Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Rules, Emotions, and Identity: Ten Patterns Tracked Through the Five-Step Method

 

Rules, Emotions, and Identity: Ten Patterns Tracked Through the Five-Step Method

Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Analysis and instrument architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.


Prefatory Note: The Translation Rule

The ten patterns below belong to the category of rules, emotions, and identity — a cluster of false impressions that share a common structural feature: they make false claims about what the agent is obligated to do or be, what his emotional states reveal about reality, and what constitutes his genuine identity and worth. Each pattern names a characteristic phenomenological form in which a false impression about the normative, affective, or identity domain arrives at the rational faculty.

The translation rule governing what follows: a cognitive distortion is a phenomenological description of how a false impression characteristically presents itself — not a causal explanation, not a diagnostic category, and not an alternative to the Stoic account of what is actually wrong with the impression. The pattern label identifies the arrival form. The Five-Step Method operates on what is underneath that form: a proposition making a false claim about the moral status of an obligation, an emotional state, an identity condition, or a normative requirement, which either corresponds to moral reality or does not.

This category is structurally distinctive in two respects. First, several patterns — Should Statements, Emotional Reasoning, Low Frustration Tolerance, Heaven’s Reward Fallacy, and Fusion of Thought and Morality — involve false claims about the normative structure of the agent’s relationship to his own internal states. These impressions misidentify what the agent’s emotions, thoughts, and obligations reveal about his genuine condition. Second, Substance Dualism does especially critical work in this category because the impressions frequently attack the boundary between the rational faculty and the psychophysical complex — treating emotions, thoughts, and productivity as constitutive of the agent’s essential identity. That boundary is precisely what Substance Dualism establishes and what Recognition must maintain.


41. “Should,” “Must,” and “Ought” Statements (Rigid, Harsh Rules)

The Impression

I should be further along than I am. I must not show weakness. I ought to handle this without difficulty. Anything less is unacceptable.

The impression applies absolute normative demands to the agent’s performance, condition, or behavior, and registers any deviation from the demand as a genuine moral failure. The normative vocabulary — should, must, ought — presents the demands as genuine obligations rather than preferences. Underneath the normative claims is a value claim: failing to meet the rigid standard constitutes a genuine evil of deficiency.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a normative verdict asserting that the agent is obligated to a standard he has not met. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether failing to meet the external standard constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from his performance level, his emotional display, his handling of difficulty, and the impression that has found all three normatively deficient. Correspondence Theory: the normative claims — should, must, ought, unacceptable — are registered as propositions asserting genuine obligations grounded in a value claim about falling short. The normative force of the vocabulary is now visible as a structural feature of the claim requiring examination rather than as self-evident moral truth.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ontological ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the self-critical urgency the normative demands generate.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: progress, emotional display, and ease of handling difficulty are all externals. The agent’s genuine moral obligation does not concern external performance standards. It concerns the rational faculty’s own activity: choosing correctly, acting with virtue, engaging rationally with impressions. The should-must-ought vocabulary assigns genuine moral obligation to external performance outcomes — which is precisely the domain the corpus excludes from genuine moral weight. The Stoic account distinguishes two things the impression conflates: the practical question of preferred performance (where striving for improvement is appropriate) and the moral verdict on falling short of an external standard (where self-condemnation is not). Foundationalism traces the failure to Theorem 10. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that no external performance standard generates a genuine moral obligation whose violation constitutes a genuine evil.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the normative demands and from the deficiency verdict they generate. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — external performance outcomes are indifferents; practical improvement is appropriate to pursue; moral self-condemnation for failing to meet a rigid external standard is not warranted.


42. Emotional Reasoning (“I Feel It, So It Must Be True”)

The Impression

I feel worthless. Therefore I am worthless. The feeling is too strong to be wrong. What I feel is what is real.

The impression treats the emotional state itself as epistemic warrant for its propositional content. The strength of the feeling is presented as evidence of the truth of the claim. Underneath the emotional reasoning is a value claim: the condition the feeling reports — worthlessness — is a genuine evil constituting the agent’s real condition. This pattern is structurally distinctive because the impression does not merely assert a false value claim — it attempts to ground the claim in an internal state, treating the pathological emotion as its own evidence.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a proposition about the agent’s moral condition, supported by an appeal to felt experience as its warrant. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about the agent’s genuine condition. That fact does not depend on the feeling. The truth value exists independently of what the feeling reports.

Recognition

Substance Dualism is decisive here. The agent is his rational faculty — categorically distinct from the emotional state the impression is using as evidence. The feeling is an event in the psychophysical complex, not a deliverable of the rational faculty. Correspondence Theory: the claim — I feel it therefore it is true — is registered as a proposition whose inferential structure is itself a claim: that felt experience is reliable epistemic warrant for moral fact. That inference is what the examination will address. The circular structure is now visible: the false value judgment generated the feeling; the feeling is now being used to confirm the false value judgment.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground — with particular force, because the feeling the impression uses as evidence is precisely what the agent must not merge with. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the weight of the felt evidence.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: the agent’s genuine condition is determined by the activity of his rational faculty — whether he is choosing correctly, acting with virtue, engaging rationally. The feeling of worthlessness is a psychological event caused, on the Stoic account, by prior false value judgments that generated the pathological emotion. Treating the pathological emotion as evidence of its own propositional content is a circular inference: the false value judgment generated the feeling, and the feeling is now being used to confirm the false value judgment. The strength of the feeling does not break the circularity — it reflects the strength of the prior false judgment that generated it. Foundationalism traces the failure to Theorem 10. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that his genuine condition as a rational faculty is not readable from his emotional states, however strong.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the circular inference and from the value claim it was meant to ground. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — the feeling of worthlessness reports nothing about the moral reality of the agent’s condition; his rational faculty is intact; the pathological emotion is a consequence of prior false value judgments, not evidence of a genuine deficiency.


43. Low Frustration Tolerance (“I Can’t Stand This”)

The Impression

This situation is intolerable. I cannot bear it. It is too much. No one should have to endure this.

The impression asserts that the agent’s capacity for endurance is exhausted by the present external situation and that the situation itself is normatively excessive. The intolerance presents itself as an accurate registration of genuine suffering. Underneath the intolerance claim is a value claim: the external situation constitutes a genuine evil of a magnitude the rational faculty cannot be expected to bear.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a compound claim — a capacity claim (I cannot bear it) and a normative claim (no one should have to endure this) both grounded in a value claim about the external situation’s magnitude. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether the external situation constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism is again decisive. The impression makes a claim about the rational faculty’s own capacity — it asserts that the faculty is overwhelmed by the external situation. Substance Dualism establishes that the rational faculty is categorically distinct from the external order. The faculty’s capacity for assent and refusal is not determined by external conditions. Correspondence Theory: the intolerance claim — I cannot stand this; it is too much — is registered as a proposition making a capacity claim about the rational faculty and a value claim about the external situation. Both are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open — and the Pause is again evidence against the impression’s claim: the agent who holds the moment open against the force of I cannot bear it is bearing it, in the act.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: the external situation is an external. Externals are indifferent. The situation the impression calls intolerable carries no genuine moral weight. The value claim fails at Theorem 12. The capacity claim is additionally false on philosophical grounds: the corpus holds that no external situation can compel the rational faculty’s assent. The faculty’s originating capacity is not defeated by external pressure. The intolerance claim conflates the genuine difficulty of an external situation with a genuine incapacity of the rational faculty — which is precisely the distinction Substance Dualism maintains. The normative claim — no one should have to endure this — assigns genuine normative weight to relief from the external situation, which repeats the value claim in prescriptive form. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 10. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that the external situation carries no genuine moral weight and that the faculty’s capacity is not determined by it.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the intolerance claim and from the normative excess verdict it carries. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — the external situation is an indifferent; the rational faculty’s capacity is not defeated by external conditions; the situation is being borne, in the act of examining the claim about it.


44. Heaven’s Reward Fallacy (Expecting the World to Reward Sacrifice)

The Impression

I have given so much and sacrificed greatly. I deserve to be rewarded for this. The fact that I have not been rewarded is unjust. Something is owed to me.

The impression asserts that the external order is normatively obligated to deliver rewards proportionate to the agent’s sacrifice and effort. The expectation presents itself as a reasonable moral claim. Underneath the reward expectation is a value claim: the absence of reward constitutes a genuine evil and a genuine injustice that the agent is right to resent.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a compound claim — a normative claim that reward is owed, a factual claim that it has not been delivered, and a value claim about the moral weight of its absence. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether the absence of external reward constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from his past sacrifices, the external rewards that have or have not arrived, and the impression that has found the external order morally deficient for failing to deliver them. Correspondence Theory: the compound claim — I deserve reward; something is owed; the absence is unjust — is registered as a set of propositions making normative, factual, and value claims. All are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the resentment the unmet expectation generates.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: external rewards are externals. Whether the external order delivers recognition, compensation, or relief proportionate to the agent’s effort occupies the domain of indifferents. The absence of reward is not a genuine evil. The normative claim — that the external order owes the agent reward — rests on a false premise: the Stoic account does not locate a normative requirement of proportionate reward in the external order. The external order is not governed by a merit-reward principle owed to individual agents. The corpus is precise on this: virtue is its own reward, in the sense that correct action is its own completion — it does not generate a debt in the external order. The value claim fails at Theorem 12. The normative claim fails the foundational account of the external order. Foundationalism traces both failures. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that external reward carries no genuine moral weight and that the external order carries no normative obligation to deliver it.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the reward expectation and from the resentment its non-fulfillment generates. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — external reward is an indifferent; the external order carries no normative debt to the agent; sacrifice pursued as virtue is complete in the act, not in the external response it generates.


45. Self-Serving Bias (Crediting Success to Self, Blaming Failure Externally)

The Impression

When things go well, it is because of my ability and effort. When things go badly, it is because of circumstances or others. The pattern is consistent and feels natural.

The impression applies asymmetric causal attribution: success is internalized as evidence of genuine ability, failure is externalized as evidence of unfavorable conditions. The asymmetry presents itself as accurate self-knowledge. Underneath the self-serving pattern is a compound value claim: the agent’s ability, confirmed by success, is a genuine good constituting his worth; failure attributable to externals is not a genuine evil touching his standing.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — an asymmetric causal attribution applied consistently across outcomes. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether success-derived ability constitutes a genuine good and failure-derived external conditions constitute a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival for both components.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the external outcomes, the ability assessments derived from them, and the impression that has applied asymmetric attribution to protect a self-image. Correspondence Theory: the asymmetric attribution pattern — internal for success, external for failure — is registered as a proposition whose asymmetric structure is now visible as a claim requiring examination rather than as transparent self-knowledge.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the self-protective comfort the asymmetric attribution provides.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target and addresses both components simultaneously: external success outcomes are externals, and external failure outcomes are externals. Neither occupies the good-evil axis. The self-serving bias attempts to extract a genuine good — confirmed ability — from successful external outcomes, while protecting the agent from a genuine evil — confirmed failure — by externalizing unsuccessful ones. Both moves operate on a moral axis that does not apply to external outcomes. The asymmetry is additionally false as a causal account: outcomes are typically produced by multiple causal factors; consistent asymmetric attribution that always credits the agent for success and excuses him from failure is not accurate causal assessment but motivated reasoning. The honest causal assessment the Stoic account requires applies a consistent standard to both success and failure — which is what the self-serving bias specifically refuses to do. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 10 for both components. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that external outcomes in either direction carry no genuine moral weight.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the asymmetric attribution and from both value claims it carries. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — external outcomes are indifferents in both directions; honest causal assessment applying a consistent standard to both success and failure is appropriate; motivated asymmetric attribution is not.


46. Negative Self-Comparison (Measuring Self Only Against Idealized Others)

The Impression

Compared to the people I admire most, I fall far short. They have achieved what I have not. Measured against them, my accomplishments are negligible.

The impression selects a comparison class consisting exclusively of idealized others — those the agent admires for their achievements — and uses the unfavorable comparison to generate a verdict of inadequacy. The idealized comparison presents itself as an aspirational standard. Underneath the comparison is a value claim: falling short of idealized others constitutes a genuine evil determining the agent’s real standing.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a comparative verdict derived from a selectively idealized reference class. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether comparative inadequacy relative to admired others constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the idealized others, their achievements, his own achievements, and the impression that has generated a comparative verdict from a selected class. Correspondence Theory: the comparative verdict — my accomplishments are negligible measured against them — is registered as a proposition whose comparison class is now visible as a structural feature of the claim requiring examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the self-diminishing force of the idealized comparison.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: comparative standing relative to others’ achievements is an external. Whether the agent’s accomplishments are large or small relative to idealized others occupies the domain of indifferents. The value claim fails at Theorem 12. The comparison is additionally false as an assessment method: it selects the most admired and accomplished as the reference class, which systematically ensures an unfavorable verdict regardless of the agent’s actual achievements. The idealized others are idealized precisely because they represent exceptional achievement; comparing oneself exclusively to exceptional achievers produces inadequacy verdicts by construction, not by honest assessment. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 12. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that comparative achievement standing carries no genuine moral weight.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the comparative inadequacy verdict. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — comparative achievement is an indifferent; the idealized reference class produces an unfavorable verdict by construction; practical aspiration toward genuine achievement is appropriate as a preferred indifferent; a moral verdict derived from comparison to idealized others is not.


47. Over-Responsibility for Others’ Feelings or Outcomes

The Impression

She is upset. It must be because of something I did. I am responsible for how she feels. If she is unhappy, I have failed in my obligation to her.

The impression attributes causal and moral responsibility for another person’s emotional state to the agent, treating the other’s feelings as the agent’s domain of obligation. The responsibility claim presents itself as sensitivity and care. Underneath the over-responsibility is a value claim: another’s unhappy emotional state, attributed to the agent’s failure, constitutes a genuine evil for which the agent bears genuine moral culpability.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a compound claim — a causal attribution (her upset is caused by me) and a normative claim (I am obligated to manage her feelings) grounded in a value claim about the moral weight of the attributed failure. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether another’s emotional state constitutes a genuine evil for which the agent bears culpability. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the other person, her emotional state, its actual causes, and the impression that has attributed causal and moral responsibility for that state to the agent. Correspondence Theory: the over-responsibility claim — I am responsible for how she feels; I have failed — is registered as a proposition making a false causal claim and a false normative claim, both grounded in a value claim. All three are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the guilt the over-responsibility claim generates.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: another person’s emotional state is an external. On the Stoic account, emotional states are caused by the person’s own value judgments — not by external events or by other people’s actions. The impression’s causal claim is false on Stoic grounds: the other person’s upset is caused by her own judgments about her situation, not by the agent’s actions. The agent may have provided the occasion for those judgments, but the judgments and their emotional consequences belong to her rational faculty, not to his. The normative claim — that the agent is obligated to manage another’s feelings — assigns genuine moral obligation to an external outcome (another’s emotional state) that is both outside the agent’s causal domain and outside the moral domain that generates genuine obligations. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 12 and the causal claim to the Stoic account of emotional causation. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that another’s emotional state carries no genuine moral weight as a verdict on the agent’s conduct.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the over-responsibility claim and from the guilt it generates. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — another’s emotional state is an external caused by her own value judgments; the agent’s genuine moral domain is his own rational activity; honest assessment of whether his actions were appropriate is the relevant inquiry, not assumption of causal and moral responsibility for another’s emotional response.


48. Minimization of Strengths and Achievements

The Impression

What I have accomplished is not significant. Anyone could have done it. My strengths are ordinary. There is nothing genuinely impressive about what I have done or can do.

The impression systematically reduces the significance of the agent’s actual achievements and capabilities, treating them as ordinary or negligible. The minimization presents itself as honest modesty. Underneath the minimization is a compound value claim: significant achievements would be genuine goods establishing worth; the agent’s ordinary achievements do not; therefore his worth is not established.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a verdict of ordinariness applied to the agent’s achievements and strengths. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether ordinary achievements constitute a genuine evil or constitute a failure to establish genuine worth. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from his achievements, their objective significance, and the impression that has minimized both to produce a worth verdict. Correspondence Theory: the minimization claim — not significant; anyone could have done it; ordinary — is registered as a proposition making a factual claim about the objective significance of achievements and a value claim about the moral weight of ordinary versus significant achievement. Both are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the deflating force of the ordinariness verdict.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: achievements and strengths are externals. Whether the agent’s accomplishments are objectively significant or ordinary occupies the domain of indifferents. The minimization’s implicit premise — that significant achievement is a genuine good establishing worth and ordinary achievement is not — fails at Theorem 12 on both sides: significant achievement is not a genuine good, and ordinary achievement is not a genuine evil. The agent’s worth is not established or withdrawn by the external significance of his achievements. It is constituted by his identity as a rational faculty. The minimization is additionally operating on a false comparative standard: “anyone could have done it” is a claim requiring evidence that is rarely supplied. Foundationalism traces the primary value failure to Theorem 10 and Proposition 4. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that the external significance of his achievements has no capacity to establish or withdraw his genuine worth as a rational faculty.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the minimization verdict and from the worth claim it carries. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — achievements are indifferents at any level of external significance; the agent’s worth is constituted by his identity as a rational faculty, not by the external significance of his outputs; honest practical assessment of strengths and achievements is appropriate, a systematic minimization that serves a false worth model is not.


49. Defining Worth Solely by Productivity or Achievement

The Impression

My worth is determined by what I produce. If I am not productive, I am worthless. A period of low output means I have no real value. Worth must be earned through achievement.

The impression locates the agent’s entire worth in his external productivity and achievement outputs, so that fluctuations in output determine fluctuations in genuine worth. The productivity-worth equation presents itself as a reasonable motivational framework. Underneath the equation is a value claim: high productivity is a genuine good constituting worth; low productivity is a genuine evil removing it.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — an identity and worth verdict conditioned on external productivity outputs. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether productivity levels determine genuine worth. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism is the critical commitment. The impression locates the agent’s worth in his external outputs. Substance Dualism establishes that the agent’s identity is his rational faculty — not his productivity, not his achievement, not any external output. The impression is registered as a claim that misidentifies the locus of the agent’s worth at the most fundamental level: it places worth in the external order, which is categorically distinct from what the agent actually is. Correspondence Theory: the productivity-worth equation — worth must be earned through achievement — is registered as a proposition asserting a conditional identity claim requiring examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground — with particular force, because the impression attacks the locus of the agent’s worth by locating it in external outputs. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the anxiety that productivity fluctuation generates when worth depends on it.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: productivity and achievement outputs are externals. External outputs carry no genuine moral weight. The productivity-worth equation treats external achievement as a genuine good that constitutes worth and its absence as a genuine evil that removes it. Both fail at Theorem 12. More fundamentally, Proposition 4 of the corpus establishes that the agent’s identity is his rational faculty alone. Worth that must be earned through external achievement is worth located in the wrong domain — in what the agent does externally rather than in what the agent is. The rational faculty’s identity and worth are not conditional on external output levels. They are constituted by the faculty’s nature. Foundationalism traces the failure to Theorem 10 and Proposition 4. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that external productivity outputs have no capacity to establish or remove his genuine worth as a rational faculty.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the productivity-worth equation. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — productivity is an indifferent; worth is constituted by the agent’s identity as a rational faculty and is not conditional on external output; practical pursuit of productive work is appropriate as a preferred indifferent, worth contingent on productivity levels is not the correct account of the agent’s genuine condition.


50. Fusion of Thought and Morality (“Having a Bad Thought Makes Me Bad”)

The Impression

I had a violent thought. I am the kind of person who has violent thoughts. Having such a thought makes me morally deficient. A person of genuine virtue would not have thoughts like this.

The impression treats the mere occurrence of a negative, violent, or unwanted thought as evidence of the agent’s moral character, fusing the having of the thought with genuine moral culpability. The fusion presents itself as moral seriousness. Underneath the fusion is a value claim: having the bad thought constitutes a genuine evil that reveals and constitutes a genuine moral deficiency in the agent.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a moral character verdict derived from the occurrence of an unwanted thought. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether having a bad thought constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism is decisive here. The impression attributes moral significance to the occurrence of a thought in the psychophysical complex — but the Stoic account distinguishes sharply between the occurrence of an impression and the act of assenting to it. The impression arrived. It was not chosen. What is in the agent’s domain is what he does with it — whether he assents or withholds assent. The occurrence of an unwanted thought is an impression arriving at the rational faculty from the psychophysical complex. It is not yet an act of the rational faculty. It is subject to the five-step procedure, not itself a verdict on the faculty’s character. Correspondence Theory: the moral character verdict — having this thought makes me morally deficient — is registered as a proposition that misidentifies the domain of genuine moral action: it locates moral culpability in the occurrence of an impression rather than in the act of assent.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open — and the Pause is itself the evidence against the fusion claim: the agent is not assenting to the violent thought; he is examining the impression that having it makes him bad. The five-step engagement with the thought is precisely the virtuous response to its arrival.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: the occurrence of an unwanted thought is not the domain of genuine moral action. Genuine moral action occurs at the point of assent and refusal — the act of the rational faculty that either endorses the impression or withholds endorsement. The thought arrived as an impression from the psychophysical complex. The agent did not choose it. What is up to the agent is his response to it: assent, withholding of assent, and the five-step engagement. Applying the five-step procedure to a violent thought is not the action of a morally deficient agent — it is the correct virtuous response. The fusion claim conflates the arrival of an impression with the endorsement of it, which collapses the distinction between impression and assent that is foundational to the entire Stoic account. Foundationalism traces the failure to the foundational distinction between impression and assent. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that the occurrence of an unwanted thought is not a moral act and generates no genuine culpability.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the moral character verdict derived from the thought’s occurrence. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — the thought arrived as an impression; its occurrence is not a moral act; genuine moral action is the response to the impression, not the impression itself; the five-step engagement with the thought is the correct virtuous response and evidence against, not confirmation of, moral deficiency.


Closing Observation

Across all ten patterns in this category, two structural features distinguish this set from preceding categories. First, the false value claims in this category are more frequently directed inward — at the agent’s obligations, his emotional states, his identity, and his worth — than at external outcomes or other persons. The agent is both the subject making the claim and the object the claim is about. This internal direction makes the impressions in this category particularly difficult to examine because they present themselves as self-knowledge rather than as claims about externals. Correspondence Theory at Recognition does especially critical work here: registering the internally directed claim as a proposition requiring examination rather than as transparent self-access.

Second, Substance Dualism does its most philosophically specific work across this category. Patterns 42, 43, 47, 49, and 50 all involve impressions that attack or exploit the boundary between the rational faculty and the psychophysical complex — treating emotional states as epistemic warrants (42), treating the faculty as overwhelmed by external conditions (43), treating another’s emotions as the agent’s causal domain (47), locating worth in external outputs (49), and treating the mere arrival of an impression as a moral act of the faculty (50). In every case, Substance Dualism at Recognition is the commitment that maintains the boundary the impression is collapsing, and that makes the examination possible by preserving the subject pole as categorically distinct from the psychophysical events the impression is treating as constitutive of the agent’s genuine condition.

Pattern 50 (Fusion of Thought and Morality) is structurally the most philosophically precise in this set. It collapses the foundational Stoic distinction between impression and assent — the distinction on which the entire Five-Step Method rests. The examination of this pattern is therefore not merely a tracking of a false value claim through the steps but a demonstration that the five-step engagement itself is the evidence against the claim it is examining.


Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Analysis and instrument architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.

Interpersonal Mind Errors: Ten Patterns Tracked Through the Five-Step Method

 

Interpersonal Mind Errors: Ten Patterns Tracked Through the Five-Step Method

Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Analysis and instrument architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.


Prefatory Note: The Translation Rule

The ten patterns below belong to the category of interpersonal mind errors — a cluster of false impressions that share a common structural feature: they make false claims about what other people think, intend, feel, or owe, and assign genuine moral weight to those claims. Each pattern names a characteristic phenomenological form in which a false impression about the interpersonal domain arrives at the rational faculty.

The translation rule governing what follows: a cognitive distortion is a phenomenological description of how a false impression characteristically presents itself — not a causal explanation, not a diagnostic category, and not an alternative to the Stoic account of what is actually wrong with the impression. The pattern label identifies the arrival form. The Five-Step Method operates on what is underneath that form: a proposition making a false claim about the moral status of another person’s mental states, actions, or relationship to the agent, which either corresponds to moral reality or does not.

This category is structurally distinctive in one consistent respect: the false value claim in every pattern concerns an external in the interpersonal domain — what others think, intend, feel, or do in relation to the agent. The corpus is precise that reputation, others’ opinions, others’ behavior, and the quality of relationships are all externals and therefore indifferents. This foundational classification is operative at Examination across all ten patterns. What varies is the specific false claim the impression makes about the interpersonal external: some concern others’ mental states, some concern causal responsibility, some concern normative obligations others are said to carry. The Five Steps address each on its own terms while the foundational examination verdict remains the same.


31. Mind Reading (Assuming You Know What Others Think)

The Impression

He has not spoken to me today. I know what he thinks of me. He finds me tiresome and would prefer I were not here.

The impression treats the agent’s inference about another’s mental state as direct knowledge, presenting an unevidenced attribution as a settled fact. The mental state attributed is negative. Underneath the mind reading is a value claim: the other person’s negative opinion of the agent constitutes a genuine evil determining the agent’s standing.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a proposition asserting knowledge of another’s mental state derived from behavioral observation. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether another person’s negative opinion constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the other person, his mental states, and the impression that has converted a behavioral observation into a settled knowledge claim about those states. Correspondence Theory: the mind-reading claim — I know what he thinks; he finds me tiresome — is registered as a proposition making a factual claim about an unobservable mental state (unevidenced) and a value claim about the moral weight of that state if true. Both are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ontological ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the felt certainty that the negative attribution generates. Certainty of tone is not certainty of truth.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: another person’s opinion of the agent is an external. Reputation and others’ assessments are explicitly classified as indifferents in the corpus. Even if the attributed mental state were accurate — even if he does find the agent tiresome — this would constitute no genuine evil to the agent’s rational faculty. The value claim fails at Theorem 12. The factual claim is additionally false: the impression treats an inference from behavioral observation as direct knowledge of an unobservable mental state, which it is not. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 12. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that another person’s opinion, whatever it is, carries no genuine moral weight.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from both the unevidenced knowledge claim and the value claim it carries. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — another’s opinion is an indifferent; the inference from behavioral observation to settled mental state knowledge is unsupported; practical attention to actual communication is appropriate, a verdict derived from mind reading is not.


32. Projection of Motives (Assuming Others Share Your Hidden Motives)

The Impression

She offered to help me. But I know why. She wants something in return. People do not help without an ulterior motive. Her real motive is self-interest.

The impression attributes to another person the motives the agent would have, or fears he has, in the same situation. The projection presents itself as realistic insight into human nature. Underneath the projection is a value claim: the self-interested motive attributed to the other person makes her offer a genuine threat or manipulation rather than a neutral or positive external event.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — an attribution of hidden motive derived from the agent’s own motivational framework projected onto another. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether another’s self-interested motive, if real, constitutes a genuine evil to the agent. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the other person, her actual motives, and the impression that has attributed the agent’s own motivational framework to her. Correspondence Theory: the motive attribution — her real motive is self-interest — is registered as a proposition making a factual claim about an unobservable mental state (derived not from evidence about her but from the agent’s own motivational assumptions) and a value claim about the moral significance of the attributed motive.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the suspicious orientation the projection generates.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: another person’s motives are an external. What another person intends in her actions is outside the agent’s rational faculty. Externals are indifferent. Even if the attribution were accurate — even if her motive were entirely self-interested — this would constitute no genuine evil to the agent’s rational faculty. The value claim fails at Theorem 12. The factual claim is additionally unsupported: the projection substitutes the agent’s own motivational framework for evidence about the other person’s actual motives. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 12. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that another’s motives, whatever they are, carry no genuine moral weight in relation to his rational faculty.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the projected motive attribution and from the suspicious value verdict it carries. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — another’s motives are an indifferent; the offer is an external event whose moral weight is indifferent regardless of the motive behind it; practical assessment of whether to accept the help is appropriate, a motive verdict derived from projection is not.


33. Hostile Attribution Bias (Assuming Others’ Actions Are Meant to Harm)

The Impression

He interrupted me in the meeting. He did it deliberately. He is trying to undermine me. His action was an attack.

The impression interprets another’s ambiguous action as intentionally hostile, treating the most negative available interpretation as the accurate one. The hostile attribution presents itself as clear-eyed realism about interpersonal dynamics. Underneath the hostile attribution is a value claim: the intentional attack constitutes a genuine evil perpetrated against the agent that warrants defensive or retaliatory response.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a hostile intent attribution derived from an ambiguous behavioral event. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether an intentional interruption constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the other person, his intentions, the interruption, and the impression that has attributed hostile intent to an ambiguous act. Correspondence Theory: the hostile attribution — he did it deliberately; it was an attack — is registered as a proposition making a factual claim about an unobservable intent (drawn from the most negative interpretation of an ambiguous event) and a value claim about the moral weight of the attributed intent. Both are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the defensive urgency the hostile attribution generates. Urgency presents itself as appropriate; the Pause registers it as a response to a claim not yet examined.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: another person’s behavior in a meeting is an external. Even intentionally hostile behavior from another person constitutes no genuine evil to the agent’s rational faculty. The value claim fails at Theorem 12 regardless of the intent attribution’s accuracy. The factual claim is additionally unsupported: the hostile attribution selects the most negative interpretation of an ambiguous event without evidence that the hostile interpretation is correct. Multiple interpretations are available. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 12. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that another’s actions — however intended — carry no genuine moral weight in relation to his rational faculty.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the hostile intent attribution and from the retaliatory value verdict it generates. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — the interruption is an indifferent; the intent attribution is unsupported; practical response to the meeting situation is appropriate, a defensive posture derived from unevidenced hostile attribution is not.


34. Personalization (Taking Excessive Responsibility or Blame)

The Impression

The project did not go well. It is my fault. I am responsible for the outcome. The failure falls on me.

The impression attributes a negative external outcome to the agent as his personal responsibility, regardless of whether the causal structure supports that attribution. The agent positions himself as the primary or sole cause of an outcome determined by multiple factors. Underneath the personalization is a value claim: being responsible for the negative outcome constitutes a genuine evil of culpability that the agent must carry.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a causal attribution of a negative external outcome to the agent as its primary cause. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether being responsible for a negative external outcome constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the project, its outcome, the other causal factors that contributed to it, and the impression that has attributed the outcome primarily to him. Correspondence Theory: the personalization claim — it is my fault; the failure falls on me — is registered as a proposition making a factual claim about causal structure and a value claim about the moral weight of the attributed responsibility. Both are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the self-blaming force the personalization generates.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: the project’s outcome is an external. Externals are indifferent. Even if the attribution of causal responsibility were accurate — even if the agent were the primary cause of the failure — the outcome would constitute no genuine evil to the rational faculty. The value claim fails at Theorem 12. The factual claim is additionally false in most cases: external outcomes are produced by multiple causal factors; the impression attributes primary responsibility to the agent without examining whether the causal structure supports that attribution. The agent’s genuine causal domain is his rational faculty’s own activity — his choices, judgments, and actions — not the external outcome those actions were aimed at. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 12. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that negative external outcomes carry no genuine moral weight regardless of their causal attribution.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the excessive causal attribution and from the culpability value claim it carries. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — the project’s outcome is an indifferent; honest assessment of what the agent actually contributed is appropriate; moral self-condemnation derived from excessive personalization is not.


35. Blaming Others and Refusing Responsibility

The Impression

This went wrong because of what they did. It is their fault entirely. I bear no responsibility for this outcome. The cause is entirely outside me.

The impression is the mirror image of Pattern 34: it externalizes causal responsibility entirely, removing the agent from the domain of genuine contribution to a negative outcome. The blame attribution presents itself as accurate assessment of the causal record. Underneath the blame is a value claim: the others’ causal contribution constitutes a genuine evil they perpetrated, and the agent’s exemption from responsibility is a genuine good that protects his standing.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a total causal attribution of a negative outcome to others, with complete exemption of the agent. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether others’ causal contribution constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the others, their actions, the outcome, and the impression that has attributed total causal responsibility to them. Correspondence Theory: the blame claim — entirely their fault; the cause is entirely outside me — is registered as a proposition making a factual claim about causal structure (total external attribution) and a value claim about others’ moral culpability. Both are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the self-protective certainty the blame attribution generates.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: others’ actions are externals. What others did or did not do occupies the domain of indifferents. Even if the blame attribution were accurate — even if others were primarily responsible — their causal contribution would constitute no genuine evil in the morally relevant sense that demands the agent’s indignation or distress. The value claim fails at Theorem 12. The factual claim is additionally false in most cases: negative outcomes typically involve multiple causal contributors, and total external attribution exempts the agent from honest assessment of his own contribution. The Stoic account of the agent’s genuine causal domain requires honest assessment of what the rational faculty actually chose and did — not exemption from that assessment through total external blame. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 12. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that others’ actions carry no genuine moral weight and that honest causal assessment serves the rational faculty better than protective blame attribution.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the total blame attribution and from its self-protective function. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — others’ actions are indifferents; honest assessment of the full causal record — including the agent’s own contribution — is appropriate; total external blame that exempts the agent from honest self-assessment is not.


36. Assuming Rejection Without Checking

The Impression

She did not reply to my message. She is avoiding me. She has decided she no longer wants contact. I have been rejected.

The impression moves from an absence of behavioral evidence to a settled negative verdict about the relationship, treating silence as rejection without inquiry. The rejection verdict presents itself as the obvious interpretation of the available evidence. Underneath the assumed rejection is a value claim: being rejected constitutes a genuine evil that determines the agent’s relational standing.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a rejection verdict derived from the absence of a behavioral response. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether rejection by another person constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the other person, her reasons for not replying, and the impression that has converted a behavioral absence into a settled rejection verdict. Correspondence Theory: the rejection claim — she is avoiding me; I have been rejected — is registered as a proposition making a factual claim about another’s intentions derived from an absence of evidence and a value claim about the moral weight of the attributed rejection. Both are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the distress the rejection verdict generates.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: another person’s relational disposition toward the agent is an external. Whether another person chooses to maintain contact or not occupies the domain of indifferents. Even if the rejection were accurate — even if she had decided to end contact — this would constitute no genuine evil to the agent’s rational faculty. The value claim fails at Theorem 12. The factual claim is additionally false: an unreplied message has many possible explanations; the rejection interpretation is one among many and is selected without evidence. The argument from ignorance is present here as in Pattern 20: absence of a reply is not positive evidence of rejection. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 12. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that another’s relational choices carry no genuine moral weight.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the assumed rejection and from the distress it generates. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — another’s relational disposition is an indifferent; the absence of a reply does not establish rejection; practical inquiry if the relationship matters to the agent is appropriate, a settled rejection verdict derived from an unreplied message is not.


37. Overinterpreting Neutral Cues as Negative

The Impression

Her tone was flat when she spoke to me. Her expression was neutral. I could tell she was displeased with me. Something is wrong between us.

The impression interprets ambiguous or neutral behavioral cues — tone, expression, posture — as negative signals directed at the agent. The negative interpretation presents itself as perceptive social reading. Underneath the overinterpretation is a value claim: the other person’s displeasure, if real, constitutes a genuine evil that determines the relational condition.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a negative signal attribution derived from ambiguous behavioral cues. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether another person’s displeasure constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the other person, her tone and expression, their actual meaning, and the impression that has converted ambiguous cues into a settled negative signal. Correspondence Theory: the negative signal claim — she was displeased; something is wrong between us — is registered as a proposition making a factual claim about the meaning of ambiguous behavioral cues and a value claim about the moral weight of the inferred displeasure. Both are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the relational anxiety the negative interpretation generates.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: another person’s emotional state and relational disposition are externals. Whether another person is pleased or displeased with the agent occupies the domain of indifferents. Even if the negative interpretation were accurate — even if she were genuinely displeased — this would constitute no genuine evil to the agent’s rational faculty. The value claim fails at Theorem 12. The factual claim is additionally unsupported: flat tone and neutral expression are ambiguous cues with multiple possible explanations unrelated to the agent. The impression selects the negative interpretation without evidence that the cues are directed at the agent or negative in meaning. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 12. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that another’s emotional state carries no genuine moral weight regardless of its direction.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the negative signal attribution and from the relational anxiety it generates. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — another’s emotional state is an indifferent; ambiguous cues are ambiguous; practical inquiry if the relationship matters is appropriate, a negative verdict derived from overinterpretation of neutral cues is not.


38. Expecting Others to Understand Needs Without Stating Them

The Impression

He should know what I need without my having to say it. The fact that he does not shows he does not care. His failure to understand is a genuine failure of the relationship.

The impression asserts that another person is normatively obligated to know the agent’s needs without communication, and registers the failure to meet that obligation as a relational deficiency. The expectation presents itself as a reasonable standard for genuine care. Underneath the expectation is a value claim: the other person’s failure to understand unstated needs constitutes a genuine evil demonstrating a real relational failure.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a compound claim — a normative claim that another is obligated to know unstated needs, a factual claim that he has failed, and a value claim about the moral weight of that failure. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether another’s failure to know unstated needs constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the other person, his epistemic access to the agent’s needs, and the impression that has found him morally deficient for lacking knowledge he was never given. Correspondence Theory: the compound claim is registered as a set of propositions — normative, factual, and evaluative — all requiring examination. The normative claim — that another ought to know unstated needs — is itself a proposition, not a self-evident social standard.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the grievance the unmet expectation generates.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: another person’s understanding of the agent’s needs is an external. Whether another person knows, guesses, or fails to know what the agent needs occupies the domain of indifferents. Even if the failure were genuine — even if he demonstrably does not care — this would constitute no genuine evil to the agent’s rational faculty. The value claim fails at Theorem 12. The normative claim is additionally false: another person is not obligated to possess knowledge that was never communicated to him. The expectation that unstated needs will be known imposes an impossible epistemic requirement on another and then registers its non-fulfillment as a moral failure. The Stoic account of appropriate action includes stating one’s needs clearly — which is within the agent’s domain — rather than requiring another to possess knowledge the agent has not provided. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 12. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that another’s epistemic access to unstated needs carries no genuine moral weight.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the normative obligation claim and from the relational failure verdict it generates. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — another’s knowledge of unstated needs is an indifferent; stating needs clearly is within the agent’s own domain of appropriate action; a relational failure verdict derived from an impossible epistemic expectation is not warranted.


39. Assuming Disagreement Equals Dislike or Disrespect

The Impression

He disagreed with my position in front of others. He does not respect me. Disagreement means he has a low opinion of me and does not value what I think.

The impression conflates intellectual disagreement with personal disrespect, treating a difference of position as evidence of a negative relational attitude. The conflation presents itself as accurate social reading. Underneath the conflation is a value claim: being disrespected or having a low opinion held of oneself constitutes a genuine evil determining the agent’s relational standing.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a relational verdict derived from an intellectual disagreement. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether being disrespected or held in low opinion constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the disagreement, the other person’s actual relational attitude, and the impression that has converted an intellectual difference into a personal disrespect verdict. Correspondence Theory: the disrespect claim — he does not respect me; he has a low opinion of me — is registered as a proposition making a factual claim about an inferred relational attitude (derived from an intellectual event that does not logically entail it) and a value claim about the moral weight of that attitude. Both are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the social injury the disrespect verdict generates.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: another person’s opinion of the agent is an external. Reputation and others’ assessments are explicitly classified as indifferents. Even if the disrespect attribution were accurate — even if he does hold the agent in low opinion — this would constitute no genuine evil to the agent’s rational faculty. The value claim fails at Theorem 12. The factual claim is additionally unsupported: intellectual disagreement does not logically entail personal disrespect. People disagree with those they respect frequently; disagreement is an epistemic event, not necessarily a relational one. The conflation imports a relational conclusion from an intellectual premise without evidence. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 12. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that another’s opinion and relational attitude carry no genuine moral weight.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the disrespect verdict and from the social injury it generates. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — another’s opinion is an indifferent; disagreement does not entail disrespect; intellectual engagement with the disagreement on its merits is appropriate, a relational verdict derived from an intellectual event is not.


40. Using a Single Interaction to Define an Entire Relationship

The Impression

She was cold to me at that one gathering. That is what the relationship really is. All the warmth before was surface. This interaction revealed the truth about her feelings toward me.

The impression treats a single negative interaction as definitively revealing the true character of an entire relationship, overriding the accumulated evidence of prior interactions. The single instance becomes the lens through which the whole relationship is reinterpreted. Underneath the totalizing reinterpretation is a value claim: the revealed negative relational reality constitutes a genuine evil that redefines the agent’s relational standing.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a totalizing relational verdict derived from a single negative interaction and applied retroactively to the full history of the relationship. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether the relational verdict, if accurate, constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the other person, the single interaction, the prior relationship history, and the impression that has used one interaction to redefine all of them. Correspondence Theory: the totalizing claim — this is what the relationship really is; the warmth before was surface — is registered as a proposition making a factual claim about the relationship’s true character (derived from one instance overriding many) and a value claim about the moral weight of the revealed relational reality. Both are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the relational redefinition the single interaction has generated.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: the quality and character of a relationship is an external. Whether a relationship is warm, cold, genuine, or surface occupies the domain of indifferents. Even if the totalizing verdict were accurate — even if the single interaction genuinely revealed a negative relational reality — the relational quality would constitute no genuine evil to the agent’s rational faculty. The value claim fails at Theorem 12. The factual claim is additionally false on epistemic grounds: a single interaction is insufficient evidence for a totalizing relational verdict, particularly one that retroactively reinterprets an extended prior history. The impression treats the negative instance as more evidentially powerful than the accumulated prior evidence — which is a form of the Mental Filter (Pattern 11) applied to relationship history. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 12. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that relational quality, however assessed, carries no genuine moral weight.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the totalizing relational verdict and from the retroactive reinterpretation it generates. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — the relationship’s quality is an indifferent; one interaction is insufficient evidence for a totalizing verdict; practical attention to the full relational record is appropriate, a relational redefinition derived from a single negative interaction is not.


Closing Observation

Across all ten patterns in this category, the shared structural feature is the assignment of genuine moral weight to events in the interpersonal domain — what others think, intend, feel, do, understand, or fail to understand in relation to the agent. The corpus is precise that all of these are externals and therefore indifferents. This foundational classification is operative at Examination across all ten patterns without exception, and it settles the value claim in every case before the accuracy of the factual attribution is addressed.

Three sub-group distinctions are worth noting. Patterns 31 through 33 involve false claims about others’ mental states — their thoughts, motives, and intentions. The factual claims in these patterns are unevidenced attributions of unobservable mental states. Patterns 34 and 35 are mirror images in the domain of causal responsibility: Personalization overattributes negative outcomes to the agent; Blaming Others underattributes. Both resolve against honest causal assessment within the agent’s genuine domain. Patterns 36 through 40 involve false claims about relational signals, obligations, and verdicts derived from insufficient evidence — absence of reply treated as rejection, neutral cues treated as negative signals, unstated needs treated as knowable, disagreement treated as disrespect, single interactions treated as definitive.

One commitment does distinctive work throughout this category: Substance Dualism at Recognition. In every pattern, the impression makes a claim about the interpersonal domain that the agent must actively separate himself from in order to examine. The three-way separation — the agent, the impression, and the interpersonal event the impression is making claims about — is the cognitive act that makes examination possible. Without the subject pole clearly located at Recognition, the agent merges with the interpersonal verdict the impression delivers, and examination has no position from which to proceed.


Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Analysis and instrument architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.

Catastrophic Prediction and Control Errors: Ten Patterns Tracked Through the Five-Step Method

 

Catastrophic Prediction and Control Errors: Ten Patterns Tracked Through the Five-Step Method

Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Analysis and instrument architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.


Prefatory Note: The Translation Rule

The ten patterns below belong to the category of catastrophic prediction and control errors — a cluster of false impressions that share a common structural feature: they make false claims about what is coming, what is possible, and who is responsible for outcomes. Some predict disaster. Some mislocate causal responsibility. Some assert that the external order must conform to a standard the agent has set. Each pattern names a characteristic phenomenological form in which a false impression arrives at the rational faculty.

The translation rule governing what follows: a cognitive distortion is a phenomenological description of how a false impression characteristically presents itself — not a causal explanation, not a diagnostic category, and not an alternative to the Stoic account of what is actually wrong with the impression. The pattern label identifies the arrival form. The Five-Step Method operates on what is underneath that form: a proposition making a false claim about the moral status of an anticipated event, a capability, a causal structure, or a normative requirement, which either corresponds to moral reality or does not.

This category is structurally distinctive in two respects. First, several patterns — Sunk-Cost Thinking, Illusion of Control, External Locus of Control, Internal Control Fallacy, and Fallacy of Fairness — involve false claims not merely about the moral weight of externals but about the structure of the agent’s relationship to the external order. These impressions mismap the boundary between what is up to the agent and what is not — which is precisely the boundary Substance Dualism and Libertarian Free Will govern. Second, the What-If spiral (Pattern 25) is architecturally distinctive because it is not a single false impression but a sequence of impressions, each catastrophizing the last. The Five-Step tracking of that pattern addresses the method for interrupting the sequence rather than tracking a single claim.


21. Catastrophizing (Expecting the Worst Possible Outcome)

The Impression

Something has gone wrong. This will escalate into the worst possible outcome. Everything will be ruined.

The impression moves directly from a present difficulty to the maximum possible negative outcome, treating the worst case as the expected case. The catastrophe is presented not as one possible outcome among many but as the natural trajectory of events. Underneath the catastrophizing is a value claim: the worst possible outcome is a genuine evil of maximal magnitude, and its anticipated arrival warrants maximal present distress.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a prediction of maximal negative outcome from a present difficulty. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether the worst possible outcome constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival. Crucially, the moral facts are already settled before the anticipated outcome occurs: even the worst possible external outcome carries no genuine moral weight.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the present difficulty, the anticipated catastrophe, and the impression that has projected the maximum negative trajectory. Correspondence Theory: the catastrophizing claim — everything will be ruined — is registered as a proposition making a predictive claim about future externals and a value claim about their moral significance. Both are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ontological ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the urgency that catastrophic prediction generates. The agent has not yet endorsed the maximum negative trajectory.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: the anticipated worst outcome is an external. Externals are indifferent — neither good nor evil, at any level of severity. The catastrophizing form assigns maximum moral weight to the maximum negative external outcome. But the moral axis it is operating on does not apply to externals at any magnitude. Even if everything were ruined in the external sense — even if the worst case occurred — the agent’s rational faculty would remain intact as the locus of his genuine condition. The predictive claim is additionally unsupported: the worst possible outcome is one outcome among a distribution; treating it as the expected trajectory is not accurate probabilistic reasoning. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 10. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that no external outcome, at any level of severity, occupies the good-evil axis.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the catastrophic prediction and from the maximal moral weight it assigns to the anticipated outcome. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — the anticipated worst outcome is an indifferent; appropriate action is to engage with the present difficulty rationally, not to pre-assent to its maximum negative trajectory as a genuine evil.


22. Fortune Telling / Negative Predictions

The Impression

I can see how this will go. It will fail. There is no point in trying.

The impression treats an anticipated future external event as already determined, presenting the negative outcome as a known fact rather than a probability. The prediction forecloses the open future and presents the agent as already knowing its contents. Underneath the prediction is a value claim: the anticipated failure is a genuine evil whose certainty warrants present withdrawal from action.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a deterministic prediction about a future external event. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether the anticipated failure is a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the anticipated event, the predicted failure, and the impression that has presented the future as already determined. Correspondence Theory: the prediction — it will fail — is registered as a proposition making a factual claim about a future external event (unevidenced and concerning an event not yet in the causal order) and a value claim about the moral weight of that event. Both are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the defeatism the prediction generates. The future is not yet determined; the Pause is itself a small demonstration of genuine origination in the present.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: the anticipated failure is an external outcome. Externals are indifferent. Whether the attempt fails or succeeds constitutes no genuine evil or good to the agent’s rational faculty. The value claim fails at Theorem 12 regardless of the predictive accuracy of the fortune-telling. The factual claim is additionally false in two respects: it treats a future external outcome as already determined when it is not, and it treats the agent’s current pessimistic assessment as reliable access to that future rather than as a current cognitive state. The Stoic account adds a further layer: the agent’s genuine task is to pursue appropriate action by rational means with reservation — which presupposes that the outcome is not already determined by the agent’s prediction of it. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 12. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that anticipated external outcomes carry no genuine moral weight regardless of their probability.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the deterministic prediction and from the value claim it carries. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — the anticipated outcome is an indifferent; the future is not yet determined; appropriate action is to pursue the preferred indifferent by rational means with reservation, not to pre-assent to its failure as a known fact.


23. Underestimating Coping Ability

The Impression

If that happens, I could not handle it. I would fall apart completely. It would be too much.

The impression predicts not only a negative external outcome but the agent’s total incapacity to engage with it. The coping failure is presented as certain: the agent knows in advance that his resources will be insufficient. Underneath the underestimation is a value claim: the anticipated inability to cope is itself a genuine evil, and its anticipation warrants present dread.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a compound claim — a prediction of a negative external event plus a prediction of total coping failure. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether an inability to cope constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism is especially critical here. The impression makes a claim about the rational faculty’s own capacity — it predicts that the faculty will be overwhelmed. Substance Dualism establishes that the rational faculty is categorically distinct from the external order that would be delivering the difficult event. The faculty’s capacity for assent and refusal, for genuine origination, is not defeated by external events — this is precisely what the Pause is demonstrating in this moment. Correspondence Theory: both the external event prediction and the coping failure prediction are registered as propositions requiring examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground — with particular force here, because the impression denies the faculty’s capacity for origination under pressure. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open: the very act of pausing is an exercise of the capacity the impression claims will be unavailable. The Pause is evidence against I could not handle it.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: coping with a difficult external event is an external performance category. Whether the agent manages the external difficulty well or poorly, the outcome concerns the external domain. The genuine condition of the rational faculty is not determined by how external difficulties are managed. More fundamentally, the Stoic account holds that no external event can compel the rational faculty’s assent — the faculty retains its capacity for origination regardless of the external pressure. The impression’s prediction of total coping failure conflicts directly with C1 and C2: Substance Dualism establishes the faculty as categorically distinct from external pressure; Libertarian Free Will establishes that the faculty’s originating capacity is not defeated by external causes. The factual prediction is false on philosophical grounds, not merely empirical ones. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 10. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that the faculty’s genuine capacity is not readable from anticipated external difficulty.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the coping failure prediction. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — the anticipated external difficulty is an indifferent; the rational faculty’s originating capacity is not defeated by external events; the prediction of total coping failure conflicts with the philosophical ground of the faculty’s own nature.


24. Overestimating Danger or Probability of Disaster

The Impression

This situation is extremely dangerous. The probability of disaster is high. I must treat this as an emergency.

The impression inflates both the severity and the probability of a negative external outcome, generating an emergency orientation toward a situation that does not warrant it. The inflation presents itself as accurate risk assessment. Underneath the overestimation is a value claim: the inflated danger constitutes a genuine evil whose probability warrants maximal protective response.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — an assessment of danger severity and probability that warrants emergency treatment. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether the anticipated disaster constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the situation, the anticipated disaster, and the impression that has inflated both its severity and probability. Correspondence Theory: the danger assessment — extremely dangerous, high probability, emergency — is registered as a proposition making factual claims about severity and probability and a value claim about the moral weight of the anticipated outcome. All are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the emergency urgency the inflated danger generates. The emergency orientation itself is what the Pause interrupts.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: the anticipated disaster is an external outcome. Externals are indifferent. Even if the danger assessment were accurate — even if disaster were genuinely probable — the outcome would constitute no genuine evil to the rational faculty. The value claim fails at Theorem 12 before the accuracy of the probability estimate is assessed. The factual claims are additionally false: the impression inflates both severity and probability beyond what the evidence supports, and treats the inflation as accurate risk assessment rather than as a cognitive distortion of the evidential field. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 12. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that anticipated external danger, at any probability level, carries no genuine moral weight.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the inflated danger assessment and from the emergency orientation it generates. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — the anticipated outcome is an indifferent; practical prudent assessment of real risk is appropriate; an emergency orientation derived from inflated probability and severity is not.


25. “What If?” Thinking Spirals

The Impression

What if this goes wrong? Then what if that leads to the next problem? And what if that escalates further? Each step reveals a worse situation than the last.

This pattern is architecturally distinctive. It is not a single false impression but a sequence of impressions, each catastrophizing the preceding one, generating a runaway chain of hypothetical disasters. The spiral is self-sustaining: each what-if answer provides the premise for the next what-if question. Underneath the spiral is a cumulative value claim: the chain of anticipated disasters constitutes a genuine evil of escalating magnitude that the agent must mentally traverse in full.

The Structural Problem

Tracking a single what-if impression through the Five Steps is straightforward — it is a negative prediction (Pattern 22) with a hypothetical frame. The distinctive problem is the chain structure: each step in the spiral generates a new impression before the previous one has been examined. The Five-Step procedure cannot be applied to all impressions simultaneously. The practical method is to apply it to the first impression in the chain, and to recognize that the chain cannot continue if the first impression does not receive assent.

Reception — First Impression in the Chain

Correspondence Theory: the first what-if impression arrives as a claim — a hypothetical prediction of a negative outcome. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether the hypothetical negative outcome constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival even for a hypothetical: the claim that the hypothetical outcome would be a genuine evil fails correspondence with moral reality regardless of the outcome’s probability or hypothetical status.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the hypothetical scenarios the what-if chain is generating. The chain is not happening. It is a sequence of propositions about what might happen. Correspondence Theory: the first what-if claim is registered as a proposition — a hypothetical prediction with an embedded value claim. The chain structure is itself now visible: the impression is the first link, not an inescapable sequence.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open at the first link. The chain cannot continue without the agent’s assent to the first impression. The Pause is structurally decisive here: if the agent holds the first impression open rather than allowing it to generate the next what-if question, the spiral cannot proceed. Libertarian Free Will is what makes that holding possible.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: the hypothetical outcome in the first what-if impression is an external. Externals are indifferent — including hypothetical ones. The value claim embedded in the first what-if fails at Theorem 12. The spiral additionally rests on a false epistemic structure: it treats the mental traversal of hypothetical disaster chains as necessary cognitive preparation rather than as assent to a sequence of false value claims. The agent is not obligated to follow the chain to its terminus. The chain exists only insofar as each link receives assent. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 12. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that the hypothetical external outcome carries no genuine moral weight, and that the chain has no claim on his continued attention once the first impression is examined and refused.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the first what-if impression. The chain stops here. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — the hypothetical outcome is an indifferent; the chain has no authority to continue once the first link is refused; practical attention to the actual present situation is appropriate, mental traversal of a runaway hypothetical sequence is not.


26. Sunk-Cost Thinking

The Impression

I have invested too much in this to stop now. Stopping means all that effort was wasted. I must continue regardless of what is rational.

The impression treats past investment — time, effort, resources already expended — as a reason to continue a course of action that present assessment would not endorse. The past investment is experienced as a genuine loss that continuing might redeem. Underneath the sunk-cost reasoning is a value claim: the past investment constitutes a genuine evil if abandoned; continuing is the only means of preventing that evil from being final.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a normative directive to continue a course of action grounded in past investment rather than present rational assessment. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether past effort abandoned constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the past investment, the course of action, and the impression that has made the past investment a reason for present action. Correspondence Theory: the sunk-cost claim — I must continue; stopping wastes everything — is registered as a proposition asserting a normative obligation grounded in a value claim about past effort. Both the normative claim and the value claim underlying it are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the felt obligation the past investment generates. The past investment is fixed; what remains genuinely open is the present decision.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: past effort expended is an external — it belongs to the domain of things that have already occurred and are now outside the agent’s control. Externals are indifferent. The past investment, whether redeemed by continuation or not, constitutes no genuine evil or good to the rational faculty. The sunk-cost reasoning rests on the false premise that unredeemed past effort is a genuine evil that the agent is obligated to prevent. Foundationalism traces the failure: the impression treats a past external outcome — effort expended — as morally significant in a way that should govern present decision. But the correct Stoic account of decision concerns the present rational assessment of the preferred course of action from this point forward, not the preservation of past investment. The past is now in the domain of fate; only the present decision is in the domain of prohairesis. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that past effort carries no genuine moral weight that can obligate present action.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the sunk-cost obligation. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — the past investment is an indifferent that belongs to the domain of fate; present decision is governed by present rational assessment; the sunk-cost claim was generating a false normative obligation from a false value claim about past externals.


27. Illusion of Control (Overestimating Control Over Events)

The Impression

If I plan carefully enough, I can prevent this bad outcome. It is within my power to control how this goes. The outcome depends on me.

The impression places outcomes firmly in the domain of the agent’s control that are in fact external — determined by factors the agent cannot govern. The overestimation of control generates a false sense of responsibility for outcomes and a corresponding distress when the outcome is not what the agent intended. Underneath the illusion is a value claim: the external outcome is a genuine evil that the agent’s control could and should prevent.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — an assertion that the external outcome is within the agent’s control. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether the external outcome, if bad, constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value of both the control claim and the value claim is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the external outcome and from the causal factors governing it. Correspondence Theory: the control claim — the outcome depends on me — is registered as a proposition making a factual claim about causal structure and an implicit value claim about the moral weight of the outcome. The factual claim maps the control boundary incorrectly. That incorrect mapping is now visible as a proposition requiring examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open. The illusion of control generates an anxious obligation to manage; the Pause interrupts the management impulse before it runs.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: the external outcome is an external. Externals are indifferent. Even if the outcome were fully within the agent’s control — which it is not — it would carry no genuine moral weight. The value claim fails at Theorem 12. The factual claim additionally fails the control dichotomy: the corpus is precise that what is up to the agent is his rational faculty’s own activity — his judgments, his assents, his choices, his intentions. External outcomes are determined by multiple causal factors, most of which are not up to the agent. The agent can pursue appropriate action; he cannot determine the outcome. Foundationalism traces both failures: the value claim to Theorem 12, the control claim to the foundational distinction between what is and what is not in the agent’s power. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that external outcomes are not the domain of his genuine control and carry no genuine moral weight regardless of whether they are.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the illusion of control. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — the outcome is an external indifferent; the agent’s genuine domain of control is his own rational activity; appropriate action is to pursue the preferred course by rational means with reservation, releasing the outcome to the causal order.


28. External Locus of Control

The Impression

Everything that happens to me is done to me by others or by circumstances. I have no real agency. My condition is determined from outside.

The impression locates causal responsibility for the agent’s condition entirely in the external order — other people, circumstances, fate — and removes the agent from the domain of genuine origination. The agent is presented as a passive recipient of what the external order delivers. Underneath the external locus is a value claim: the externally determined condition constitutes a genuine evil the agent is helpless to address.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a causal structure claim asserting that the agent’s condition is determined from outside. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether the externally determined condition is a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism is the decisive commitment at Recognition here. The impression denies the categorical distinction between the rational faculty and the external order — it asserts that the external order determines the agent’s condition. Substance Dualism establishes that the rational faculty is not continuous with the external causal order. It is categorically distinct. The agent’s genuine condition is his rational faculty’s own activity, which is not determined from outside. The impression is registered as a claim that misidentifies the agent’s relationship to the external order. Correspondence Theory: the causal structure claim — everything is done to me — is registered as a proposition directly contradicting the foundational account of the agent’s nature.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open — and does so with decisive force: the Pause is itself an act of genuine origination that the external locus claim denies is possible. The act of holding the moment open is evidence against I have no real agency.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: what the external order delivers is external. Externals are indifferent. The condition the impression describes as determined from outside — whatever circumstances, other people, or fate have produced — occupies the domain of indifferents. More fundamentally, the causal structure claim conflicts directly with C1 and C2: the rational faculty is a distinct substance not reducible to the external causal order (C1), and the faculty genuinely originates its acts of assent and refusal (C2). The external locus claim is false on philosophical grounds: it denies the architecture that the corpus establishes as the correct account of the agent’s nature. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 10 and the causal claim to Propositions 1 through 5. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that his rational faculty is not determined from outside and that its genuine activity is not in the domain of externals.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the external locus claim — an act of origination that is itself a refutation of it. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — what the external order delivers is an indifferent; the rational faculty’s genuine activity is not determined from outside; the agent is the originating cause of his assents and refusals regardless of what circumstances deliver.


29. Internal Control Fallacy (Everything Bad Is My Fault)

The Impression

This bad outcome occurred. I am responsible for it. Everything that went wrong is traceable to my failure. I am the cause of all of it.

The impression is the mirror image of Pattern 28: it locates causal responsibility for negative outcomes entirely inside the agent, treating him as the originating cause of everything that went wrong. Where the External Locus denies the agent’s causal power, the Internal Control Fallacy overextends it. Underneath the total internal attribution is a value claim: being the cause of all bad outcomes constitutes a genuine evil of maximum culpability.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a claim — a total causal attribution of negative outcomes to the agent. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether being the cause of all bad outcomes constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the external outcomes, the other causal factors that contributed to them, and the impression that has attributed total responsibility to him. Correspondence Theory: the total causal attribution — everything bad is traceable to my failure — is registered as a proposition making a factual claim about causal structure (all negative outcomes originate with the agent) and a value claim about the moral weight of that attribution. Both are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the self-condemnatory force of the total attribution.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target: the negative outcomes the impression attributes to the agent are externals. Externals are indifferent. Even if the agent were the total cause of every negative outcome — which he is not — the outcomes would constitute no genuine evil to the rational faculty in the morally relevant sense. The value claim fails at Theorem 12. The factual claim is additionally false: external outcomes are produced by multiple causal factors, most of which are outside the agent’s control. The agent’s genuine causal domain is his rational faculty’s own activity — his judgments, his choices, his acts of assent and refusal. This is a bounded domain, not a total one. Assigning causal responsibility for all external outcomes to the agent overextends the genuine domain of the agent’s causal power in the opposite direction from Pattern 27. Foundationalism traces the value failure to Theorem 12 and the causal claim to the control dichotomy. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that external outcomes are not solely his responsibility and that total causal attribution is false on both philosophical and empirical grounds.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from the total causal attribution and from the self-condemnatory value claim it carries. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — external outcomes are indifferents produced by multiple causes; the agent’s genuine causal domain is his rational activity; honest assessment of what the agent actually contributed is appropriate, total self-attribution of negative outcomes is not.


30. Fallacy of Fairness

The Impression

This outcome is unfair. Life should be fair. The fact that it is not is intolerable and wrong. Something has gone wrong with the moral order.

The impression asserts that the external order is morally obligated to distribute outcomes fairly, and registers its failure to do so as a genuine wrong that warrants the agent’s indignation and distress. The fairness demand is presented not as a preference but as a genuine normative requirement on the external order. Underneath the fallacy is a value claim: the unfair outcome is a genuine evil, and the external order’s failure to deliver fairness constitutes a moral failure that the agent is right to find intolerable.

Reception

Correspondence Theory: the impression arrives as a compound claim — a factual claim that an outcome was unfair, a normative claim that the external order ought to be fair, and a value claim that the unfair outcome is a genuine evil. Moral Realism: there is a fact of the matter about whether an unfair external outcome constitutes a genuine evil. The truth value is present on arrival.

Recognition

Substance Dualism: the agent is his rational faculty, categorically distinct from the external outcome, the distribution of outcomes generally, and the impression that has found the distribution morally deficient. Correspondence Theory: the compound claim — unfair, should be fair, intolerable — is registered as a set of propositions making factual, normative, and value claims. All three are now held for examination.

Pause

Substance Dualism provides the ground. Libertarian Free Will holds the moment open against the indignation the fairness violation generates. Indignation presents itself as morally warranted; the Pause registers it as a response to a claim not yet examined.

Examination

Moral Realism supplies the target and addresses the value claim first: the unfair external outcome is an external. Externals are indifferent. Whether the distribution of external outcomes is fair or unfair, the outcomes themselves carry no genuine moral weight to the agent’s rational faculty. The unfair outcome is not a genuine evil. The normative claim — that the external order ought to be fair — rests on a false premise: the Stoic account does not locate a normative requirement of fairness in the external order. The external order is governed by Providence or by the indifferent causal structure of nature; it is not governed by a fairness principle owed to individual agents. The factual claim — that the outcome was unfair — may or may not be accurate, but its accuracy is irrelevant to the value verdict: even a genuinely unfair external outcome carries no genuine moral weight. Foundationalism traces the primary failure to Theorem 10 and the normative claim to the foundational Stoic account of the external order. Ethical Intuitionism provides direct apprehension: the agent sees that the external order’s distribution of outcomes does not constitute a genuine evil regardless of whether it meets a fairness standard.

Decision

Libertarian Free Will: the agent genuinely originates withholding assent from all three components of the compound claim — the value claim, the normative claim, and the indignation they jointly generate. Correspondence Theory: the agent aligns his assent with the moral fact — the unfair outcome is an indifferent; the external order is not morally obligated to deliver fairness; appropriate response is equanimity toward external distributions, not indignation at their failure to meet a fairness requirement the external order does not carry.


Closing Observation

Across all ten patterns in this category, two structural features distinguish this set from the preceding categories. First, several patterns — Sunk-Cost Thinking, Illusion of Control, External Locus of Control, Internal Control Fallacy, and Fallacy of Fairness — involve false claims about the structure of the agent’s relationship to the external order rather than merely about the moral weight of specific external outcomes. These impressions mismap the boundary between what is up to the agent and what is not. The control dichotomy — the foundational Stoic distinction between what is in our power and what is not — is the primary corpus resource for examining this class of claim. Patterns 27 and 28 represent the two directions of boundary error: overextension of the agent’s causal domain (Illusion of Control) and denial of it (External Locus). Pattern 29 overextends moral responsibility without overextending control. Pattern 30 demands that the external order conform to a normative standard it does not carry.

Second, Substance Dualism and Libertarian Free Will do their most distinctive combined work in Patterns 23, 25, 28, and 29 — the patterns that make claims about the agent’s own causal and originating capacity. In each case, the act of performing the Pause is itself philosophical evidence against the impression’s claim: the agent who holds the moment open against the force of I could not handle it or I have no real agency or the chain of what-ifs cannot be stopped is demonstrating, in the act, that the impression’s claim about the faculty’s capacity is false.

In every case, what presents itself as a realistic assessment of danger, control, responsibility, or fairness is, in corpus terms, a false impression making a value claim that fails correspondence with moral reality at Theorem 12 or Theorem 10, often compounded by a false causal or normative claim about the agent’s relationship to the external order.


Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Analysis and instrument architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.