Only correspondence theory delivers the normative force of “false” as a property of beliefs.
  3. The heart and soul of Stoicism is the mismatch between impressions and how good and evil really are.
  4. Fact is the fundamental ontological category; truth is the correspondence relation between statement and fact.
  5. The regress demand against “fact” misunderstands that foundational categories must terminate the regress.
  6. Therefore correspondence theory is required, and fact as the fundamental category is its proper ground.

II. The Devitt Argument

The governing text is Michael Devitt, Realism and Truth (Princeton University Press, 1984; second edition 1991).

Devitt defends correspondence theory as explanatorily necessary — not merely a natural way of speaking about truth but the only account that explains what truth is and why it matters. His argument proceeds by establishing the explanatory inadequacy of deflationism and then defending correspondence as the correct positive account.

The argument against deflationism:

Premise One: Deflationism holds that “P is true” says nothing beyond “P” — truth is a merely logical or linguistic device for disquotation, not a real property that beliefs have or lack.

Premise Two: If truth is merely a linguistic device, it cannot explain the success of true beliefs. Why do true beliefs enable successful action while false beliefs lead to failure? On a deflationary account, this success is inexplicable — “true beliefs work better” collapses into “beliefs that work better work better,” which is uninformative.

Premise Three: The success of science — the fact that scientific beliefs produce reliable predictions and technological achievements — requires explanation. The best explanation is that scientific beliefs correspond to how the world actually is. Deflationism cannot provide this explanation.

Conclusion from deflationism argument: Deflationism is explanatorily inadequate. Truth must be a real property, not a linguistic device.

The positive correspondence argument:

Premise One: Realism holds that there is a mind-independent world — a world that is as it is regardless of what anyone believes about it. This is the ontological commitment that correspondence theory requires.

Premise Two: Truth is the property a belief has when it accurately represents the mind-independent world. The correspondence relation is a real relation between a belief and what it is about — not a relation between beliefs, not a relation between a belief and its consequences, but a relation between a belief and the world.

Premise Three: This account explains what deflationism cannot: why true beliefs enable successful action (they accurately represent the world the agent acts in), why false beliefs lead to failure (they misrepresent it), and why scientific progress is genuine progress (later theories correspond more closely to reality than earlier ones).

Conclusion from positive argument: Correspondence theory is the correct account of truth because it is the only account that is explanatorily adequate — that explains the success of true beliefs and the failure of false ones by reference to a real relation between beliefs and the world.

Devitt’s argument compressed:

  1. Deflationism makes truth a linguistic device with no explanatory content.
  2. Truth must explain the success of true beliefs and the failure of false ones.
  3. Deflationism cannot provide this explanation; therefore deflationism fails.
  4. Realism holds that there is a mind-independent world that is as it is regardless of belief.
  5. Truth is the real correspondence relation between a belief and that mind-independent world.
  6. Correspondence theory explains what deflationism cannot and is therefore the correct account.

III. Correspondence Finding

Point of structural identity — explanatory necessity as the criterion: Both Sterling and Devitt argue that correspondence theory is required — not merely natural or intuitive but explanatorily necessary. Sterling’s route: without correspondence theory, the word “false” loses its normative force and the Stoic project collapses. Devitt’s route: without correspondence theory, the success of true beliefs and the achievements of science are inexplicable. Both are making the same structural move: the alternatives to correspondence theory fail to account for something that must be accounted for, and correspondence theory is the only account that does. Explanatory necessity, not intuitive appeal, is the argument.

Point of structural identity — the refutation of deflationism: Both Sterling and Devitt make the same objection to deflationism. Deflationism strips “true” of real content — making it a linguistic device rather than a property beliefs actually have or lack. Sterling’s objection: if truth is merely a linguistic device, the Stoic verdict that value impressions are false has no determinate content and cannot carry the normative force the system requires. Devitt’s objection: if truth is merely a linguistic device, it cannot explain the success of true beliefs. The structure of the objection is the same: deflationism makes truth do less work than truth actually does, and the deficit shows in what deflationism cannot explain.

Point of structural identity — the priority of the mind-independent world: Both Sterling and Devitt hold that the world is prior to truth. Sterling’s statement: a universe without thinking beings would contain facts but no truths — facts are the fundamental ontological category, and truth is the relation between statements and those prior facts. Devitt’s statement: realism holds that the mind-independent world is as it is regardless of what anyone believes — truth is a relation between beliefs and that prior world. Both are making the same ontological move: the world’s being a certain way is not constituted by our believing it to be that way. Truth tracks the world; it does not constitute it.

Point of divergence — the Stoic grounding: Sterling argues for correspondence theory specifically because Stoicism requires it: the normative force of calling value impressions false depends on there being objective facts for impressions to fail to correspond to. Devitt argues for correspondence theory on purely epistemological and scientific grounds, without reference to ethics or value ontology. This divergence is complementary: Devitt establishes that correspondence theory is defensible in the epistemological mainstream; Sterling establishes the specific role it plays in the evaluative domain. The correspondence map covers the structural overlap; the application to value ontology is Sterling’s own contribution.

Point of divergence — fact as a foundational category: Sterling’s most distinctive contribution to C4 is his argument that fact is the fundamental ontological category and that the regress demand against “fact” misunderstands what foundational categories do. This argument has no equivalent in Devitt, who defends realism and correspondence without making the same explicit connection to foundationalism. In Sterling’s corpus, this argument closes the junction between C4 and C6: both commitments require accepting that some categories are foundational and must terminate the regress rather than being further derived. This connection is Sterling’s own and is not carried over by the correspondence.

Overall correspondence finding: The load-bearing argumentative moves are structurally equivalent. Both Sterling and Devitt argue from explanatory necessity, make the same objection to deflationism, and hold that the mind-independent world is prior to truth. Devitt’s comprehensive analytic defense provides independent philosophical corroboration for Sterling’s position argued from within the Stoic framework. The divergence in grounding is complementary. Sterling’s argument that fact is a foundational category — closing the junction between C4 and C6 — is a distinct and original contribution not present in Devitt and not carried over by the correspondence.


Sterling and the Contemporary Proponents — Argument Correspondence Map. C4: Correspondence Theory of Truth. Analysis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude.

Sterling and the Contemporary Proponents — Argument Correspondence Map C3 — Moral Realism: Sterling and Shafer-Landau

 

Sterling and the Contemporary Proponents — Argument Correspondence Map

C3 — Moral Realism: Sterling and Shafer-Landau

Analysis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude.


I. The Sterling Argument

The governing corpus passages are Stoicism, Moral Facts, and Ethical Intuitionism (Sterling, ISF February 24 and March 13, 2020), Stoicism, Moral Realism, and the Necessity of Objective Moral Facts (Sterling, ISF), Stoicism and Self-Interest: What Is Our Interest? (Sterling, August 2014), and the C3 analytical essay (Kelly, 2026 from Sterling’s theoretical foundations).

Sterling’s argument for moral realism has two distinct components: an argument from the internal requirements of Stoicism, and an argument from the elimination of alternatives.

The internal requirement argument:

Premise One: The Stoic project requires that impressions about value can be factually false — not merely unhelpful, not merely culturally contingent, but objectively false. Sterling states this in Nine Excerpts Section 6: “This belief is factually false. Note that this is not a psychological claim — it is a value claim.”

Premise Two: For an impression to be factually false about value, there must be mind-independent moral facts against which it fails to correspond. If moral claims express only preferences or social agreements, there is no basis for calling a value impression false rather than culturally contingent or personally unhelpful.

Premise Three: Stoicism is incoherent without moral facts. The claim that externals are neither good nor evil is a fact about the universe, independent of how we want things to be. If it is not a fact, it is merely a Stoic preference, and the entire project of examining and correcting value impressions collapses into preference management.

Conclusion A: Moral realism is a necessary condition of the Stoic project. If there are no objective moral facts, the Stoic project fails utterly.

The elimination of alternatives argument:

Premise One: Moral truths are necessary, not contingent. They have no source in the way empirical facts have sources, just as 2+2=4 has no source. They could not have been otherwise.

Premise Two: Moral terms cannot be heard, smelt, tasted, seen, or felt. They are not accessible through sensory experience. Any account that grounds moral knowledge in sensory experience therefore fails to account for how moral knowledge is possible at all.

Premise Three: The alternatives to moral realism are moral constructivism (moral facts are produced by rational procedure or social agreement) and moral nihilism (there are no moral facts). Constructivism fails because constructed values are dependent on the minds and procedures that generate them and therefore not genuinely mind-independent. Nihilism eliminates moral knowledge altogether.

Conclusion B: Intuitionism or nihilism — no third alternative. Moral realism, grounded in direct rational apprehension of necessary moral truths, is the only position that preserves moral knowledge without reducing it to preference or eliminating it.

The three test cases (Document 19 — Stoicism and Self-Interest): The Smith/Jones case, the Ring of Gyges, and the dying molester each eliminate one layer of the instrumental account of virtue’s goodness. When all layers are stripped, the only surviving position is that virtue is intrinsically good — good in itself, not good because of what it produces. Intrinsic goodness requires moral realism: if virtue is intrinsically good, its goodness is a real property, not a projection.

Sterling’s argument compressed:

  1. The Stoic project requires that value impressions can be factually false.
  2. Factual falsity requires mind-independent moral facts against which impressions fail to correspond.
  3. Moral truths are necessary, not contingent, and not accessible through sensory experience.
  4. Constructivism produces mind-dependent values; nihilism eliminates moral facts entirely.
  5. Intuitionism or nihilism — no third alternative survives.
  6. Therefore objective moral facts exist, virtue is intrinsically good, and moral realism is true.

II. The Shafer-Landau Argument

The governing text is Russ Shafer-Landau, Moral Realism: A Defence (Oxford University Press, 2003).

Shafer-Landau defends non-naturalist moral realism — the claim that there are objective moral truths not reducible to natural properties — through three interconnected arguments: an argument against reduction, an argument for mind-independence, and an argument for moral supervenience.

The argument against reduction:

Premise One: Moral properties are not identical to natural properties. For any natural property N proposed as the reduction of a moral property, it remains an open question whether N is genuinely good or genuinely right. This is Moore’s open question argument, which Shafer-Landau endorses as establishing the non-identity of moral and natural properties.

Premise Two: If moral properties are not identical to natural properties, they cannot be derived from natural properties by any logical or empirical inference. The is/ought gap is real.

Conclusion from reduction argument: Moral properties are sui generis — genuinely distinct from natural properties and not reducible to them.

The argument for mind-independence:

Premise One: Moral claims purport to be true or false independently of what anyone believes, prefers, or agrees to. This is what moral discourse is about: not what we happen to endorse, but what is genuinely right or wrong.

Premise Two: If moral claims are true or false independently of what anyone believes, then moral facts are mind-independent. They hold whether or not anyone recognizes them, affirms them, or cares about them.

Premise Three: Constructivist accounts make moral facts dependent on the procedures, agreements, or attitudes of rational agents. They therefore cannot account for the mind-independence that moral discourse presupposes.

Conclusion from mind-independence argument: Moral facts are mind-independent. Constructivism fails as an account of moral truth.

The argument from moral supervenience:

Premise One: Moral properties supervene on non-moral properties: no two situations can be identical in all non-moral respects while differing in moral properties. This supervenience is necessary, not contingent.

Premise Two: Necessary supervenience requires explanation. It cannot be a brute coincidence that moral properties co-vary necessarily with non-moral properties.

Premise Three: The best explanation of necessary moral supervenience is that moral properties are real features of the world that are fixed by non-moral features without being identical to them — which is precisely what non-naturalist moral realism claims.

Conclusion from supervenience argument: Non-naturalist moral realism provides the best explanation of necessary moral supervenience.

Shafer-Landau’s argument compressed:

  1. Moral properties are not identical to natural properties (open question argument).
  2. Moral claims purport to be true independently of what anyone believes or agrees to.
  3. Constructivism makes moral facts mind-dependent and cannot account for this independence.
  4. Moral properties necessarily supervene on non-moral properties without being reducible to them.
  5. Non-naturalist moral realism best explains this necessary supervenience.
  6. Therefore objective moral facts exist, are mind-independent, and are not reducible to natural properties.

III. Correspondence Finding

Point of structural identity — mind-independence as the decisive criterion: Both Sterling and Shafer-Landau identify the same criterion as what moral realism requires: moral facts must be mind-independent. Sterling states this as the condition for calling a value impression factually false rather than culturally contingent. Shafer-Landau states this as what moral discourse presupposes and what constructivism cannot deliver. The argumentative move is identical: moral claims are not about what anyone believes, prefers, or agrees to — they are about how things actually are in the evaluative domain.

Point of structural identity — the refutation of constructivism: Both Sterling and Shafer-Landau make the same objection to constructivism. Constructivism produces values that are dependent on the minds and procedures that generate them. Sterling’s objection: a constructed value is not a fact about the universe independent of how we want things to be. Shafer-Landau’s objection: constructivism makes moral facts mind-dependent and cannot account for the mind-independence moral discourse presupposes. The structure of the objection is the same: constructivism relocates moral facts from the world to the procedure, and in doing so loses what moral realism requires.

Point of structural identity — moral facts as necessary rather than contingent: Sterling holds that moral truths are necessary, not contingent — they have no source, just as 2+2=4 has no source, and could not have been otherwise. Shafer-Landau’s supervenience argument establishes the same modal status: necessary moral supervenience requires that moral properties are real features of the world fixed necessarily by non-moral features. Both are making the same claim about the modal status of moral facts: they are necessary truths, not contingent ones, and their necessity requires a realist rather than constructivist or nihilist account.

Point of divergence — the Stoic grounding: Sterling’s moral realism is specifically grounded in the requirements of the Stoic project: if there are no objective moral facts, the project of examining and correcting value impressions collapses. The moral facts Sterling cares about are specific: that virtue is the only genuine good, that vice is the only genuine evil, that externals are indifferent. Shafer-Landau defends moral realism in general — the claim that some moral facts are objective — without committing to any specific moral content. His defense is compatible with a wide range of moral positions. Sterling’s defense is inseparable from the specific Stoic value ontology. The correspondence is structural; the specific moral content is Sterling’s own.

Point of divergence — the three test cases: Sterling’s most distinctive argumentative contribution to C3 is the three test cases from Document 19 — Smith/Jones, Ring of Gyges, dying molester — which eliminate instrumental accounts of virtue’s goodness by stripping away each layer of instrumental benefit. This argument has no equivalent in Shafer-Landau. It is Sterling’s original contribution to the case for moral realism, developed within the specific context of Stoic self-interest theory. The correspondence map covers the structural overlap; this argument stands independently in the corpus as Sterling’s own.

Overall correspondence finding: The load-bearing argumentative moves are structurally equivalent. Both Sterling and Shafer-Landau establish mind-independence as the decisive criterion, make the same objection to constructivism, and hold that moral facts are necessary rather than contingent. Shafer-Landau’s comprehensive analytic defense provides independent philosophical corroboration for Sterling’s position argued from within the Stoic framework. The divergence in grounding — Stoic requirements versus general moral realism — is complementary: Shafer-Landau establishes that moral realism is defensible in the analytic mainstream; Sterling establishes the specific moral facts the Stoic framework requires. Sterling’s three test cases are a distinct and original contribution not present in Shafer-Landau and not carried over by the correspondence.


Sterling and the Contemporary Proponents — Argument Correspondence Map. C3: Moral Realism. Analysis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude.

Sterling and the Contemporary Proponents — Argument Correspondence Map C2 — Libertarian Free Will: Sterling and O’Connor

 

Sterling and the Contemporary Proponents — Argument Correspondence Map

C2 — Libertarian Free Will: Sterling and O’Connor

Analysis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude.


I. The Sterling Argument

The governing corpus passages are Free Will and Causation (Sterling, ISF), the C2 analytical essay (Kelly, 2026 from Sterling’s theoretical foundations), and One Act of Correct Engagement (Kelly, 2026).

Sterling’s argument for libertarian free will proceeds from what the Stoic framework requires rather than from a purely metaphysical starting point. The structure is a transcendental argument: given that the Stoic system makes the claims it makes, libertarian free will must be true for those claims to be coherent.

Premise One: Assent is the only thing in our control. This is the foundational Stoic claim. It must mean that assent genuinely originates in the agent — not merely that it passes through the agent, not merely that it flows from internal states without external constraint, but that the agent is its true cause.

Premise Two: The framework holds that agents are responsible for false value judgments. Responsibility requires that the agent could have done otherwise. If assent were causally inevitable, false judgment would not be an error attributable to the agent but an unavoidable outcome. Praise and blame would be misplaced projections rather than accurate evaluations.

Premise Three: The Pause is a real decision point. At the moment between impression and assent, multiple alternatives are genuinely open. The outcome has not been fixed by prior causes. Both assent and withholding remain available until the will moves. This is not epistemic uncertainty about which determined outcome will occur; it is metaphysical openness.

Premise Four: Compatibilism does not capture what the framework requires. Compatibilism redefines freedom as action flowing from internal states without external constraint. But this preserves neither genuine origination nor real alternatives. It replaces authorship with internal causation in a weak sense. Under compatibilism, the agent is a locus of events, not their originator. The dichotomy of control under compatibilism becomes a distinction between types of causes, not a distinction between what is truly up to us and what is not.

Conclusion: Libertarian free will — the claim that the agent is the genuine first cause of his assents, that alternative possibilities are metaphysically real at the point of choice, and that the act is not determined by prior causes — is not optional in Sterling’s framework. It is what makes assent a genuine act, control a real property, responsibility a justified attribution, and eudaimonia a reachable state.

Sterling’s argument compressed:

  1. Assent is in our control means assent genuinely originates in the agent.
  2. Responsibility for false judgment requires that the agent could have done otherwise.
  3. The Pause is a real decision point with metaphysically open alternatives.
  4. Compatibilism reduces authorship to internal causation in a weak sense and cannot ground the dichotomy of control.
  5. Therefore genuine origination — libertarian free will — is required.
  6. The agent is a true first cause of his assents, not a sophisticated conduit for prior causes.

II. The O’Connor Argument

The governing text is Timothy O’Connor, Persons and Causes: The Metaphysics of Free Will (Oxford University Press, 2000).

O’Connor defends agent causation as the correct account of free action. His argument proceeds by establishing what genuine freedom requires, showing that event-causal accounts cannot deliver it, and then arguing that agent causation is metaphysically coherent.

Premise One: Genuine freedom requires that the agent be the originating cause of his action — not that his action be caused by his desires or beliefs as prior events, but that the agent as such is the cause. This is the distinction between event causation (prior events cause the action) and agent causation (the agent causes the action directly).

Premise Two: Event-causal accounts of free will, including compatibilist accounts, cannot ground genuine origination. If the action is caused by prior events — including events internal to the agent such as desires and beliefs — then the agent is not the originating cause; the prior events are. The agent is the location of a causal process, not its source.

Premise Three: Agent causation is metaphysically coherent. Persons are substances with irreducible causal powers that are not exhausted by the sum of their physical states. These causal powers are exercised directly by the agent, not mediated through prior events. The agent causes the action not by being the last event in a causal chain but by being the kind of substance that originates actions.

Premise Four: Agent causation makes genuine alternative possibilities real. Because the agent is the originating cause and not a conduit for prior causes, at any decision point more than one outcome is genuinely open. The prior state of the universe does not fix a single outcome. The agent determines which possibility becomes actual.

Conclusion: Persons are irreducible agents who genuinely originate their actions. Free will is not a compatibilist redescription of determined processes. It is the real causal power of a substance to produce actions that are not outputs of prior event-causal chains.

O’Connor’s argument compressed:

  1. Genuine freedom requires the agent as originating cause, not prior events as originating cause.
  2. Event-causal accounts including compatibilism locate causation in prior events, not in the agent as such.
  3. Agent causation is metaphysically coherent: persons have irreducible causal powers exercised directly.
  4. Agent causation makes alternative possibilities genuinely real at the decision point.
  5. Therefore persons are irreducible agents who genuinely originate their actions.
  6. Free will is real causal power, not compatibilist redescription.

III. Correspondence Finding

Point of structural identity — origination as the decisive criterion: Both Sterling and O’Connor identify the same criterion as what genuine freedom requires: the agent must be the originating cause, not a conduit for prior causes. Sterling states this as the difference between assent that originates in the agent and assent that merely passes through the agent. O’Connor states this as the distinction between agent causation (the agent as such causes the action) and event causation (prior events cause the action). The argumentative move is identical: compatibilism fails because it preserves the location of the action in the agent while shifting the origination to prior events or states.

Point of structural identity — the refutation of compatibilism: Both Sterling and O’Connor make the same precise objection to compatibilism. Compatibilism redefines freedom as action flowing from internal states without external constraint. Sterling’s objection: this replaces authorship with internal causation in a weak sense — the agent becomes a locus of events, not their originator. O’Connor’s objection: event-causal accounts locate causation in prior events, not in the agent as such, leaving the agent as the location of a causal process rather than its source. The structure of the objection is the same: compatibilism identifies the wrong level at which origination must occur.

Point of structural identity — genuine alternative possibilities: Both Sterling and O’Connor hold that at the decision point, more than one outcome is metaphysically real. Sterling’s Pause is precisely this: a moment at which both assent and withholding remain genuinely available, not merely epistemically uncertain. O’Connor’s agent causation makes alternative possibilities real by grounding them in the agent’s irreducible causal powers rather than in prior event-causal chains. Both explicitly distinguish this from mere epistemic uncertainty about which determined outcome will occur.

Point of divergence — the metaphysical framework: Sterling’s argument is transcendental in structure — libertarian free will is required by what the Stoic framework claims. O’Connor’s argument is directly metaphysical — he defends agent causation as a positive account of what free action is, independently of any practical or ethical system that requires it. This divergence is philosophically significant but not architecturally problematic. Sterling’s transcendental route establishes that libertarian free will must be true given what Stoicism claims. O’Connor’s direct route establishes that it is metaphysically coherent independently. The two arguments are complementary: Sterling shows why the framework needs it; O’Connor shows that what the framework needs is philosophically defensible.

Point of divergence — substance dualism as background condition: In Sterling’s framework, libertarian free will is inseparable from substance dualism. The Pause is real because the rational faculty is a distinct substance with genuine causal independence from the physical order. Without C1, C2 lacks its metaphysical locus. O’Connor defends agent causation within a framework that is not explicitly committed to substance dualism — he argues that persons as substances have irreducible causal powers, but his account of what kind of substance a person is is more minimal than Sterling’s. For the corpus, the integration of C1 and C2 is architecturally essential and is not fully present in O’Connor alone.

Overall correspondence finding: The load-bearing argumentative moves are structurally equivalent. Both Sterling and O’Connor identify origination as the criterion genuine freedom requires, make the same precise objection to compatibilism, and hold that alternative possibilities are metaphysically real at the decision point. O’Connor’s direct metaphysical defense of agent causation provides independent philosophical corroboration for what Sterling’s transcendental argument establishes as necessary. The divergence in metaphysical framework is complementary rather than conflicting. The absence of full C1/C2 integration in O’Connor is noted as a gap the corpus fills that O’Connor does not.


Sterling and the Contemporary Proponents — Argument Correspondence Map. C2: Libertarian Free Will. Analysis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude.

Sterling and the Contemporary Proponents — Argument Correspondence Map C1 — Substance Dualism: Sterling and Swinburne

 

Sterling and the Contemporary Proponents — Argument Correspondence Map

C1 — Substance Dualism: Sterling and Swinburne

Analysis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude.


I. The Sterling Argument

The governing corpus passage is A Brief Reply, Re: Dualism (Sterling, ISF January 20, 2012). Sterling’s argument has three premises and a conclusion.

Premise One: I am absolutely certain, beyond any possibility of error, that I have qualitative mental experiences. This certainty is stronger than any other proposition I hold.

Premise Two: Experience consistently tells me that I make choices on the basis of the qualitative content of these experiences — following a logical proof, turning down veal on the basis of a moral argument, consciously reconsidering a judgment after extended philosophical discussion.

Premise Three: Modern physics accounts for brain activity only in terms of particles undergoing electro-chemical processes. None of those particles or processes have properties like “the feeling of pain” or “the concept of modus ponens.”

Conclusion: The mental cannot be identified with the physical. A philosopher today who claims the mind is a form of matter has never explained how particles undergoing electro-chemical processes could have such properties. Dualism follows not from ancient Stoic metaphysics but from the collision between the certainty of qualitative mental experience and the explanatory poverty of modern physical description.

The C1 analytical essay (Kelly, 2026) extends this argument architecturally. The rational faculty must be a distinct substance because the entire Stoic system requires a real self/external boundary. If mind is a bodily process, the dichotomy of control becomes a practical convenience rather than a fact about reality. If assent is a physical event among physical events, it is not uniquely in our control. If consciousness is reducible to neural states, the first-person act of judgment is identical to a third-person describable process — and subjectivity, intentionality, qualia, and ownership of thought are left unaccounted for.

Sterling’s argument compressed:

  1. Qualitative mental experience is certain beyond doubt.
  2. Choices are made on the basis of qualitative content.
  3. Physical description cannot account for qualitative properties.
  4. Therefore the mental is not identical to the physical.
  5. Therefore a distinct mental substance exists.
  6. Therefore the rational faculty is genuinely distinct from the body and all external conditions.

II. The Swinburne Argument

The governing text is Richard Swinburne, The Evolution of the Soul (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1986), particularly Part One.

Swinburne’s argument proceeds from conceivability to possibility to actual distinctness.

Premise One: It is conceivable that I exist without my body — that the soul continues while the body is destroyed. Conceivability here means that no logical contradiction is involved in the supposition.

Premise Two: If a state of affairs is conceivable without logical contradiction, it is metaphysically possible.

Premise Three: If it is metaphysically possible for X to exist without Y, then X is not identical to Y and is not constituted by Y.

Conclusion: The soul is not identical to the body and is not constituted by bodily states. It is a genuinely distinct substance.

Swinburne supplements this with a property argument. Mental properties — the felt quality of pain, the intentional directedness of thought, the first-person character of experience — are not identical to physical properties and cannot be derived from them by any physical law. Since physical substances have only physical properties, a substance with irreducibly mental properties cannot be a physical substance. The soul is therefore a non-physical substance.

Swinburne’s argument compressed:

  1. It is conceivable without contradiction that the soul exists without the body.
  2. Conceivability without contradiction entails metaphysical possibility.
  3. Metaphysical possibility of separation entails genuine distinctness.
  4. Mental properties are irreducibly non-physical.
  5. A substance with irreducibly non-physical properties is not a physical substance.
  6. Therefore the soul is a genuinely distinct non-physical substance.

III. Correspondence Finding

Point of structural identity — the irreducibility claim: Both Sterling and Swinburne make the same foundational move: they establish that mental properties cannot be accounted for within physical description. Sterling’s route is epistemological — the certainty of qualitative experience combined with the explanatory poverty of physical science. Swinburne’s route is modal — the conceivability of the soul’s existence without the body. Both arrive at the same structural conclusion: the mental is not identical to the physical and cannot be derived from it. This is the load-bearing argumentative move C1 requires, and both philosophers make it independently.

Point of structural identity — qualitative properties as the decisive evidence: Sterling’s Premise Three focuses on properties like “the feeling of pain” and “the concept of modus ponens” as what physical description cannot account for. Swinburne’s property argument focuses on the felt quality of pain and the intentional directedness of thought as irreducibly mental. Both identify qualitative and intentional properties as the precise point where physicalism fails. The evidential base is the same.

Point of structural identity — the positive thesis: Both conclude not merely that physicalism is wrong but that a genuinely distinct non-physical substance exists. This positive thesis is what distinguishes their position from property dualism, which acknowledges irreducibly mental properties while denying a distinct mental substance. Sterling needs the positive thesis because the prohairesis must be a genuine agent, not merely a property of a physical agent. Swinburne defends the positive thesis on the same grounds: a substance with irreducibly mental properties cannot be a physical substance.

Point of divergence — the route to the conclusion: Sterling’s argument is grounded in the certainty of first-person experience and the failure of physical science to account for it. It is an argument from explanatory inadequacy. Swinburne’s primary argument is modal — from conceivability to possibility to distinctness. The modal route is more formally rigorous but more vulnerable to the objection that conceivability does not entail possibility. Sterling’s route is more direct: he does not need to establish metaphysical possibility; he establishes that physical description simply lacks the resources to account for what is already known with certainty. For the Sterling corpus, Sterling’s route is the stronger argument because it does not depend on the conceivability-possibility inference.

Point of divergence — the Stoic context: Sterling develops his dualism specifically against modern scientific physics and in service of the dichotomy of control. The rational faculty must be a distinct substance because the Stoic system requires a real self/external boundary and genuine ownership of assent. Swinburne develops his dualism within the context of natural theology — the soul’s distinctness is connected to its survival of bodily death and its relationship to God. This divergence is architecturally significant: Sterling’s dualism is entirely secular in its motivation and Stoic in its application. Swinburne’s dualism carries theological implications that are not load-bearing for the Sterling corpus and should not be imported into it.

Overall correspondence finding: The load-bearing argumentative moves are structurally equivalent. Both Sterling and Swinburne establish the irreducibility of mental properties, identify qualitative and intentional properties as the decisive evidence, and conclude that a genuinely distinct non-physical substance exists. The routes differ — explanatory inadequacy versus modal argument — with Sterling’s route being more direct and less vulnerable to standard objections. The theological dimension of Swinburne’s account is not present in Sterling and is not carried over by the correspondence. What the correspondence establishes is that Sterling’s C1 argument, made concisely in a 2012 ISF post, is structurally equivalent to the most rigorous contemporary book-length defense of the same position.


Sterling and the Contemporary Proponents — Argument Correspondence Map. C1: Substance Dualism. Analysis: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude.

How to Conduct the Five Steps: A Guide for the Beginner

 

How to Conduct the Five Steps: A Guide for the Beginner

Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Five-Step Method and commitment-to-step mapping: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.


Epictetus tells us in the Enchiridion (48) that the things most people are concerned about — reputation, wealth, position, health, the opinions and actions of others — are precisely the things that are neither good nor evil. They are externals. Yet a beginner in Stoicism carries a value landscape that treats these things as genuine goods and genuine evils. Sterling puts the consequence plainly: the heart and soul of Stoicism is that most impressions about good and evil do not match how good and evil really are in the universe.

This means that for the beginner, most impressions he encounters concerning externals arrive already carrying a false value component. Not as exceptions. As the standard condition of an unreformed mind. The five steps — Reception, Recognition, Pause, Examination, Decision — are the structure through which that unreformed condition is addressed, one impression at a time.

Each step is governed by specific philosophical commitments. What those commitments require at each step determines what correct conduct consists in. What follows is a guide to that conduct.


Reception

The impression arrives. For the beginner it typically arrives pre-colored: the job loss presents itself as a genuine evil, the criticism as a genuine harm, the desired object as a genuine good. The first task is not to evaluate this but to receive it correctly.

Correct Reception requires recognizing that the impression is not a sensation to be managed. It is a propositional claim about reality — a claim about the evaluative status of what has just occurred. The beginner must receive it as such. Not: something happened and I feel bad. But: something happened and this impression is claiming that what happened is genuinely evil. That distinction — between a psychological event and a truth-claim — is everything. Reception conducted correctly receives the impression as a claim that is either true or false by reference to moral facts that exist independently of the impression making them.

The failure at Reception is receiving the impression as a feeling rather than a claim. A feeling is not true or false — only comfortable or uncomfortable. A claim about an evaluative fact is true or false. The beginner who receives a false impression as a feeling has no grounds for examining it. The beginner who receives it as a claim has taken the first step toward correcting it.


Recognition

The impression has arrived. Now the beginner must locate himself in relation to it. This is the step most likely to be skipped, because the impression arrives with such apparent immediacy that the beginner finds himself already inside the situation rather than facing it as a faculty that receives claims.

Correct Recognition requires locating yourself as the rational faculty receiving the impression — not as the situation the impression concerns. Not: I am the person who has lost the job. But: I am the faculty that has received an impression about a job loss. The job is an external. The impression is what I am encountering. I am not what I am encountering.

This is the self/external boundary made practical. The rational faculty — you, in the strict Stoic sense — is genuinely distinct from everything the impression concerns. Everything the impression is about is on one side of the line. You are on the other. Recognition is the act of locating yourself on the correct side.

Recognition also requires making the claim explicit: stating internally what the impression is asserting about the evaluative status of what has occurred. That explicit formulation is what becomes available for examination at Step Four. Recognition is not complete until the claim has been stated, even silently: this impression is saying that this external is genuinely evil.


Pause

The claim is before the faculty. Now the beginner must hold the process open before assent completes. This is the step of maximum difficulty — not because it is philosophically complex but because the habit of automatic assent is deeply established. The impression arrives, the claim is registered, and the habitual response moves immediately toward assent before the Pause can be inserted.

The Pause is not a technique. It is a genuine act of interruption — the beginner, as the true originating cause of his own assents, holding the process open. The outcome is not fixed. Both assent and withholding remain genuinely available. The beginner is at a fork, not at a point on a rail. That is what the Pause is: the fork made explicit and held.

For the beginner under strong provocation, the Pause may be brief and difficult to sustain. It must be attempted regardless. Each successful Pause — even a partial one — is genuine practice. The Pause fails in two ways: the beginner does not try to stop because he has already accepted that his response is determined; or the beginner goes through the motions of stopping while the process has already completed. Both failures share the same root: the Pause is nominal rather than real.


Examination

The claim is before the faculty and the outcome is held open. Now the beginner tests the claim against the moral facts. This is the step that most requires understanding — because the beginner may not yet know how to conduct an examination as distinct from conducting an argument or consulting a feeling.

The examination is not an argument. It is a directed act of attention. The beginner turns the rational faculty toward the foundational moral fact and holds the impression against it. The foundational moral fact: virtue is the only genuine good, vice the only genuine evil, everything else is neither. The impression is claiming that an external has genuine evaluative status. The examination asks: does that claim match the moral fact?

The path of the examination is short and direct. This impression claims that this external is genuinely evil. Externals are neither good nor evil. Therefore this impression is false. The tracing reaches the foundational truth quickly because the foundational truth is directly apprehensible — not the conclusion of a chain of argument but seen immediately by the rational faculty that attends to it. The examination is complete when the seeing occurs.

Three failures are possible at Examination. If there are no moral facts to test against, the examination assesses whether the impression is useful or comfortable — and produces an adjustment rather than a correction. If the moral facts are unstructured, the examination detects that something is wrong but cannot locate where. If the foundational truths are not directly apprehensible, the examination is overtaken by sophisticated rationalizations that argue for the impression’s validity. The examination has authority only when the moral fact is directly apprehensible and the impression is held against it without mediation.


Decision

The examination has produced a verdict: the impression is false. The Decision closes what the Pause held open. The beginner must now act on the verdict.

The Decision is a genuine act of origination — not the victory of one psychological force over another, not the automatic completion of a process, but the beginner as the true cause of his assents refusing to accept a false claim. The act is his. He is its source.

When the Decision succeeds, it accomplishes something precise. Withholding assent from a false impression is not merely an act of psychological resistance. It is a truth-aligning act: the beginner brings his judgment into correspondence with the moral fact the examination revealed. The impression claimed the external was genuinely evil. The moral fact is that it is not. The Decision aligns the judgment with the fact.

For the beginner, the Decision is where the examination most frequently fails to complete. The verdict may be reached and still the habitual assent follows — the impression is strong, the habit is deep, the causal momentum carries through before the withholding can be performed. This is not a failure of the examination. It is the condition the training addresses. Each Decision that fails despite a correct verdict still represents genuine practice: the Pause was held, the examination was conducted, the verdict was reached. When the Decision fails, the failure is itself an external. Note it. Return to Reception with the next impression.


The Complete Sequence

Receive the impression as a truth-claim about an evaluative fact. Locate yourself as the faculty receiving the claim, not as the situation the claim concerns. Make the claim explicit. Hold the process open as a genuine act of origination. Test the claim against the foundational moral facts by directing attention to where the claim fails. Originate the act of withholding assent, bringing the judgment into correspondence with the moral fact the examination revealed.

This sequence will reveal false impressions at almost every step concerning externals. That is the beginner’s condition. The five steps are the structure of practice — the procedural form through which the false value landscape is progressively reformed, one impression at a time, until the reformed landscape begins to generate fewer false impressions automatically. That progressive reformation is what Stoic character formation consists in.


Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Five-Step Method and commitment-to-step mapping: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude. Governing texts: Epictetus, Enchiridion 48.3; Core Stoicism (Sterling).

Thursday, April 30, 2026

The Five Steps for the Beginner: Conduct Under the Six Commitments

 

The Five Steps for the Beginner: Conduct Under the Six Commitments

Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Five-Step Method and commitment-to-step mapping: Dave Kelly. Analysis and prose rendering: Claude, 2026. Governing text: Epictetus, Enchiridion 48; One Act of Correct Engagement (Kelly, 2026); Core Stoicism (Sterling).


The Governing Situation

Epictetus identifies in Enchiridion 48 the class of impressions that most concern the beginner: those concerning reputation, wealth, position, health, the opinions and actions of others. These are externals — things neither good nor evil. Yet the beginner’s unreformed value landscape treats them as genuine goods and genuine evils. Sterling’s formulation states the consequence directly: the heart and soul of Stoicism is that most impressions about good and evil do not match how good and evil really are in the universe. For the beginner, this means that most impressions he will encounter concerning externals carry false value components not as exceptions but as the standard condition of a mind not yet trained.

The five steps are therefore not an occasional corrective intervention. They are the structure of practice itself — the procedural form through which the beginner’s false value landscape is progressively reformed, one impression at a time. Each step is governed by specific philosophical commitments that make the step possible and determine what correct conduct at that step consists in.

The commitment-to-step mapping is as follows:


Reception

Commitments Active: Correspondence TheoryMoral Realism

The impression arrives. It does not ask permission. It presents itself with apparent immediacy — as though what it says about the situation is simply how the situation is. For the beginner, the impression will typically arrive pre-colored: the job loss presents itself as a genuine evil, the criticism presents itself as a genuine harm, the desired object presents itself as a genuine good.

Correspondence theory governs the conduct of Reception before the beginner does anything. The impression is not a sensation to be managed. It is a propositional claim about reality — specifically, a claim about the evaluative status of what has just occurred. The beginner must receive it as such. Not: something happened and I feel bad. But: something happened and this impression is claiming that what happened is genuinely evil. The distinction is the difference between a psychological event and a truth-claim. Reception conducted correctly receives the impression as a truth-claim.

Moral realism supplies what the truth-claim is claiming about. There are moral facts — real, mind-independent features of the evaluative structure of the universe. The impression is claiming that what has occurred has a specific evaluative status: genuinely good, genuinely evil, or indifferent. That status is already fixed independently of the impression’s claiming it. The impression may or may not be right. Moral realism establishes that there is a fact of the matter either way.

Conduct instruction: Receive the impression as a claim, not as a report. Note that it is saying something about the evaluative status of what has occurred — not just registering that something occurred. Do not yet evaluate the claim. Simply receive it as a claim about something real.

Failure signature: If moral realism is not operative, the impression does not arrive as a claim about something real. It arrives as a stimulus with no fact of the matter attached to it. What follows is not the evaluation of a truth-claim but the management of a psychological event. If correspondence theory is not operative, the impression arrives as an expression of feeling rather than a proposition with a truth value. The beginner who receives the impression as a feeling rather than a claim has no grounds for examining it — feelings are not true or false, only comfortable or uncomfortable.


Recognition

Commitments Active  Substance Dualism — Correspondence Theory

The impression has arrived. Recognition is the step at which the beginner locates himself in relation to it. For the beginner this is the step most likely to be skipped — because the impression arrives with such apparent immediacy that the beginner experiences himself as already inside it rather than as the faculty that is receiving it.

Substance dualism governs the conduct of Recognition. The rational faculty — the beginner himself, in the strict Stoic sense — is a genuinely distinct substance from everything the impression concerns. The job, the reputation, the opinion of others, the state of the body: all of these are on one side of the line. The rational faculty is on the other. Recognition is the act of locating oneself on the correct side of that line. Not: I am the person who has lost the job. But: I am the faculty that has received an impression about a job loss. The job is an external. The impression is uencountering.

Correspondence theory at Recognition specifies what the beginner is recognizing about the impression itself — that it is a claim, with propositional content, that can be assessed for truth or falsity. Recognition makes the claim explicit: this impression is asserting that this external has this evaluative status. That explicit formulation is what becomes available for examination at Step Four.

Conduct instruction: Locate yourself as the faculty receiving the impression, not as the situation the impression concerns. Make the claim explicit: state what the impression is asserting about the evaluative status of what has occurred. This does not require spoken language — it requires the internal act of holding the claim as a claim rather than as reality.

Failure signature: If substance dualism is not operative, the beginner identifies himself with the situation — the self/external boundary collapses and the impression is experienced as constituting the agent’s state rather than making a claim the agent can assess. If correspondence theory is not operative at Recognition, the claim is not made explicit and passes unexamined into the next moment.


Pause

Commitments Active: Libertarian Free Will — Substance Dualism

The impression has been received as a claim and the claim has been made explicit. The Pause holds the process open before assent completes. For the beginner this is the step of maximum difficulty — not because it is philosophically complex but because the habit of automatic assent is deeply established. The impression arrives, the claim is registered, and the beginner’s habitual response moves immediately toward assent before the Pause can be inserted.

Libertarian free will governs the conduct of the Pause. The Pause is not a delay in a determined sequence. It is a genuine interruption — an act of origination by which the beginner, as the true cause of his own assents, holds the process open. The outcome is not fixed. Both assent and withholding remain genuinely available. The beginner is at a fork, not at a point on a rail. The Pause is real only if the beginner is the genuine originating cause of the interruption — if the causal power to stop belongs to the rational faculty and not to the physical momentum of the arriving impression.

Substance dualism grounds the Pause’s possibility. The rational faculty is categorically distinct from the physical causal order that carries the impression. The interruption is possible because the faculty that interrupts is not continuous with the process it is interrupting. If the beginner were merely a physical process among physical processes, the Pause would be a longer interval in a determined sequence. Because the rational faculty is a distinct substance with genuine causal independence, the Pause is a real act of interruption.

Conduct instruction: Stop before assenting. Not as a technique but as a genuine act — hold the outcome open. The impression has made its claim. The claim has not yet been accepted or rejected. That moment of genuine openness is what the Pause is. For the beginner under strong provocation, the Pause may be brief and difficult to sustain. It must be attempted regardless. Each successful Pause — even a partial one — is genuine practice.

Failure signature: The Pause fails in two forms. The first is explicit: the beginner does not try to stop because he has implicitly accepted that his response is already determined. The second is subtle: the beginner goes through the motions of stopping while the process has already completed. Both forms share the same root: the Pause is nominal rather than real. What follows from a nominal Pause can look like examination from outside. It is completion of a determined sequence, not genuine engagement.


Examination

Commitments Active: FoundationalismEthical IntuitionismMoral Realism

The claim is before the faculty and the outcome is held open. Examination tests the claim against the moral facts. For the beginner, this is the step that most requires understanding — because the beginner may not yet know how to conduct an examination as distinct from conducting an argument or consulting a feeling.

Moral realism establishes what the examination is examining against. There are moral facts — fixed, mind-independent, real. The primary fact: virtue is the only genuine good, vice the only genuine evil, everything else is neither. The impression is claiming that an external has genuine evaluative status. Moral realism establishes that this claim is either true or false by reference to a fact that exists independently of the impression making it.

Foundationalism structures the examination so that it can be conducted systematically rather than globally. The beginner does not need to examine the impression against everything he knows. He traces it to the specific point in the moral dependency structure where it fails. Most impressions concerning externals fail at the same derived theorem: externals are neither good nor evil. That theorem derives from the foundational truth: virtue is the only genuine good. The examination traces the path: this impression claims that this external is genuinely evil. Externals are neither good nor evil. Therefore this impression is false. The tracing is short, direct, and anchored to the foundational truth — not a lengthy deliberation but a precise location of where the claim fails.

Ethical intuitionism supplies the epistemic authority that makes the examination conclusive rather than merely inferential. The foundational moral truths are directly apprehensible by the rational faculty — not derived from sensory observation, not the conclusion of a chain of argument, but seen directly by the faculty that attends to them. The beginner who examines an impression and tests it against the foundational truth that virtue is the only genuine good does not need to complete a philosophical argument. He needs to attend — to turn the rational faculty toward the moral fact and hold the impression against it. The seeing is direct. The examination is complete when the seeing occurs. Without intuitionism the examination would require completing an argument every time — and arguments can be countered with arguments. With intuitionism the examination has authority: the moral fact is directly apprehensible and the impression either matches it or it does not.

Conduct instruction: Test the impression against the foundational moral fact. Ask: is what this impression claims about the evaluative status of this external correct? Trace the claim to where it fails: this is an external; externals are neither good nor evil; therefore this impression — which claims this external is genuinely good or genuinely evil — is false. The examination does not require a lengthy internal argument. It requires directed attention to the moral fact the impression is contradicting.

Failure signatures: If moral realism is not operative, the examination has no fixed target. The beginner assesses whether the impression is useful or comfortable rather than whether it is true. The verdict is “unhelpful attitude” rather than “false impression.” If foundationalism is not operative, the examination is unfocused. The beginner detects that something is wrong but cannot locate the source. Corrections are peripheral rather than foundational. If ethical intuitionism is not operative, the examination stalls or is overridden. Without direct apprehension, the beginner has only arguments, and arguments can be countered with arguments. A sophisticated rationalization survives the examination because the examination has no authority to override it.


Decision

Commitments Active: Libertarian Free Will  — Correspondence Theory

The examination has produced a verdict: the impression is false. It claims the external has genuine evaluative status when the moral facts establish it does not. The Decision closes what the Pause held open. The beginner must now act on the verdict.

Libertarian free will makes the Decision a genuine act rather than the automatic completion of a process. The verdict is in. The Pause is still holding the outcome open. But neither the verdict nor the open moment automatically produces the Decision. The beginner must originate the act of withholding assent. This is not the victory of one psychological force over another. It is a genuine act of origination — the beginner, as the true cause of his assents, closing the process by refusing to accept the false claim. The act is his in the full sense. He is its source. It belongs to him in a way that a determined output does not belong to its mechanism.

For the beginner, the Decision is where the examination most frequently fails to complete. The verdict may be reached and still the habitual assent may follow — the impression is strong, the habit is deep, and the causal momentum of the false value judgment carries through before the genuine act of withholding can be performed. This is not a failure of the examination. It is the condition the training addresses. Each Decision that successfully withholds assent from a false impression weakens the impression’s grip on future encounters. Each Decision that fails despite a correct examination still represents genuine practice — the Pause was held, the examination was conducted, the verdict was reached. The habit of automatic assent is being interrupted even when it is not yet fully overridden.

Correspondence theory specifies what the Decision accomplishes when it succeeds. Withholding assent from a false impression is not merely a psychological act of resistance. It is a truth-aligning act. The impression claimed that the external is genuinely evil. The moral fact is that it is not. The Decision to withhold assent brings the beginner’s cognitive state into correspondence with the moral fact that the examination revealed. This is the specific location of correspondence theory at Decision: not the testing of the claim — that was Examination — but the alignment of the assent with the fact the testing revealed.

Conduct instruction: Act on the verdict. Withhold assent from the false impression. This is a genuine act — not a feeling of resistance, not a suppression of the impulse, but the origination of a refusal. The refusal brings the judgment into correspondence with the moral fact the examination revealed. When the Decision fails despite a correct verdict, note the failure without assenting to a verdict about its significance as a genuine evil — the failure is an external. Return to Reception with the next impression.

Failure signature: If libertarian free will is not operative, the Decision is nominal — the verdict is reached but the determined sequence completes regardless. If correspondence theory is not operative, the Decision is experienced as

 a psychological management act rather than a truth-aligning act. The difference is not behavioral. It is the difference between choosing a preferred cognitive stance and bringing a judgment into correspondence with reality.


The Complete Sequence

Receive the impression as a truth-claim about an evaluative fact. Locate yourself as the faculty receiving the claim, not as the situation the claim concerns. Make the claim explicit. Hold the process open — genuinely, as an act of origination. Test the claim against the foundational moral facts by directing the rational faculty’s attention to where the claim fails. Originate the act of withholding assent, bringing the judgment into correspondence with the moral fact the examination revealed.

For the beginner whose value landscape is largely unreformed, this sequence will reveal false impressions at almost every step concerning externals. The five steps are not an occasional corrective. They are the structure of practice itself — the procedural form through which the beginner’s false value landscape is progressively reformed, one impression at a time, until the reformed landscape begins to generate fewer false impressions automatically. That progressive reformation is what Stoic character formation consists in.


Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Five-Step Method and commitment-to-step mapping: Dave Kelly, 2026. Analysis and prose rendering: Claude. Governing texts: Epictetus, Enchiridion 48; One Act of Correct Engagement (Kelly, 2026); Core Stoicism (Sterling).