The Commonwealth Within — An Essay Tracking Federalist No. 10
The Commonwealth Within — An Essay Tracking Federalist No. 10
Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.
Design note. This essay tracks Federalist No. 10 movement by movement — its opening alarm, its definition, its two methods, its anatomy of causes, its rejected remedies, its democracy and its republic, its extended sphere, its closing exhortation — and at each station argues the corpus position. Where Madison’s subject is the state, the essay’s subject is the agent; the tracking is deliberate, because the corpus holds that Madison assigned to the constitution a cure that exists, but exists only in the jurisdiction he declared closed. Per the standing constraint, the political application is Dave Kelly’s.
To the citizen, whoever he is:
Among the numerous advantages promised by a well-ordered ruling faculty, none deserves to be more accurately developed than its tendency to break and control the violence of the passions. The friend of rational agency never finds himself so much alarmed for its character and fate as when he contemplates its propensity to this dangerous vice — and then he remembers that alarm is itself the vice contemplated, withdraws his assent from it, and proceeds calmly to the analysis. The instability, injustice, and confusion introduced into the councils of the soul have, in truth, been the mortal diseases under which agents have everywhere suffered; and the complaints are heard from every considerate man: that his judgments are too unstable, that his true interest is disregarded in the conflict of rival desires, and that his measures are too often decided, not according to the rules of correct judgment, but by the superior force of an interested and overbearing passion. The evidence of known facts will not permit us to deny that these complaints are true. But it will be found, on a candid review of our situation, that these distresses have been erroneously charged on the operation of externals; they are, chiefly and wholly, effects of the unsteadiness and injustice with which false judgment has tainted the administration of the self (Th7; Core Stoicism, Th2).
By a passion, I understand a movement of the soul, whether momentary or entrenched, actuated by a common impulse with all others of its kind: the false judgment that some external is genuinely good or genuinely evil (Th7; SLE, Section IV). And by a faction — for the two are one thing at two scales — I understand a number of citizens who have severally assented to the same false judgment and act in concert upon it. The essay this essay tracks defined faction by its adversity to the rights of others; the corpus completes the definition by naming its cause. Faction is collectivized false assent. What the statesman fears in the many, the practitioner first locates in himself.
There are two methods of curing the mischiefs of passion: the one, by removing its causes; the other, by controlling its effects. And there are again two methods of removing the causes: the one, by destroying the liberty which is essential to its existence; the other, by giving to the citizen true opinions in place of false.
It could never be more truly said than of the first remedy, that it is not merely worse than the disease but impossible and incoherent together. Liberty is to passion what air is to fire — but the liberty in question is the assent of the rational faculty, and that liberty no power on earth can destroy, because nothing stands between an agent and his assent (Th6). Nor, could it be destroyed, would the destroyer have gained anything: the free assent that makes passion possible is the same free assent in which alone virtue can reside (Th27). To abolish it to prevent its abuse would be to annihilate the one thing of value in the universe because it can be badly used.
The second expedient — and here this essay parts company with the essay it tracks — is impracticable only for governments. Madison judged it folly to give every citizen the same opinions; and so it is, by proclamation, by law, or by force, since no external power can install a judgment. But every citizen can give himself the same opinions — the same, that is, as any rational faculty apprehending the same truths: that only virtue is good and only vice evil (Th10), that judgment is in his control, and that the externals over which passions contend carry no value of their own. The remedy declared impossible in the aggregate is the daily work of the discipline in the individual. What no legislature can distribute, each man can produce. The causes of passion are therefore removable — but only in the first person, one assent at a time, by the training the corpus prescribes; which is why, for every power other than the agent himself, the great original held exactly: relief is only to be sought in the means of controlling effects.
The latent occasions of passion are sown thickly in the circumstances of life, and we see them everywhere brought into different degrees of activity. A zeal for different opinions; an attachment to contending leaders; and most commonly and durably, the various and unequal distribution of externals. Those who hold property and those who are without it have ever formed distinct parties — not because holdings compel opinions, for no position constitutes a sentiment and no interest compels a judgment, but because to the man who has assented to the false proposition that his holding is his good, his holding dictates his party. The division of society into interests is the division of mankind by the objects of their false assents. Strip the assent, and the landed, the manufacturing, and the moneyed interests remain as occupations; they cease to exist as factions. And the deepest correction runs beneath the whole theater: the interests thus contending cannot, in truth, conflict at all, for it is impossible for there to be a conflict between what is genuinely good for one man and what is genuinely good for another (Egoism and Altruism). Only false judgments about externals collide. The war of interests is a war of errors.
No man is allowed to be a judge in his own cause, because his interest, it is said, would certainly bias his judgment. Say rather: because the occasion of false assent is there strongest, and experience shows the assent freely given far more often than withheld. Yet mark what the maxim conceals. In the only cause that finally matters — the condition of his own ruling faculty — every man is judge, jury, and the whole tribunal, and no recusal is possible or needed. There, the judge cannot be bribed except by his own consent; there, the most powerful faction on earth cannot pack the bench; there, and only there, perfect justice is always available, since it consists in judging correctly, and judgment is in his control (Core Stoicism, concluding paragraph following Th29). The maxim is sound prudence for legislatures and a counsel of despair for no one.
It is in vain, says the essay we track, to say that enlightened statesmen will be able to adjust these clashing interests: enlightened statesmen will not always be at the helm. Granted — of the state. But the enlightened agent can always be at his own helm, and any agent can be enlightened, since anyone is capable of making the right choice at any given time (Stoicism, Politics, and the Best Form of Government, Message Two). Nor do moral motives lose their efficacy as numbers combine, as though arithmetic reached into the soul; agents decline to act on them, freely, one by one, while combination multiplies the occasions and lets each man’s error reinforce his neighbor’s. The supply of the enlightened is fixed by nothing but the neglect of training.
From this view of the subject it may be concluded that a soul governed as a pure democracy — in which every impression that assembles administers the government in person, and the common passion is felt at once by the majority of the man — can admit of no cure for the mischiefs of passion. Such souls have ever been spectacles of turbulence and contention, incompatible with security or steadiness, as short in their peace as they are violent in their commotions; and the theoretic doctrine that would perfect them by mere freedom — do whatever you feel like doing at the moment — only confirms each entrenched desire in its office (Message Two, citing Plato on democracy).
A soul governed as a republic opens a different prospect, and promises the cure for which we are seeking. The two great points of difference are exactly the two the great original named. The first is the delegation of the government: no impression rules in person; each is passed through the medium of a chosen body — the ruling faculty in its office of assent — whose wisdom may best discern the true interest of the man, and whose settled judgments will be least likely to sacrifice it to temporary or partial considerations. Under such a regulation it constantly happens that the verdict pronounced upon an impression is more consonant to the agent’s true interest than the impression’s own clamor, convened for the purpose, could ever be. The second is the extension of the sphere. Extend the sphere of the judgment — take in the whole of the agent’s roles, the whole of his life, the whole of the world as governed by Providence and therefore as it should be (Th20–22) — and you make it improbable that any single passion can carry its scheme of oppression; the impression that seemed a majority in the moment of its arrival finds itself, in the enlarged view, one voice among all things, unable to discover its strength or act in unison against a faculty that has seen it whole. The influence of a kindled desire may inflame its particular province, but will be unable to spread a general conflagration through the ordered soul; a rage for any external will be less apt to pervade the whole man in the same proportion as the man is extended and structured by the disciplines.
Hence it clearly appears that the same advantage which a republic has over a democracy in controlling the effects of faction is enjoyed, within, by the trained over the untrained soul — with this signal superiority, that the commonwealth within can do what no commonwealth without can attempt: it removes the causes. And what of the commonwealth without? Let it do the work proper to its jurisdiction, and let its citizens not ask more of it. Its object, rightly named, is not the public good — for good inheres only in the virtue of individual rational agents, severally, and the act of protecting a life can be Good in itself though the life protected is not (Sterling, “Changing what we value,” April 18, 2014) — but the common welfare: an aggregate of preferred indifferents, worth securing with reservation, worth defending by every appropriate action, and never worth one false assent. The best such commonwealth would be one that affirms a clear conception of virtue and guides its citizens toward it; failing that, one that at least obstructs the concert and execution of collectivized false judgment. Either way the decisive election is held elsewhere, at every moment, in a district of one.
In the extent and proper structure of the governed soul, therefore, we behold the rational remedy for the diseases most incident to rational beings. And according to the degree of pleasure and pride we feel in being rational agents ought to be our zeal in cherishing the discipline and supporting the character of the practitioner.
THE PRACTITIONER.
Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (Eastern Illinois University). Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic). 2026.

