Thick as a Brick — Sterling Logic Engine Audit
Thick as a Brick — Sterling Logic Engine Audit
Jethro Tull, 1972 — A sophisticated diagnosis of external corruption that locates harm in the wrong place
The Song
The Lyrics
See there, a man was born and we pronounce him fit for peace
There's a load lifted from his shoulders with the discovery of his disease
We'll take the child from him, put it to the test
Teach it to be a wise man, how to fool the restWe will be geared to the average rather than the exceptional
God is an overwhelming responsibility
Oh, fluffy duckWe walked through the maternity ward and saw two hundred and eighteen babies wearing nylons
It says here that cats are on the upgrade (upgrade?)
Hipgrave, downgrades are rare, it's got that fat and old catIn the clear white circles of morning wonder, I take my place with the lord of the hills
And the blue-eyed soldiers stand slightly discoloured
In neat little rows sporting canvas frillsWith their jockstraps pinching, they slouch to attention
Whilst queueing for sarnies at the office canteen
Saying "how's your granny?" and good old Ernie
Coughed up a tenner on a premium bond winThe legends worded in the ancient tribal hymn
Lie cradled in the seagull's call
And all the promises they made are ground beneath the sadist's fallThe poet and the wise man stand behind the gun, behind the gun
And signal for the crack of dawn, light the sun, light the sun
Do you believe in the day?
Do you believe in the day?The dawn creation of the kings has begun, has begun
Soft Venus, lovely maiden brings the ageless one, the ageless one
Do you believe in the day?
Do you believe in the day?The fading hero has returned to the night, to the night
And fully pregnant with the day, with the day, wise men endorse the poet's sight
Do you believe in the day?
Do you believe in the day?Let me tell you the tales of your life
Of your love and the cut of the knife
The tireless oppression, the wisdom instilled
The desire to kill or be killedWell, let me sing of the losers who lie
In the street as the last bus goes by
The pavements are empty, the gutters run red while the fool toasts his god in the skySo come all ye young men who are building castles!
Kindly state the time of the year
And join your voices in a hellish chorus
Mark the precise nature of your fearLet me help you pick up your dead
As the sins of the father are fed
With the blood of the fools and the thoughts of the wise
And from the pan under your bedWell, let me make you a present of song
As the wise man breaks wind and is gone
While the fool with the hour-glass is cooking his goose and the nursery rhyme winds alongSo come all ye young men who are building castles
Kindly state the time of the year
And join your voices in a hellish chorus
Mark the precise nature of your fearSee the summer lightning casts its bolts upon you
And the hour of judgement draweth near
Would you be the fool stood in his suit of armour or the wiser man who rushes clear?So, come on ye childhood heroes!
Won't your rise up from the pages of your comic-books, your super-crooks
And show us all the way?
Well, make your will and testament
Won't you join your local government?
We'll have Superman for president
Let Robin save the daySo where the hell was Biggles when you needed him last Saturday?
And where were all the sportsmen who always pulled you through?
They're all resting down in Cornwall writing up their memoirs
For a paper-back edition of the Boy Scout ManualSo you ride yourselves over the fields
And you make all your animal deals
And your wise men don't know how it feels
To be thick as a brick, yeah
Sterling Logic Engine Audit
Correspondence Verdict
CORRESPONDENCE FAILURE DETECTED
The song demonstrates sophisticated awareness of societal corruption and institutional failure, but locates the problem in externals (systems, authorities, heroes) rather than in the singer's own value-judgments.
The Core Error
The song correctly identifies dispreferred indifferents (corrupt institutions, absent heroes, oppressive systems) but incorrectly treats them as genuine evils that cause suffering.
What the facts are: Social institutions are corrupt. Authority figures are hypocritical. Promised heroes and saviors don't materialize. The system produces conformity and mediocrity.
What the song claims: These external failures are genuine harms. Society's corruption is the source of your problems. The absence of heroes is why you suffer. The system's oppression prevents flourishing.
Propositions Violated
Proposition 20: "The belief that any external is good or evil is factually false."
The song treats as genuine evils: corrupt institutions (external), absent heroes (external), oppressive systems (external), societal indoctrination (external), failed authority figures (external).
Proposition 4: "A person's true identity is constituted by this rational faculty alone."
The song implies your identity and wellbeing are shaped by what society teaches you, whether heroes save you, whether institutions serve you, whether the system is just.
Sterling's correction: Self = prohairesis. External indoctrination cannot touch your rational faculty unless you assent to false value-judgments.
Theorem 3: "All human unhappiness is caused by having a desire for some outcome, and then that outcome does not result."
The song's theory of suffering: You suffer because society is corrupt (external cause). You suffer because heroes didn't come (external cause). You suffer because the system oppresses you (external cause).
Sterling's correction: You suffer because you desired these externals as goods. The song has the causation backwards.
Theorem 7 Diagnostic
Theorem 7: "Desires are caused by beliefs (judgments) about good and evil."
The song reveals these operative beliefs:
- "I desire just institutions" → "I judge just institutions are good"
- "I desire heroes to save me" → "I judge salvation by others is good"
- "I desire the system to be fair" → "I judge fair systems are good"
These are false value-judgments. Justice, fairness, and heroes are preferred indifferents (Theorem 10, Proposition 22), not goods.
The Pathos Diagnostic
Emotions detectable in the song: cynicism toward authority, bitterness about failed promises, despair about lack of salvation, contempt for conformity.
All are pathē (Propositions 23-27) caused by false value-judgment.
The operative belief: "I judged that external authorities, heroes, and systems should save me (treating their justice as good). They didn't. Therefore I experience despair, cynicism, and bitterness."
Proof of correspondence failure: If systems and heroes were correctly classified as indifferent, their corruption or absence would produce no pathos. The emotional intensity of the song is diagnostic proof that externals are being treated as goods and evils.
The Sophisticated Trap
Why this song is dangerous: It is intellectually sophisticated about external corruption while remaining philosophically naive about the source of harm.
The song correctly identifies social institutions as corrupt, authority figures as hypocritical, promised saviors as absent, and mass conformity as destructive.
But incorrectly concludes: Therefore these external failures are your problem. Therefore you need external solutions. Therefore your suffering is caused by what is out there.
This is the Marxist and Progressive pattern: sophisticated external analysis combined with fundamental attribution error about the source of harm.
Sterling would say: You have correctly diagnosed dispreferred indifferents. Now correctly classify them as indifferent to your eudaimonia.
Specific Correspondence Failures
"God is an overwhelming responsibility"
Claim: Divine or cosmic order is a burden.
Sterling: Proposition 20-22 (Theorem 20-21 in Core Stoicism) states Providence and Nature govern rationally. Your responsibility is your own assent (Theorem 6), not managing the cosmos.
Correspondence failure: Treating cosmic governance as your burden (external) rather than your rational will as your domain.
"Where the hell was Biggles when you needed him last Saturday?"
Claim: Absence of hero is the source of your harm.
Sterling: Hero's presence is external (Proposition 19), indifferent (Proposition 20). You desired the hero to save you, which is a false judgment that the hero's action is your good.
Correspondence failure: Self-sufficiency of virtue denied. Treating external savior as necessary for your good.
"Let me tell you the tales of your life, of your love and the cut of the knife, the tireless oppression..."
Claim: Life's suffering comes from external oppression and violence.
Sterling: Oppression and violence are dispreferred indifferents (Proposition 21). Your suffering comes from desiring freedom from oppression as good (Theorem 7). The oppression is external; your grief about it is caused by your false value-judgment.
Correspondence failure: Locating harm in external violence rather than in your assent to the false impression that violence harms your good.
"Mark the precise nature of your fear"
Claim: Fear is an appropriate response to external threats.
Sterling: Proposition 27 states fear is a pathos caused by judging an external as evil. If you correctly judged external threats as indifferent, no fear would result.
Correspondence failure: Treating fear as rational response to externals rather than as diagnostic of false value-belief.
What the Song Gets Right
The song demonstrates awareness that something is wrong, recognition of institutional corruption, skepticism toward authority, rejection of false saviors, and critique of conformity.
These are compatible with Stoicism if systems are recognized as dispreferred indifferents (Proposition 21-22), it is appropriate to pursue just institutions (Theorem 25-26), with reservation (Proposition 35c), while recognizing they are not your good (Theorem 10).
The Refactoring
Current operative belief (song's position):
"Corrupt systems, absent heroes, and oppressive institutions are evils that cause my suffering. I need external salvation. Without just systems and heroic intervention, I cannot flourish."
Stoic refactoring:
"Corrupt systems are dispreferred indifferents (Proposition 20-21). I appropriately pursue just institutions with reservation (Proposition 22, 35c). Their corruption does not touch my good (Theorem 10). My eudaimonia is my virtue (Theorem 14), which consists of pursuing appropriate aims (Theorem 29) regardless of whether systems are just or heroes arrive. My suffering comes not from their corruption but from my false belief that their justice is my good (Theorem 7). I eliminate suffering by correcting this value-judgment (Theorem 14), not by demanding external conditions change."
Final Diagnostic
The song reveals sophisticated external analysis (correctly identifies dispreferred indifferents) combined with fundamental value-belief error (treats those indifferents as goods and evils), resulting in intellectual Stoicism combined with operational Epicureanism.
It thinks like a Stoic about externals (they are corrupt and unreliable) but values like an Epicurean (treats them as necessary for wellbeing).
Verdict: Correspondence failure detected throughout.
The song demonstrates the educated cynic's error: correctly seeing through external promises while incorrectly locating the good in external conditions.
Propositions violated: 4, 10, 17, 18-20, 22
Theorems violated: Theorem 3, 7, 14, 29
Recommended correction: Maintain critique of externals, eliminate treating their corruption as harm to your good.
The Crucial Mechanism
To understand how to correct this correspondence failure, see The Discipline Mechanism of Core Stoicism, which explains how Theorems 7 and 15-17 form the bridge between eliminating false desires (Section Two) and generating desire for virtue that directs appropriate action (Section Four).
The mechanism: Desires follow judgments (Theorem 7). Correct the judgment about what is genuinely good (Theorem 10: only virtue), and you simultaneously eliminate false desires for externals AND generate genuine desire for virtue, which expresses itself in pursuing appropriate aims with reservation (Theorem 29).
The song's cynicism, bitterness, and despair are diagnostic proof of false value-judgments. Change the judgment, and the pathos disappears.
Sterling Logic Engine v3.0. Sterling's Core Stoicism: Core Stoicism. The 58 Unified Stoic Propositions: Grant C. Sterling. Synthesis and SLE framework: Dave Kelly.

