Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Friday, March 20, 2026

How the Six Commitments Stabilize the Rational Faculty

 

How the Six Commitments Stabilize the Rational Faculty

Theodore Millon called the borderline condition the stable unstable. His point was that the borderline condition is not chaos plus stability alternating — it is a stable organization around instability. The person reliably returns to fragmentation. That is their ground state. The six commitments address this at precisely the structural level where the instability is organized.


Dualism Stops Identity Fusion with Content

The borderline instability begins at the location problem. When an impression arrives — rejection, praise, threat, desire — the faculty does not register it as about something external. It registers it as what I am right now. Identity fuses with content moment by moment. Dualism is the operation that prevents this by continuously locating the faculty at the subject pole prior to all content. It does not eliminate intense impressions. It keeps the faculty from becoming them. The stable-unstable pattern is precisely what you get when this operation is absent: the person is stable in their tendency to become whatever arrives.


Free Will Inserts the Structural Pause

The borderline pattern characteristically collapses the gap between impression and response. Something arrives and behavior follows with minimal interval. The structural pause that libertarian free will provides — the recognition that presentation is not yet assent — is what is missing. Without it the faculty is not handling impressions; it is being driven by them. Free will does not slow the faculty down deliberately. It inserts a structural fact: I have not yet assented. That fact alone changes what is possible next.


Intuitionism Grounds Moral Judgment in Apprehension Rather Than in the Other Person

A significant feature of borderline instability is the rapid oscillation of moral evaluations of others — idealization collapsing into devaluation and back. This happens when moral judgment is not grounded in direct apprehension of what is there but in what the other person is currently providing or withholding. Ethical intuitionism directs the faculty to look at the act or situation rather than at the emotional return it generates. The judgment becomes something read rather than something felt as a response to treatment received.


Foundationalism Provides Non-Negotiable Ground

The stable-unstable structure is in part a ground problem. The faculty has no fixed standing point that new impressions cannot move. Every intense impression is potentially identity-reorganizing. Foundationalism is the operation that establishes which commitments are load-bearing and treats them as immovable. This is not the same as rigidity about particular judgments. It is the establishment of a floor below which destabilization cannot reach. With that floor in place the faculty can be moved at the surface — by argument, by emotion, by circumstance — without losing its fundamental orientation.


Correspondence Theory Disconnects Value Claims from Emotional State

When correspondence theory is operating the faculty submits its value judgments to a standard outside itself. The judgment is an attempt to get something right, not an expression of current feeling. In the borderline pattern value claims tend to track emotional state directly — what feels true is treated as true, what feels like betrayal is a betrayal, what feels like love confirms the other person's goodness. Correspondence theory introduces the gap between how things feel and how things are. That gap is stabilizing because it means the faculty's assessments are not hostage to its current affective condition.


Moral Realism Gives Judgments Weight That Does Not Fluctuate

When moral realism is operating, virtue and vice are features of the world with fixed ontological status. They do not change based on the relationship, the mood, or the most recent interaction. In the borderline pattern the moral status of persons and acts shifts dramatically with context — the same person is wonderful and monstrous in rapid succession. Moral realism stabilizes this by insisting that the classification carries weight independent of how the faculty currently feels about the thing being classified. Evil does not become good because the person who did it is currently being kind. Good does not become evil because the person is currently withholding.


The Structural Summary

Millon's stable instability is what you get when all six operations are absent simultaneously. The faculty has no location, no structural pause, no direct moral apprehension, no fixed ground, no external standard, and no ontologically stable moral classifications. Every impression reorganizes everything. The six commitments are not therapeutic interventions applied to this condition from outside. They are the structural features whose absence is the condition. To operate with all six functioning is not to manage borderline instability. It is to have a differently organized faculty — one whose ground state is stable location rather than stable fragmentation.

The Six Commitments in Operation

 

The Six Commitments in Operation

Here is an account of each commitment as a moment-by-moment operation of the rational faculty — what the faculty actually does when the commitment is functioning.


Substance Dualism in Operation

At each moment the rational faculty registers that it is not identical to what is happening to the body, to the nervous system, or to the social position. When an impression arrives — pain, insult, loss, elation — the faculty notes that the impression is about something external and that the one receiving it is not that thing. This is not a theoretical claim made once and stored. It is a continuous act of location: I am here; that is there. Without this operation the faculty collapses into its content and assent becomes indistinguishable from reaction.


Libertarian Free Will in Operation

At each moment the rational faculty holds the impression in suspension before assenting. The operation is a pause — not a long deliberative pause, but a structural one. Something is presented; the faculty recognizes that presentation is not yet assent; it then either assents or withholds. The will is not the outcome but the gap before the outcome. When this operation is functioning the faculty never experiences itself as caused to assent. It experiences itself as the cause.


Ethical Intuitionism in Operation

When a value judgment is required the rational faculty does not run a calculation. It looks directly at the act or situation and reads what is there. The operation is something like recognition — the way one recognizes a shape before analyzing its geometry. The faculty is not indifferent to reasons; it uses them to clarify what it is looking at. But the judgment itself is not derived from the reasons. It is apprehended. When this operation is functioning the faculty does not experience moral truth as a conclusion. It experiences it as a given that reasons are unpacking.


Foundationalism in Operation

At each moment the rational faculty knows which judgments are negotiable and which are not. This is not stubbornness. It is structural orientation — the faculty is always standing somewhere, and foundationalism is the operation that keeps it standing on the same ground from one moment to the next. When a new impression arrives that conflicts with a first principle, the operation produces immediate resistance rather than immediate accommodation. The faculty recognizes: this cannot move me because I am already committed to what contradicts it. Without this operation every new argument is potentially destabilizing.


Correspondence Theory of Truth in Operation

When the rational faculty makes a value judgment it implicitly submits that judgment to a standard outside itself. The operation is one of referral — the judgment points away from the faculty's preferences and toward how things actually are. This means that at every moment of judgment the faculty holds open the possibility that it is wrong, not because truth is uncertain but because the faculty's grasp of truth is always fallible. Error is not a perspective; it is a miss. When this operation is functioning the faculty never experiences its value claims as expressions of what it happens to prefer. It experiences them as attempts to get something right.


Moral Realism in Operation

At each moment the rational faculty treats the distinction between virtue and vice as a distinction in the furniture of the world, not in the customs of a community. When it encounters an act, a disposition, or a judgment, the faculty classifies it as genuinely good, genuinely bad, or genuinely indifferent — and the classification carries ontological weight, not social weight. The operation is one of serious attribution: the faculty means what it says when it calls something evil. It is not reporting a preference or a cultural norm. It is identifying a feature. Without this operation moral language becomes rhetoric, and the faculty knows it has become rhetoric, which undermines every subsequent moral act.


These six operations are not sequential steps. They run simultaneously as aspects of a single functioning rational faculty. Dualism locates the faculty. Free will structures its agency. Intuitionism directs its moral attention. Foundationalism stabilizes its ground. Correspondence theory keeps it honest about error. Moral realism gives its judgments genuine weight. A faculty in which all six are operating is one that can assent, withhold, judge, and act without the constant leakage into reaction, calculation, drift, or performance that marks a faculty in which one or more are failing.

Enchiridion Two and the Discipline of Desire: A Conceptual Integration

 

Enchiridion Two and the Discipline of Desire: A Conceptual Integration


The Structural Claim of Section Two

Enchiridion Two is the most compressed and technically precise statement Epictetus ever produced of what the Discipline of Desire actually requires. Almost every clause does philosophical work that is easy to miss.

Epictetus opens with a symmetry: desire promises attainment; aversion promises non-occurrence. Both are promissory notes. The question is whether the promise can be kept. He then identifies the exact condition under which it cannot: when the object of desire or aversion lies outside the agent’s control.

If a man desires something external — health, money, an outcome in the world — and that thing fails to obtain, he has failed in his desire and is therefore unfortunate. If a man fears something external — disease, death, poverty — and it happens anyway, he has fallen into what he sought to avoid and is therefore miserable. The math is simple: desire an external and you may fail; avert from an external and it may come anyway. You have no guarantee in either direction.

The move Epictetus makes is not to counsel resignation or reduced expectation. It is architecturally sharper than that. He says: withdraw aversion entirely from what is not under your control, and transfer it to what is unnatural among the things that are under your control. As for desire — remove it utterly for the present. Because if you desire any external, you are bound to be unfortunate; and there is nothing among the things under your control that is yet within your grasp as a proper object of desire. So for now: employ only choice and refusal, lightly, with reservations, without straining.


What Section Two Presupposes

The section presupposes the full doctrine of indifferents without naming it. Epictetus does not say here that externals are neither good nor evil — that is Section One’s territory. But Section Two’s instructions only make sense if that metaphysical foundation is already in place. The reason aversion to disease or death is irrational is not merely that it fails to work. It is that disease and death are not genuine evils. There is nothing there to legitimately fear. The aversion is built on a false judgment, and the misery that follows its frustration is built on the same falseness.

This is where the integration with Sterling’s corpus becomes essential. Sterling’s Theorem 7 states that desires are caused by beliefs — judgments about good and evil. You desire what you judge to be good; you are averse to what you judge to be evil. The Discipline of Desire is therefore not a discipline of will in the sense of willpower. It is a discipline of cognition. Aversion to death is not a brute emotional reflex to be suppressed. It is a judgment — “death is an evil” — that has been accepted, and it can be corrected by accepting the true proposition instead: death is an external and therefore neither good nor evil.

Theorem 13 follows directly: desiring things out of our control is irrational because it involves false judgment. Not merely impractical. Not merely prone to frustration. False. The Discipline of Desire is the project of replacing false cognition with true cognition regarding the class of objects that constitute externals.


My Desires Are My Judgments

The document “My Desires Are My Judgments” states the same point from the inside — from within the first-person experience of desiring — and the convergence with Enchiridion Two is exact. The desire and the judgment are not two events; the desire just is the judgment in its motivational form. If a man wants his health to continue, it is because somewhere — explicitly or, far more often, implicitly — he has accepted the proposition that his health is a genuine good. The desire is the acceptance.

This means that desires are in the agent’s control. Not directly, not by an act

My Desires Are My Judgments

 

My Desires Are My Judgments


I desire things. Let us begin there. At any given moment I find myself wanting certain outcomes — that my health continue, that my work succeed, that those I care about flourish, that I not be humiliated or dismissed or forgotten. These desires feel like facts about me, as basic and unchosen as my height. But they are not facts about me in that sense. They are conclusions. They follow from something.

What they follow from is a judgment. Specifically, they follow from the judgment that the thing desired is genuinely good — or, in the case of aversion, that the thing avoided is genuinely evil. You do not desire what you judge to be worthless. You do not fear what you judge to be harmless. The desire and the judgment are not two events; the desire just is the judgment in its motivational form. If I want my health to continue, it is because somewhere — explicitly or, far more often, implicitly — I have accepted the proposition that my health is a genuine good. The desire is the acceptance.

This means that desires are in my control. Not directly, not by an act of pure will in which I simply decide to stop wanting what I want. But indirectly, in exactly the way that impressions are indirectly in my control: through the governance of judgment. If I change what I accept as genuinely good or evil, my desires will follow. They cannot do otherwise, because they have no source other than those judgments.

Now: what actually is genuinely good? The answer the Stoics give is precise and, at first encounter, almost unbelievable in its narrowness. The only genuine good is virtue — that is, the correct use of my rational will. The only genuine evil is vice — the incorrect use of it. Everything else, without exception, falls outside those categories. My health, my reputation, my life, the lives of those I love, my comfort, my success — none of these are genuinely good. Their opposites are not genuinely evil. They are preferred or dispreferred, more or less appropriate to pursue, but they carry no genuine value of the kind that could make me happy if I obtain them or unhappy if I do not.

The consequence for desire is immediate and total. Any desire I have for an external outcome rests on a false judgment. I desire continued health because I have judged health to be genuinely good. That judgment is false. The desire that follows from it is therefore built on nothing — or rather, built on an error. And an error of that kind is not merely intellectually unfortunate. It is the direct cause of every unhappiness I will ever experience, because unhappiness just is the frustration of desire, and I have filled myself with desires for things I cannot control.

What should I desire, then? Virtue. That is the whole answer. I should desire to judge correctly, to will correctly, to act from rational assessment of what is appropriate rather than from appetite for outcomes. And here is the aspect of this that most people miss entirely: this desire can always be satisfied. It can be satisfied right now, regardless of what is happening around me, regardless of what has been taken from me or what has not yet arrived. Whether I am healthy or sick, employed or destitute, loved or alone — none of those circumstances affect whether I can, at this moment, judge correctly and will correctly. The object of the one desire I should have is always within reach.

There is more. Once I have relinquished the false desires — or begun to relinquish them, since this is not done in an afternoon — something opens up that was previously crowded out. I find that I can take genuine pleasure in things I previously only grasped at. The taste of a meal, the quality of light in the late afternoon, the interest of a conversation — these produce positive feeling without requiring that I desire them to continue. I enjoy them while they are present and release them when they are not, because I have not judged them to be genuine goods whose loss would harm me. The grasping was what prevented the enjoyment. The desire was what made the pleasure anxious.

So what I am after is this: to want only what is genuinely mine to achieve, and to hold everything else as it actually is — neither good nor evil, available or not available, present or absent — with the equanimity that follows not from indifference but from correct understanding. This is not a diminished life. It is the only life in which the positive feelings are not perpetually threatened by the possibility of losing what produces them. I cannot lose virtue except by my own choice. Everything else I never truly had.

Thursday, March 19, 2026

Defending Classical Philosophy: The Positive Account

 

"How does one defend oneself against modern anti-classical philosophy"

Defending Classical Philosophy: The Positive Account

The question assumes that anti-classical philosophy is on offense and classical philosophy must defend. That assumption should be rejected at the outset. The burden of proof runs the other way.

Anti-classical positions — relativism, constructivism, postmodernism — are not the default from which classical philosophy deviates. They are departures from commitments that any coherent rational enterprise already presupposes. The task is not to parry attacks but to make those presuppositions explicit.

What classical philosophy actually claims

Classical philosophy is not a collection of positions that happen to be old. It is the systematic working-out of six commitments that any serious inquiry already implicitly accepts:

That there is a mind-independent reality distinct from our representations of it. That beliefs can correspond to or fail to correspond with that reality. That some things are genuinely good or evil, not merely preferred or avoided. That some moral and logical truths are known directly rather than inferred from prior premises. That rational agents have real causal power over their own assent. That knowledge requires genuine justification, not merely coherent belief.

These are not arbitrary starting points. They are what you are already committed to the moment you assert that your anti-classical thesis is true, that your opponent's view fails to correspond to reality, that classical foundationalism is really wrong rather than merely unfashionable, that you chose to reason rather than simply being caused to produce sounds, and that your critique is justified rather than merely expressed.

The peritrope is not enough

The standard defensive move — showing that relativism is self-refuting — is correct but incomplete. It establishes that the anti-classical position cannot be coherently asserted. It does not establish what should replace it. A positive account is required.

The positive account is this: the six commitments named above are not hypotheses under test. They are the preconditions of testing anything. You cannot run an inquiry — philosophical, scientific, ethical, or logical — without already operating within correspondence, foundationalism, and the real efficacy of rational assent. Anti-classical philosophy does not escape these commitments. It relies on them silently while attacking them explicitly.

Why anti-classical philosophy arose

The historical question matters because it identifies what went wrong rather than merely what is wrong now.

Anti-classical philosophy gained traction by attacking each commitment separately, in sequence, without acknowledging that they stand or fall together. Substance dualism was abandoned first, which made libertarian free will implausible, which made genuine rational assent a fiction, which made the correspondence of belief to reality a contingent accident rather than an achievement, which made foundationalism look like dogma, which made moral realism look like projection. Each step felt local and manageable. The cumulative result was the evacuation of every condition that makes inquiry possible.

The reconstruction runs in reverse. Restore the real distinction between the rational faculty and its material substrate and libertarian free will becomes coherent again. Restore free will and genuine assent becomes possible again. Restore genuine assent and correspondence becomes an achievement rather than an illusion. Restore correspondence and foundationalism becomes recognizable as what it always was: the acknowledgment that justification must stop somewhere or it does not start anywhere. Restore foundationalism and moral realism follows as the recognition that the stopping point in ethical inquiry is direct acquaintance with genuine value, not arbitrary commitment.

The practical upshot

When confronted with an anti-classical move, the right response is not tactical. It is to name which commitment is being covertly relied upon while being explicitly denied, and to ask whether the critic is prepared to relinquish it consistently — in their own inquiry, not merely in their thesis.

A relativist who argues carefully relies on correspondence. A constructivist who claims power distorts knowledge relies on the contrast between distorted and undistorted cognition — which is a foundationalist and realist commitment. A postmodernist who publishes relies on the real efficacy of rational persuasion. None of them can do their work without the ground they are trying to remove.

Classical philosophy does not need a defense playbook. It needs to be stated.

Conceptual Integration: The Three Disciplines Across Four Sections

 

Conceptual Integration: The Three Disciplines Across Four Sections


The three disciplines — assent, desire, and action — are the organizational spine of Stoic practice in Epictetus. What the four sections together provide is a complete account of each discipline at three distinct levels: the phenomenological, the axiomatic, and the operational. No single section provides all three levels for any single discipline. The integration is therefore not a summary of what each section says but an account of what they establish jointly.


The Discipline of Assent — Section 7

Section 7 is the primary phenomenological account of the discipline of assent. Impressions arrive propositionally — already carrying claims about the world, frequently including claims about value. The agent’s sole point of leverage is the act of assent: acceptance or rejection of the impression as true. If he refuses to assent to a value-laden impression, nothing follows — no desire, no emotion, no action. The entire causal chain is severed at its first link.

Section 7’s account of assent has two faces, positive and negative. The negative face is refusal: declining to accept that an external is genuinely good or evil. The positive face is substitution: actively formulating a true counter-proposition and assenting to that. Refusal alone leaves a vacuum; substitution fills it with correct judgment. Both faces are required for the discipline to function.

Section 9’s axiomatic structure then provides the logical warrant for why the discipline of assent is architecturally primary. Theorem 7 establishes that desires are caused by beliefs about good and evil. Theorem 3 establishes that all unhappiness is caused by frustrated desire. The causal chain therefore runs: false assent → false belief about value → desire for external → frustrated desire → unhappiness. The discipline of assent intervenes at the origin of that chain. Every other discipline presupposes it.


The Discipline of Desire — Section 11, Section 7 (a and c), Core Stoicism Section Two

The discipline of desire concerns what the agent pursues and avoids. Its governing principle is that desire should be directed only at what is genuinely good — virtue — and aversion directed only at what is genuinely evil — vice — with everything external held as neither.

Section 11 provides the phenomenological and operational account. Desires are not brute facts about the agent; they are judgments in motivational form. To desire health is to have already accepted, implicitly or explicitly, that health is genuinely good. The desire and the false judgment are not two events — they are one event at two levels of description. This means desires are indirectly in the agent’s control through exactly the same mechanism as impressions: governance of judgment. Change what is accepted as genuinely good or evil, and desire follows without remainder.

Section 11 further establishes that the object of correct desire — virtue, the right use of rational will — is always available. Unlike every external object, it cannot be placed beyond reach by circumstance. This is not consolation; it is a structural feature of the object itself. And Section 11 identifies what becomes available once false desires are released: the sensory and aesthetic pleasures that were previously crowded out by grasping. Enjoyment without desire for continuation is not diminished pleasure — it is pleasure freed from the anxiety that attends every object one has falsely judged to be a genuine good.

Section 7’s instructions (a) and (c) specify the discipline of desire at the practical level. Instruction (a) — do not assent to impressions that depict externals as good or evil — is the discipline of desire in its negative form: the refusal to generate the false judgment from which false desire flows. Instruction (c) — consciously formulate true propositions regarding the lack of value of external things, in advance where possible — is the discipline of desire in its positive form: the active construction of correct value judgment before the impression arrives with its emotional charge. Sterling’s example is precise:

“My wife’s actions are not in my control. They are neither good nor evil. My happiness is in my control, not enslaved to the actions of others.”

This is not a coping statement. It is a correct value proposition, assented to in advance, that preempts the false desire before it forms.

Core Stoicism Section Two provides the axiomatic foundation. Theorems 3 through 14 establish the complete logical structure: unhappiness follows from frustrated desire; desire follows from false value judgment; false value judgment concerns externals; externals are not in the agent’s control; therefore desire for externals is irrational and is the sole source of all unhappiness. Theorem 10 — the only genuine good is virtue, the only genuine evil is vice — is the axiomatic warrant for redirecting desire entirely. Theorems 11 and 12 complete the structure: since virtue and vice are acts of will, they are in the agent’s control; therefore the only genuine goods and evils are in the agent’s control; therefore correct desire is always satisfiable.


The Discipline of Action — Section 10, Section 7 (b and d), Core Stoicism Section Four

The discipline of action — the discipline of kathēkon, appropriate action — concerns how the agent moves from correct desire to correct conduct in the world. Its governing principle is the reserve clause: pursue rational ends by rational means with the conscious recognition that outcomes are never genuinely the agent’s to produce.

Section 10 provides the operational account. On the Stoic view, the agent’s action just is his choice — not the physical occurrence that follows from it. The choice is appropriate or inappropriate at the instant it is made. Whether the restaurant is open, whether the colleague arrives, whether the sidewalk is safe — none of these are the agent’s action. They are the world’s response to it, and the world’s response is always already outside the agent’s purview. This means the agent who has made a correct choice has already acted correctly, completely, regardless of what follows.

The three-part structure Section 10 makes explicit — identify rational ends, select rational means, hold every choice with the reservation that outcomes are not mine to guarantee — is not a practical heuristic. It is the behavioral form that correct assent and correct desire take when extended into the world. The agent who holds his choices with reservation is the agent who has refused to assent to the impression that the outcome is genuinely good or evil. The reserve clause and the discipline of assent are the same act seen from different levels.

Section 7’s instructions (b) and (d) specify the discipline of action at the practical level. Instruction (b) — if you have failed to refuse the initial false assent, do not then assent to subsequent impressions that depict immoral responses as appropriate — concerns the containment of failure: when the discipline of assent has not prevented a false value judgment, the discipline of action prevents the false judgment from issuing in irrational conduct. Instruction (d) — consciously formulate true action propositions, attending to preferred and dispreferred indifferents and to the duties connected with one’s various roles — is the positive face of the discipline of action: the explicit construction of the correct choice before acting. Sterling’s example is equally precise:

“I should report truthfully to my boss regarding the sales numbers from the last quarter: truth-telling is virtuous, and I have a duty to act faithfully at work. If my boss fires me, I should remember that my job is an external, neither good nor evil.”

The action proposition contains the reserve clause within it. The correct action and the correct attitude toward its outcome are formulated simultaneously.

Core Stoicism Section Four provides the axiomatic foundation. Theorem 24 establishes that acts of will require objects — action is always action toward something. Theorem 25 establishes that some objects are appropriate to aim at without being genuinely good — the preferred indifferents. Theorem 27 establishes that virtue consists of rational acts of will. Theorem 29 is the pivot: virtue consists of the pursuit of appropriate objects of aim, not the pursuit of desired outcomes. Such pursuit produces good feeling and, because it carries no desire for the actual outcome, can never produce unhappiness. The discipline of action is therefore not a constraint on desire — it is what correct desire looks like when it takes the form of movement in the world.


Positive Feelings — Core Stoicism Section Three

Core Stoicism Section Three stands somewhat apart from the three disciplines as an account of what correct practice yields rather than what it requires. Its three sources of positive feeling — joy in virtue (Theorem 17), sensory and aesthetic pleasure (Theorems 18–19), and appreciation of the world as it is (Theorem 22) — correspond precisely to the three disciplines.

Joy in virtue is the affective consequence of the discipline of action: the agent who has chosen correctly and assents to having done so receives appropriate positive feeling as the direct result. Sensory and aesthetic pleasure is the affective consequence of the discipline of desire: the agent who has released his false desires no longer grasps at pleasures, and the pleasure that was previously anxious becomes available as simple enjoyment without vulnerability. Section 11 makes this explicit — the grasping was what prevented the enjoyment. Appreciation of the world as it is is the affective consequence of the discipline of assent: the agent who meets each impression without the overlay of false value judgment perceives what is simply as what it is, and that perception is itself a source of continuous positive feeling available at every waking moment.


The Integration: One Practice, Three Registers, One Consequence

The deepest result of the integration is that the three disciplines are not three practices coordinated with one another. They are one practice — the governance of rational assent — described at three levels of resolution.

At the perceptual level, the practice is: meet each impression without assenting to its value claims about externals, and actively substitute correct propositions in their place. This is the discipline of assent.

At the motivational level, the practice is: direct pursuit only toward what is genuinely good and aversion only toward what is genuinely evil, which means toward virtue and away from vice alone, holding all externals as indifferent. This is the discipline of desire. It is the discipline of assent applied to the question of what to want.

At the operational level, the practice is: identify rational ends, select rational means, act with the reserve clause that outcomes are never genuinely mine to produce. This is the discipline of action. It is the discipline of desire applied to the question of how to move.

Core Stoicism Section Three then describes the single consequence of the practice operating correctly at all three levels simultaneously: the agent who judges truly will never be unhappy, will experience continual uninterrupted appropriate positive feeling, and will always act virtuously. These are not three outcomes achieved by three disciplines. They are one outcome — eudaimonia — described from the perspectives of the three disciplines at once.

Section 9’s closing statement is therefore not a conclusion to an argument. It is a description of what the agent is when the practice has taken hold: someone for whom assent, desire, and action have converged into a single continuous act of correct engagement with whatever presents itself.

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Stoicism Is Not Therapy, But Training

 

Stoicism Is Not Therapy, But Training

Author: Grant C. Sterling
Source: International Stoic Forum, February 25, 2008 (three-part exchange with Jules Evans)
Compiled by: Dave Kelly
Corpus status: Primary source — Sterling’s argument; Kelly editorial framing


Editorial Note — Dave Kelly

In February 2008, Grant Sterling engaged Jules Evans in a three-part exchange on the International Stoic Forum concerning whether Stoicism functions as therapy. Sterling’s position, developed across the three messages, is that Stoicism operates as immunization rather than cure, that its psychological benefits are fully parasitic on its philosophical doctrine, and that no technique carries Stoic content apart from the beliefs that give it content. The exchange is reproduced here in full as a primary source document. 


Part One

Sterling’s first message, responding to Evans’s proposal that Stoicism can help ordinary people with emotional suffering through practical techniques and concrete applications.

As one of the professional philosophers on this List, and someone who has often engaged on this list in highly technical discussions, I thought I should say something on this topic.

My position, which I am sure is unpopular, is that it is impossible to give people an idea of “how Stoicism can help their emotional suffering” without having a clear grasp on what Stoicism is.

Suppose my neighbor has lost a loved one. What does Epictetus advise? Simply that I console him and pretend to grieve with him. In a situation like that, it is highly unlikely that Stoicism [or, I think, virtually any other belief system or therapeutic method] will be able to do much for him.

I didn’t say that Stoicism is helpless to deal with such grief. It is not. The problem is that the Stoic medicine has to be administered before the shock. Stoicism functions as an immunization, not as a cure. Let me have a chance to convince my neighbor of the truth of Stoic doctrine long before the loved one dies, and he will feel no debilitating grief when it occurs — or, at least, he will be in a position where he can feel no grief, and where I can help him by reminding him of the Stoic truths he has embraced.

So what would this Stoic immunization therapy look like? It will and must take the form of nothing other than convincing him of the truth of the core doctrines of Stoicism. If I can convince him that things not in our control are neither good nor evil, and that Virtue is the only Good and source of happiness, then he will be able to have a better life. But if he does not make these beliefs part of his belief system, Stoicism can do little or nothing to help him with his distress from the outside. That’s why I disagreed with Malcolm’s claim that a modern day Stoic would be a psychologist and not a philosopher — all psychological benefits that Stoicism conveys can come only to those who believe Stoic principles. [The psychological systems that most resemble Stoicism do precisely this — they teach some basic Stoic doctrines, sometimes with direct quotes from Stoic philosophers.] The psychology is parasitic on the philosophy.

Now of course I need not convince him of these things using Stoic technical terminology. But such terminology is helpful on this List in allowing us to say things quickly and precisely. But if I begin to discuss Stoic thought with my neighbor, I will bet [given my experiences doing this sort of thing with friends and students] that he will ask questions like “but doesn’t this mean that I’d have to be an emotional zombie?” and “doesn’t this mean that I’d never eat or do anything else, since it wouldn’t be good or evil to do so?”, etc. If he is persuaded of these things, he will never believe in the principles of Stoicism, and will never rid himself of desires for external things, and will therefore continue to suffer distress. How can I answer such questions? By understanding the doctrine of eupatheia, and the doctrine of preferred indifferents. Again, I need not use that terminology with my neighbor, but I will have to explain those ideas if I wish to convince him that Stoicism is not absurd.

“But”, he will object, “I cannot change my desires.” So I will have to explain to him [in whatever words I choose] the Stoic doctrine that desires follow from beliefs about value, that such beliefs are in our control, that I can refuse to assent to impressions that I have been harmed, etc.

So, speaking for myself, all my successes at making other peoples’ lives better through Stoicism have come from convincing them of the truth of Stoic ideas — in other words, by engaging in exactly the kind of conversations we have on this List. While [e.g.] Epictetus talks a great deal about dealing with distressing circumstances, in every case that I can think of off the top of my head his comments are addressed to someone who already accepts Stoic doctrine. He offers little or nothing in the way of advice as to how to deal with the suffering of someone who does not know and accept Stoic ideas already. Indeed, I don’t think he can say anything about that, because at the bottom Stoicism says that distress comes from false beliefs about the world, and the distress will not go away while the false beliefs remain. If your problem is dealing with the suffering of someone who is not able to rationally consider these fundamental truths, then Stoicism has nothing to offer you — look elsewhere for that advice. But even then, if Stoicism is true [and I think it is], you will look elsewhere in vain — unless the sufferer changes his beliefs about being harmed, he will continue to suffer.

Now I am not very good at offering general advice to people who already have Stoic beliefs but fail to follow them in some area or other. So if that’s what you want — advice on dealing with anger for someone who is convinced that Stoicism is true but still gets upset — then of course it will be fine for people on this List to offer whatever suggestions they may [or to cite suggestions from the ancients on such matters, some examples of which you gave in this post]. But I claim no special expertise in such matters, and in any case as I said such advice comes only after the person has come to believe that Stoicism is true — and whatever small contributions I might be able to make to Stoicism will have to come in that area — “Stoic Apologetics”, if you will.

Regards, Grant


Part Two

Sterling’s second message, responding to Evans’s objection that Stoic benefit does not require acceptance of all Stoic theory, and that millions have benefited from Stoic techniques without committing to the full metaphysics.

Well, I don’t agree with you, Grant. I’m not saying that you haven’t done useful and helpful work with others, but I don’t agree that to get the benefit from Stoic techniques and ideas, you must accept all of Stoic theory.

I never said that. I said you must accept the core Stoic beliefs.

Imagine you went to the doctor with a terrible fever and they said ‘now, before I can treat you, I’ll need you to accept in entirety all of my theories’!

If the fever was caused by false medical beliefs, that’s exactly what I’d expect him to say. [Leaving out the “in entirety all” part.]

Imagine if Buddhists said, ‘before you come in and learn this meditation technique, you must accept all Buddhist doctrine and metaphysics’.

Again, Buddhists do not hold the same view as Stoics with regard to the origin of the ills meditation is meant to deal with.

In fact, millions of people have been greatly helped by learning the basic insight of Stoicism — that much of our suffering comes from our interpretation of external events, rather than the events themselves.

Specifically, that the events themselves are never worth suffering over. Yes, I quite agree. That is why the only doctrines I claimed must be accepted to derive benefits from Stoicism are the ones connected with this concept. Please re-read my post.

People can grasp that quite quickly, and take a leap forward in terms of how they view the world and their own minds.

I quite agree. I never said otherwise. But what you’re saying is that to derive the benefits of Stoicism, what is needed is that the person come to believe the core principle of Stoic thought — which is what I thought I was saying in my post. Stoic therapy does not work without this belief.

Of course you can use Stoic techniques (thought journals, staying in the moment, visualizations, thought analyzing and challenging) without accepting all of Stoic metaphysics.

I never said otherwise. But you cannot use these techniques — or, at any rate, there won’t be anything remotely Stoic about your use of these techniques — if you don’t accept the core principles of Stoicism.

Nonetheless, I used Stoic techniques to overcome social anxiety, by focusing on how my own thoughts caused my anxiety, rather than the people around me; and then learning to control those thoughts.

That’s great. But, as you say, that is a direct and simple application of a basic part of the Stoic belief system. Unlike the doctor’s fever medicine, or even the Buddhist’s meditation techniques, this method does not work unless you believe the principle upon which it is based. If you believe that our desires and emotions are caused by external events, or that they are not in our control, or that the external events are truly evil and so the anxiety is justified — then you can’t relieve the anxiety “Stoically”.

As to Stoicism only working as an immunization rather than a cure, there are literally millions of modern examples which disprove that, millions of examples where people have used Stoic techniques to overcome emotional disorders which they are already in the grip of.

Not without changing their beliefs, they didn’t.

And in the ancient world, Cicero used Stoic teachings to get over his breakdown when his daughter died. If he had fully accepted Stoic teachings before she died, he wouldn’t have had a breakdown. But he still found Stoicism very helpful to get over his bereavement. Stoicism is a therapy — it’s a cure. If we weren’t sick in the first place, we wouldn’t need the cure.

We are sick in the sense that we have an underlying condition that breaks out in incidents of distress. No real cure for the distress exists that doesn’t address the underlying condition.

Regards, Grant


Part Three

Sterling’s third message, responding to Evans’s claim that the “core insight” of Stoicism is more accessible than the radical claim that virtue is the only source of happiness, and that CBT and positive psychology have successfully incorporated Stoic techniques without the full doctrine.

This would be a pity, because the core Stoic insight — that our suffering often comes from our own thoughts and beliefs rather than from externals — is much easier to accept for most people. It’s much more practically useful. Stoicism has survived because of that insight, not because of the more radical idea that the only real source of happiness is inner virtue.

Slow down. The belief that our suffering comes from our own thoughts and not from externals is equivalent to the belief that externals are neither good nor evil. If externals were genuine goods or evils, then our perception of a genuine evil would cause suffering, as would the loss or absence of a genuine good. So you cannot coherently believe that our suffering never comes from externals without holding that externals are neither good nor evil.

Now, as I said, you can phrase this doctrine in whatever way will help the other person learn it. You don’t have to use the words “good” or “evil”. But that’s the doctrine.

It would be a shame to teach someone that externals have no value [in whatever way you wish to phrase it] and not teach them that Virtue does have value. It would be odd to teach them that suffering comes from our thoughts and beliefs and not from externals, and not teach them that happiness comes from having the proper thoughts and beliefs. I see no reason why this “more radical idea” would be hard to swallow for anyone who swallowed the “core insight”. Why would that be?

And the techniques of Stoicism — training oneself to stay mindful, to stay in the moment, to keep thought journals, to challenge negative thoughts etc. — are also much more generally accessible and applicable than the more radical idea that the only source of happiness is inner virtue.

Train oneself to stay mindful of what? To keep thought journals about what? All these techniques, it seems to me, either reflect the underlying Stoic doctrine [we are to challenge negative thoughts because negative thoughts are based on the false belief that externals have value], or else they are in no way distinctively Stoic techniques [many other philosophical systems recommend that you stay mindful of something, etc.]

The “pure” Stoic therapy would be to tell them that a girlfriend or a boyfriend is an indifferent, it’s not a source of real happiness, so they should rather spend their time trying to accept the will of the Logos. So they accept the will of the Logos and don’t change their situation.

This is false. This is a misunderstanding of the nature of goodness that results from not understanding the doctrine of preferred indifferents. Pure Stoic therapy would tell them no such thing. [Although it would tell them to accept the will of Logos if they try to meet someone and fail — but you’d better be teaching them that, or else your method won’t be relieving their suffering at all.]

This more practical form of Stoic therapy is what CBT, REBT and positive psychology has incorporated. Because it has retained the core insight of Stoicism (thoughts often cause suffering) without the more radical claims (only source of happiness is virtue) it has gained great acceptance with the medical community, with governments, and with ordinary people.

The success it has had is the result of incorporating Stoic doctrine. I see no reason to suppose that it would have less success or popularity if it incorporated more Stoic doctrine.

[This is no different from the way in which Freudian psychotherapy is based on Freudian doctrines about the nature of the unconscious, repression, etc. The only difference is that Freudian psychotherapy doesn’t work, because the underlying doctrines are false.]

There are six million people with depression in the UK, and about 4 million with anxiety disorders. You can’t wait for them all to accept that the only source of happiness is inner virtue. If they don’t, I still believe Stoic ideas and techniques can help them.

Indeed, it can help them because they will then be “making progress”, by adopting the first and most basic Stoic principles and working upwards. More power to them. I have no objection whatsoever to the expansion of Stoic-based psychological programs.

Regards, Grant


One Act of Correct Engagement

 

One Act of Correct Engagement

A Synthesis of the Five Steps, the Six Commitments, and Their Experiential Structures


Preliminary: What This Document Does

Three bodies of work have been developed in this project. The first is Sterling’s identification of the six philosophical commitments that ground Stoic practice: substance dualism, libertarian free will, ethical intuitionism, foundationalism, correspondence theory of truth, and moral realism. The second is Dave Kelly’s Five-Step Method: Reception, Recognition, Pause, Examination, Decision — the operational sequence through which the Stoic practitioner engages with an impression. The third is a series of six documents mapping the experiential structure of each commitment: what the agent directly encounters when each commitment is operative, and what collapse looks like when it is not.

This document synthesizes all three by tracing one complete act of correct engagement from the arrival of an impression to the moment of decision. At each step it identifies which commitments are active, what the agent experiences when they are functioning, and what failure looks like when they are not.

The commitment-to-step mapping governing this document:

  • Reception: Correspondence theory, Moral realism
  • Recognition: Substance dualism, Correspondence theory
  • Pause: Libertarian free will, Substance dualism
  • Examination: Foundationalism, Ethical intuitionism, Moral realism
  • Decision: Libertarian free will, Correspondence theory

Step One: Reception

Commitments active: Correspondence theory — Moral realism

An impression arrives. Before the agent has done anything, something has been presented to the rational faculty. The impression does not ask permission. It arrives and makes a claim.

Two commitments are already operative before the agent acts.

Moral realism is what makes the arriving impression a claim about something real. The impression presents a circumstance as genuinely good, genuinely evil, or indifferent. For that presentation to have a truth value — for it to be the kind of thing that can be correct or incorrect rather than merely useful or unhelpful — there must be a moral fact for it to correspond to or fail to correspond to. Moral realism is that fact. Theorem 10 — that virtue is the only genuine good and vice the only genuine evil — is not a useful organizing principle. It is a fact about reality that exists independently of what anyone believes, prefers, or constructs. The impression that arrives at Reception is already either matching or failing to match that fact. The agent has not yet tested it. But the truth value is already there, waiting.

Without moral realism at Reception, the impression does not arrive as a claim about moral reality. It arrives as a stimulus with no fact of the matter attached to it. What follows is not the evaluation of a truth-claim but the management of a psychological event. The entire corrective project of the Five Steps is transformed at its first moment: from truth-seeking to preference regulation.

Correspondence theory is what makes the impression a claim rather than a brute event. Sterling is precise in Nine Excerpts Section 7: impressions are cognitive and propositional, not uninterpreted raw data. The impression arrives already asserting something — that this external is a genuine evil, that this outcome is a genuine good, that this circumstance matters in a way that warrants desire or aversion. The impression makes a truth-claim. Correspondence theory is the commitment that makes truth-claim a real category: a proposition is true if and only if it corresponds to reality. The impression either does or it does not. That binary is what the agent will eventually test. It is already present at Reception, before anything is done.

Without correspondence theory at Reception, the impression does not arrive as a proposition that can be true or false. It arrives as a psychological occurrence to be managed. The agent has no basis for treating it as a claim to be tested rather than a force to be regulated.

What the agent experiences at Reception:

If both commitments are operative, Reception has a specific experiential character: the impression presents itself as a claim about something real. The agent registers not merely that something has happened but that something is being asserted. The impression does not simply affect him; it addresses him. There is content, and the content has a direction: it points toward a moral fact about which it is making an assertion. The agent has not yet assessed that assertion. But he registers that there is one.

Failure signature at Reception:

Reception fails when the impression arrives as a brute psychological event rather than as a moral claim. The agent is affected rather than addressed. What follows cannot be genuine examination because the impression has not presented itself as something examinable. It has presented itself as something to be absorbed or resisted, not as something to be assessed for truth.


Step Two: Recognition

Commitments active: Substance dualism — Correspondence theory

The agent now performs an act. He recognizes the impression as an impression: a claim about reality, not reality itself. He distinguishes three things that Reception presented as a single undifferentiated event — the external event, the impression, and himself as the one receiving the impression. This three-way separation is Recognition.

Substance dualism makes Recognition possible. The separation the agent performs at Recognition presupposes that there is a categorical difference between the rational faculty doing the separating and everything else. The external event is outside the rational faculty. The impression arrived at the boundary. The agent — his prohairesis — is the one for whom the separation is being made. This three-way structure is the practical operationalization of the dualist commitment: I am my rational faculty, the event is outside it, and the impression is what arrived at the interface between them.

Without substance dualism, Recognition has no philosophical ground. The agent cannot separate himself from the impression because there is no principled account of what he is that would make him categorically distinct from the impression arriving in him. Without a subject pole categorically distinct from what arrives at the object pole, the three-way separation collapses into a description of a single undifferentiated event with three labels attached.

Correspondence theory deepens Recognition by specifying what is being recognized. The agent is not merely noting that something has arrived. He is recognizing it as a claim — as a proposition that stands between him and reality, asserting something about reality without being reality itself. This is the moment at which the agent explicitly registers the gap between the impression-as-assertion and the reality-asserted-about. Without correspondence theory, that gap has no philosophical content. The agent notes that an impression has arrived; he does not register it as a claim that can succeed or fail at matching something external to itself.

The combination of substance dualism and correspondence theory at Recognition produces the specific cognitive act the step requires: the agent locates himself as the subject pole, locates the impression as propositional content at the object pole, and registers that the propositional content is a claim about a reality that exists independently of the impression making the claim. All three elements are necessary. The dualist commitment provides the subject and the object. The correspondence commitment provides the claim and the reality.

What the agent experiences at Recognition:

Recognition is experienced as a stepping back — not physical withdrawal but the rational faculty explicitly reasserting its position as the one doing the receiving rather than the one being received. The experience of the Three-Way Separation is the experience of the subject pole becoming explicit rather than merely structural. The agent actively locates himself as distinct from the impression. He sees the impression as content rather than as reality. He registers the gap between what is being claimed and what is the case.

Failure signature at Recognition:

Recognition fails in two forms. The first is the failure of substance dualism: the agent does not separate himself from the impression. He is the impression. The Three-Way Separation does not occur because the subject pole has not maintained its position. The second is the failure of correspondence theory: the agent separates himself from the impression but does not register it as a claim about reality. He notes that an impression has arrived without registering that it is making an assertion about something. What follows is not examination of a truth-claim but management of a psychological state.


Step Three: Pause

Commitments active: Libertarian free will — Substance dualism

The agent stops. He does not proceed immediately to act on what the impression presents. He holds the process open at the point where automatic assent would otherwise occur. The Pause is the moment that separates the Five Steps from mere conditioning: it is what requires the agent to be a genuine agent rather than a sophisticated processor.

Libertarian free will is what makes the Pause real rather than nominal. If the agent’s response to an impression is fully determined by prior causes — his character, his neurological constitution, his conditioning — then the apparent Pause is a longer processing delay, not a genuine interruption. The outcome was fixed before the stopping appeared to occur. What presents itself as a held-open moment is the determined process running its course.

Libertarian free will holds that the Pause is genuinely what it presents itself as: a moment at which the agent, as the originating cause of his next act, holds the process open. The outcome has not yet been fixed. Both paths — assent and withholding — remain genuinely available until the will moves. This is the Origination Model of Choice: deliberation as the experience of genuine openness, the agent at a fork rather than at a point on a rail. The Pause is the fork made explicit and held.

Substance dualism supports the Pause from the side of the faculty that pauses. The will that interrupts the process is an act of the rational faculty — the subject pole — operating with its own causal powers, not reducible to the physical causation governing the body and the arriving impression. The Pause is possible because the rational faculty has genuine causal independence from the physical order. Without this, the Pause is the body slowing down, not the soul choosing to stop. The difference is not behavioral. It is the difference between a genuine interruption and a longer delay in a determined sequence.

The two commitments operate together in a specific way at the Pause. Libertarian free will establishes that the interruption is genuine — that the agent is the originating cause of the stopping. Substance dualism establishes the domain in which that origination occurs — the rational faculty, categorically distinct from the physical causal order that would otherwise carry the process through to its determined conclusion. Neither is sufficient without the other. Free will without a categorically distinct domain in which to operate produces origination without a locus. Substance dualism without free will produces a distinct domain whose operations are nonetheless determined.

What the agent experiences at the Pause:

The Pause is the experience of the subject pole asserting its causal power most actively. The experience is not of waiting for the stronger impulse to win. It is of genuinely holding the outcome open — of being at a fork where both paths are available and neither has been taken. The moments when this is most vivid are the moments of active resistance: anger that does not drive the response, fear that does not determine the action. These are the training ground because they make the subject pole’s causal power most directly available to the agent’s own recognition.

Failure signature at the Pause:

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


Step Four: Examination

Commitments active: Foundationalism — Ethical intuitionism — Moral realism

The agent, having paused, examines the impression. He holds it before the rational faculty and asks whether it is true: whether what it claims about the value status of its object corresponds to how things actually are. Examination is the most philosophically dense of the five steps. Three commitments are simultaneously active, each doing distinct work.

Moral realism supplies the target of the examination. The impression is tested against moral facts that exist independently of what anyone believes. At Reception, moral realism made the impression a claim about something real. At Examination, moral realism is the something real against which the claim is tested. Theorem 10 and its derivatives — that virtue is the only genuine good, that vice is the only genuine evil, that externals are therefore genuinely neither — are facts about moral reality. The impression either matches them or it does not. The examination reveals which.

The Pre-Existing Fact Model is the relevant experiential structure here. The agent examining the impression is finding something that was already there, not constructing a standard to test against. The moral facts existed before the impression arrived and before the examination began. The examination is a cognitive act of discovery: the agent turns his attention toward what is already the case and registers whether the impression matches it. Without moral realism, there is nothing to discover. There is only a standard the agent has adopted, which is a different kind of thing entirely.

Foundationalism organizes the target so that the examination can be conducted systematically rather than globally. The moral facts that moral realism posits are not an undifferentiated mass. They are organized in a dependency structure — some foundational, some derived — and the examination operates by locating where in that structure the impression fails.

A false value impression typically fails at Theorem 12: it presents an external as genuinely good or evil, which contradicts the proposition that externals are indifferent. That proposition derives from Theorem 10, which is foundational. The examination traces the failure through the structure: this impression fails here, at this level, because it conflicts with this derived proposition, which rests on this foundational theorem. That tracing is what foundationalism makes possible. Without it, the agent knows the impression is wrong but cannot locate where in the moral architecture the wrongness is located. Corrections made without that location are surface corrections that leave the source of error intact.

The Load-Bearing Structure Model identifies the practical consequence: examination without foundationalism produces case-by-case correction rather than foundational correction. The same class of false impression recurs in the next instance because the foundational false judgment that generates it has not been addressed. Examination guided by foundationalism reaches the source.

Ethical intuitionism provides the epistemic access that makes the examination conclusive rather than merely inferential. Moral realism establishes that there are facts to be found. Foundationalism organizes those facts into a navigable structure. But the agent still needs to be able to know — not merely infer — whether the impression matches those facts. This is intuitionism’s contribution: the rational faculty can directly apprehend whether a moral claim is true or false, without requiring a further regress of justification.

When the agent examines the impression that a reputation loss is a genuine evil, the examination does not stall at the question “but how do I know that externals are not genuinely evil?” The foundational theorem is directly apprehensible. The agent sees it rather than inferring it. Sterling’s prefatory note identifies the foundational theorems as unprovable fundamental postulates defensible only by appeal to intuition of their truth. The examination is authoritative because its standard is directly accessible, not because the agent has constructed an argument that the standard is correct.

The Direct Apprehension Model also supplies the authority to run arguments backwards when necessary. If an impression arrives accompanied by a sophisticated rationalization — an argument concluding that this particular external really is a genuine good, given the circumstances — the examination does not assess the validity of the argument and follow its conclusion. It tests the conclusion against the directly apprehended moral fact. If the conclusion conflicts with Theorem 10, the argument must have a false premise, however plausible its premises appeared. The rational faculty’s direct apprehension of the moral fact takes precedence over formal inference from disputed premises. Without intuitionism, the examination has no authority to refuse a valid argument. It is at the mercy of whatever rationalization is most sophisticated.

What the agent experiences at Examination:

Examination is experienced as directed attention. The agent turns the rational faculty toward the moral fact against which the impression is to be tested and holds both before it simultaneously — the impression making its claim, the moral fact standing as the standard. The experience of correct examination has the specific character the Direct Apprehension Model describes: the rational faculty sees whether the impression matches or fails to match. The seeing is not the conclusion of an argument. It is a direct cognitive act. The examination is complete when the seeing occurs.

Failure signatures at Examination:

If moral realism is not operative, the examination has no fixed target. The agent assesses whether the impression is useful or comfortable rather than whether it is true. The verdict is “unhelpful attitude” rather than “false impression.”

If foundationalism is not operative, the examination is unfocused. The agent detects that something is wrong but cannot locate the source. Corrections are peripheral rather than foundational.

If ethical intuitionism is not operative, the examination stalls or is overridden. Without direct apprehension, the agent has only arguments, and arguments can be countered with other arguments. The sophisticated rationalization survives the examination because the examination has no authority to override it.


Step Five: Decision

Commitments active: Libertarian free will — Correspondence theory

The agent has examined the impression and arrived at a verdict: the impression is false. It presents an external as a genuine good or evil when it is neither. He now acts: he withholds assent. The Decision closes what the Pause held open.

Libertarian free will makes the Decision a genuine act rather than a determined output. The examination has produced a verdict. The Pause has kept the outcome open. But neither the verdict nor the open moment automatically produces the Decision. The agent must close it. He must originate the act of withholding. This is what libertarian free will provides at Decision: the act is genuinely his, he is its source, and what follows belongs to him in a way that a determined output does not belong to its mechanism.

This matters practically because the Stoic account of moral formation depends on it. The agent who withholds assent from a false impression is doing something. He is not completing a process that was going to produce a refusal regardless. He is refusing. That act is his in the full sense: he originated it, he is responsible for it, and it is genuinely different from what would have occurred if the determined process had run without interruption. Epictetus’s insistence that assent is always the agent’s own act — that no external compels it — requires libertarian free will to be literally true at this moment.

Correspondence theory specifies what the Decision accomplishes. When the agent withholds assent from a false impression, he is not merely choosing a preferred cognitive stance. He is bringing his assent into correspondence with reality. The impression claimed that an external is a genuine evil. The moral fact is that it is not. The Decision to withhold assent is the act by which the agent aligns his cognitive state with how things actually are.

This is the specific location of correspondence theory at Decision rather than at Examination: Examination tested the impression against reality and produced a verdict. Decision is the act by which the agent’s assent is brought into correspondence with the verdict. The test was at Examination. The alignment is at Decision. The two are distinct moments in the act, and correspondence theory operates differently at each. At Reception and Recognition, correspondence theory made the impression a testable claim. At Decision, it specifies the character of the act that closes the process: the agent’s assent now corresponds to the moral fact that the examination revealed.

The Fixed Standard Model is the relevant experiential structure here. The Decision is a truth-aligning act. The agent is not choosing between two equally available cognitive options. He is aligning himself with how things are. That alignment is what gives the Decision its character as moral action rather than preference choice: it is answerable to a standard that the agent did not set and cannot revise by deciding otherwise.

What the agent experiences at Decision:

The Decision is experienced as origination combined with alignment. The agent is the source of the act — he closes the open moment that the Pause created — and the act he performs is one of bringing his cognitive state into correspondence with what the examination revealed. The experience is not of choosing between options with equal weight. It is of settling the question in the direction that the examination has already indicated. The agent is free to do otherwise — libertarian free will holds that the decision is genuine — and he chooses correspondence. He chooses truth.

Failure signature at Decision:

The Decision fails in two forms. The first is the failure of libertarian free will: the act is not genuine origination. The agent completes a determined sequence rather than closing an open moment. What presents itself as a decision is the arrival of a predetermined outcome.

The second is the failure of correspondence theory: the agent genuinely originates an act but the act is not alignment with the moral fact. Having examined the impression and seen it is false, the agent assents to it anyway — not because the examination failed but because the Decision is disconnected from the correspondence standard the examination applied. He knows the impression is false and aligns his assent with the impression rather than with reality. This is the subtlest failure the Five Steps can produce. The infrastructure functioned through four steps. The final act inverts what the examination revealed. The agent chose, but chose incorrectly — chose the impression over the fact.


The Act as a Whole

A single act of correct engagement is not five separate operations performed in sequence. It is one continuous act with five distinguishable moments. The commitment architecture across the five moments can now be stated precisely.

At Reception, correspondence theory and moral realism establish the nature of what arrives: a truth-claim about a real moral order.

At Recognition, substance dualism and correspondence theory enable the agent to locate himself as categorically distinct from the arriving claim and to register it explicitly as a claim rather than as reality.

At the Pause, libertarian free will and substance dualism hold the process open: the agent is the originating cause of the interruption, exercising a causal power that belongs to the rational faculty and not to the physical order.

At Examination, moral realism, foundationalism, and ethical intuitionism make the test authoritative: there are real moral facts, they are organized in a navigable structure, and the rational faculty can apprehend directly whether the impression matches them.

At Decision, libertarian free will and correspondence theory close the act: the agent genuinely originates the final act and that act brings his assent into correspondence with the moral fact the examination revealed.

No commitment appears at all five steps. Each appears where it is specifically required. Substance dualism does its foundational work at Recognition and Pause but is not the operative commitment at Examination or Decision. Moral realism grounds the arriving claim at Reception and supplies the examination target at Examination but does not appear at the moment of closing. Libertarian free will is required at the Pause and the Decision — the two moments of genuine origination — but not at the moments of reception and recognition that precede them. Correspondence theory threads through Reception, Recognition, and Decision, specifying at each the character of the truth-claim relationship: the impression as claim at Reception, the impression recognized as claim at Recognition, and the agent’s assent aligned with fact at Decision.

This distribution is not arbitrary. It reflects the specific philosophical work each commitment does and the specific moment in the act at which that work is required. The six commitments are not six descriptions of the same general Stoic orientation. They are six distinct philosophical instruments, each active at the moment the act requires what it specifically provides.

That act — correctly performed, with all six commitments operative at their proper moments — repeated with increasing reliability across a lifetime of practice, is what Stoic character formation consists of.


Status: Dave Kelly’s independent contribution. Synthesizes Dave Kelly’s Five-Step Method, Sterling’s six philosophical commitments, and the six experiential structure documents produced in this project. Commitment-to-step mapping is Dave Kelly’s analytical work. Governing propositions are Sterling’s. Not a source of governing propositions for framework runs.

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

THE SIX PHILOSOPHICAL COMMITMENTS THAT GROUND STOIC PRACTICE

 

THE SIX PHILOSOPHICAL COMMITMENTS THAT GROUND STOIC PRACTICE

How Sterling Replaces Ancient Physics with Defensible Foundations


THE PROBLEM STERLING IS SOLVING

Classical Stoicism:
Ethics logically depends on Physics (materialism, cosmic determinism, pneuma, etc.)

Modern situation:
Ancient physics is indefensible.

“Ancient Stoic physics, then, is clearly obsolete and no reasonable person can believe in it any more.”
— Brad Inwood, Stoicism: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford University Press, 2018), p. xxiv.

Three options:

  1. Keep ancient physics (intellectually dishonest)
  2. Drop foundations, keep techniques (pragmatic but unstable)
  3. Replace ancient physics with defensible classical foundations ← Sterling’s approach

Sterling’s solution:
Six classical philosophical commitments that ground the practice without requiring ancient Stoic physics.


HOW THE SIX COMMITMENTS GROUND THE PRACTICE


1. SUBSTANCE DUALISM

Commitment: Mind/soul and body are ontologically distinct substances.

What it grounds:

Enchiridion 1 — The Dichotomy:
“Some things are in our control, others not.”
“In our control: belief, impulse, desire, aversion—in a word, everything that is our own action.”
“Not in our control: body, property, reputation, office—in a word, everything that is not our own action.”

Why dualism is necessary:

  • If mind = body (materialism), then mental events are just brain states
  • Brain states are physical, subject to physical causation
  • Therefore mental events (beliefs, desires) are determined by prior physical causes
  • Therefore they’re NOT “in our control” in the required sense

With substance dualism:

  • Mind is distinct from body
  • Mental acts (assent, desire, will) are acts of mind/soul
  • Mind has its own causal powers, not reducible to physical causation
  • Therefore mental acts CAN be “in our control”

Practice grounded:

  • “I am my prohairesis” — You ARE the rational soul, not the body
  • External vs Internal distinction — Body is external TO the soul
  • Step 2 (Recognition) — Can separate: External event / Impression / Prohairesis
  • The entire dichotomy — Only what soul does is in your control

Without dualism:

  • Can’t coherently separate “you” from “body/externals”
  • No principled basis for dichotomy of control
  • Practice loses ontological foundation

2. LIBERTARIAN FREE WILL

Commitment: The will is genuinely free — not determined by prior causes.

What it grounds:

Th 6: “The only things in our control are our beliefs and our acts of will.”

Why libertarian free will is necessary:

  • If determinism is true, your “choices” are caused by prior events
  • You couldn’t have chosen differently (given same prior causes)
  • “Control” becomes illusory — just feeling of control while determined
  • Practice becomes futile — you’re going to assent/not assent based on prior causes anyway

With libertarian free will:

  • Assent is a GENUINE choice
  • You could have chosen differently
  • The pause is real — you can actually STOP automatic process
  • Decision (Step 5) is an authentic free act

Practice grounded:

  • Step 3 (Pause) — Requires that automatic assent CAN be interrupted
  • Step 5 (Decision) — Requires genuine choice between assenting/refusing
  • Th 8 — “Desires are in our control” — because will is free, desires (caused by beliefs) are controllable
  • The entire training — Practice makes sense only if you can freely choose differently

Without libertarian free will:

  • “Practice” is just going through motions determined by prior causes
  • Can’t genuinely choose to pause or refuse assent
  • Stoicism becomes descriptive (how determined beings feel) not prescriptive (what to do)

3. ETHICAL INTUITIONISM

Commitment: We have direct, non-inferential access to moral truths.

What it grounds:

Sterling’s foundational theorems as self-evident:
Sterling identifies the basic theorems of Core Stoicism as “unprovable fundamental postulates defensible only by appeal to intuition of their truth” (Core Stoicism, prefatory note). Theorem 10 — that virtue is the only genuine good and vice the only genuine evil — is not derived from prior premises. It is directly apprehended. The agent does not infer it; he sees it.

Why intuitionism is necessary:

  • Examination (Step 4) requires ability to KNOW if impression is true/false
  • If moral knowledge requires inference from disputed premises, examination stalls
  • If “good/evil” are just learned conventions, no way to test impressions against truth
  • Need direct access to moral reality to recognize false value claims

With ethical intuitionism:

  • You can directly grasp “only virtue is good”
  • You can recognize “this external is good” as FALSE
  • Examination reveals truth through rational intuition
  • The seeing is literal — the rational faculty apprehends the falsehood directly, not by inference

Practice grounded:

  • Step 4 (Examination) — Can actually test if impression matches moral reality
  • Recognition of false value — Once clearly seen as false, the rational faculty cannot voluntarily endorse it
  • Sterling’s (a) — Can refuse false values because you RECOGNIZE them as false
  • The training works — Character change happens as you learn to see moral truths

Without intuitionism:

  • How do you KNOW “only virtue is good”? Just assume it? Cultural conditioning?
  • Examination has no epistemic ground
  • Can’t distinguish true from false value judgments with certainty
  • Practice rests on unfounded assertions

4. FOUNDATIONALISM

Commitment: Some beliefs (foundational) are self-evident; others justified by deriving from foundations.

What it grounds:

The entire theorem structure (Th 1–29):

  • Core axioms (Th 1–2, Th 6, Th 10) are foundational
  • Other theorems derive from these
  • Testing impressions means comparing to foundational truths

Why foundationalism is necessary:

  • If all beliefs require justification by other beliefs (coherentism), infinite regress
  • Need stopping point — self-evident truths that don’t require further justification
  • Examination requires STANDARD against which to test impressions
  • Standard must be epistemically secure (foundational)

With foundationalism:

  • Th 10 (“only virtue is good”) is foundational — grasped directly as true
  • Other truths derive: Th 12 (externals not good/evil) follows from Th 10–11
  • Examination tests impression against foundational structure
  • No circular reasoning — testing against independently established foundations

Practice grounded:

  • Step 4 (Examination) — Tests impression against foundational truths (Th 10–12)
  • Sterling’s systematic structure — Th 1–29 provide the testing framework
  • Why examination WORKS — Impressions tested against epistemically secure foundations
  • Prosoche vigilance — Watching for violations of foundational truths

Without foundationalism:

  • What standard do you test impressions against?
  • If “only virtue is good” needs justification, by what? (regress problem)
  • Examination becomes relativistic or circular
  • No secure ground for practice

5. CORRESPONDENCE THEORY OF TRUTH

Commitment: A belief is true if and only if it corresponds to reality.

What it grounds:

The entire notion of “false impressions”:
Sterling: “We can accept that a given impression is TRUE, or reject it as unproven or false.”

Why correspondence theory is necessary:

  • Practice requires distinguishing TRUE from FALSE impressions
  • Need account of what makes impression true/false
  • Alternative theories (coherence, pragmatist) don’t provide needed objectivity
  • Must be able to say: “Impression claims X, but reality is Y, therefore false”

With correspondence theory:

  • Impression: “Intrusion is evil”
  • Reality: Only vice is evil (by Th 10), intrusion is external (by Ench 1)
  • Test: Does impression-claim match reality? NO
  • Verdict: FALSE impression
  • Action: Refuse assent

Practice grounded:

  • Step 4 (Examination) — Tests if impression CORRESPONDS to reality
  • Step 2 (Recognition) — Separates impression-as-claim from reality-claimed-about
  • Sterling’s entire method — Based on impressions making truth-claims testable against reality
  • Why refusal works — False impressions genuinely don’t match reality

Without correspondence theory:

  • On what basis is impression “false”?
  • Pragmatist: “False” = doesn’t lead to desired results (but this makes truth subjective)
  • Coherentist: “False” = doesn’t cohere with other beliefs (but this is circular)
  • Need objective standard: Reality itself

6. MORAL REALISM

Commitment: Moral facts exist independently of our beliefs about them.

What it grounds:

Th 10: “Only virtue is good, only vice is evil.”

Why moral realism is necessary:

  • Practice requires OBJECTIVE distinction between good and evil
  • If “good/evil” are subjective preferences, no basis for calling values “false”
  • If culturally relative, Stoicism is just one cultural preference among many
  • Need: “Virtue IS good” is true regardless of what anyone believes

With moral realism:

  • “Only virtue is good” is FACT about reality
  • “Externals are good” is FALSE — contradicts moral reality
  • Examination reveals how impression-claims match/mismatch moral facts
  • Sterling’s (a) refuses FALSE values because there ARE true values

Practice grounded:

  • Th 10–12 — Objective facts about what is/isn’t good/evil
  • DOD — Refuses false values because values can be objectively true/false
  • Sterling’s (a)–(c) — Can distinguish true from false value propositions
  • Th 14 — Valuing only virtue produces happiness BECAUSE virtue objectively is good

Without moral realism:

  • Why shouldn’t you desire externals? Just cultural conditioning? Personal preference?
  • “Only virtue is good” becomes “I/we prefer valuing only virtue”
  • No way to say someone’s value judgments are “wrong”
  • Practice loses normative force — just one life strategy among many

HOW THE SIX WORK TOGETHER TO GROUND PRACTICE

The Five-Step Method requires all six:

STEP 1: RECEPTION

  • Substance dualism: Impression appears to soul/prohairesis (distinct from body)
  • Correspondence theory: Impression makes claim about reality

STEP 2: RECOGNITION

  • Substance dualism: Can separate external event / impression / prohairesis (you)
  • Correspondence theory: Recognize impression AS claim (not as reality)

STEP 3: PAUSE

  • Libertarian free will: Can genuinely choose to interrupt automatic assent
  • Substance dualism: Will (part of soul) can act independently of physical causation

STEP 4: EXAMINATION

  • Foundationalism: Test impression against foundational truths (Th 10–12)
  • Correspondence theory: Does impression-claim match reality?
  • Ethical intuitionism: Can know if impression matches moral reality
  • Moral realism: There ARE moral facts to match against

STEP 5: DECISION

  • Libertarian free will: Genuinely choose to assent or refuse
  • Ethical intuitionism: Having recognized the truth directly, the rational faculty cannot voluntarily endorse what it has seen to be false
  • Moral realism: Refusing false values because there are true values

WITHOUT THESE COMMITMENTS, PRACTICE COLLAPSES

Remove substance dualism:

  • → No principled self/external distinction
  • → Dichotomy of control loses ontological ground
  • → Can’t separate “you” from body/events

Remove libertarian free will:

  • → Choice is illusory (determinism)
  • → Can’t genuinely pause or decide
  • → Practice becomes descriptive of determined process, not transformative training

Remove ethical intuitionism:

  • → Can’t KNOW if examination reveals truth
  • → Moral knowledge requires controversial inference
  • → Step 4 stalls without epistemic access to moral reality

Remove foundationalism:

  • → What do you test impressions against?
  • → Infinite regress or circular reasoning
  • → No secure standard for examination

Remove correspondence theory:

  • → No objective sense of “false impression”
  • → Can’t test if impression matches reality
  • → Truth becomes subjective or relativistic

Remove moral realism:

  • → “Only virtue is good” is just preference
  • → No objective basis for refusing false values
  • → Practice loses normative force

STERLING’S ACHIEVEMENT

He showed:

1. Stoic practice requires philosophical foundations

  • Can’t just be “techniques”
  • Ethics depends on metaphysics/epistemology

2. Ancient Stoic physics won’t work (Inwood is right)

  • Materialism, cosmic determinism, pneuma are indefensible

3. But classical philosophy provides alternative foundations

  • Six commitments from defensible classical tradition
  • Ground the practice without ancient physics
  • Make Stoicism philosophically rigorous

4. This is “Core Stoicism”

  • Core = Essential practice (Five Steps, DOD, DOA)
  • Stoicism = Grounded in systematic philosophy
  • Not pragmatic techniques, but philosophically-founded way of life

THE COMPLETE GROUNDING STRUCTURE

SIX PHILOSOPHICAL COMMITMENTS (Foundations)

THEOREMS TH 1–29 (Derived systematic structure)

ENCHIRIDION 1–2 (Practice instructions)

FIVE-STEP METHOD (Operationalization)

DOD & DOA (Disciplines of practice)

PROSOCHE (Vigilance enabling practice)

CHARACTER TRANSFORMATION (Outcome)

EUDAIMONIA (Goal)

Every level depends on the level above.

Remove foundations → Structure collapses.

Sterling’s contribution: Provided defensible foundations for ancient practice.


This answers Inwood’s challenge: Yes, ancient physics is obsolete. But Stoic practice can be grounded in defensible classical philosophy instead. Sterling did exactly this.


Status: Dave Kelly’s independent contribution. The Five-Step Method (Reception, Recognition, Pause, Examination, Decision) is Dave Kelly’s instrument. Sterling’s six commitments are Sterling’s theoretical identification. The mapping of commitments to steps is Dave Kelly’s analytical work. Governing propositions sourced to Core Stoicism (Sterling). Inwood citation: Stoicism: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford University Press, 2018), p. xxiv.

The Experiential Structure of Metaphysical Libertarianism

 

The Experiential Structure of Metaphysical Libertarianism

1. The Experiential Entry Point

If the question is how libertarian freedom appears in experience, the answer is that deliberation itself presents it. When a man genuinely deliberates — when he actually weighs whether to do one thing or another — the experience is not the experience of watching a process run toward its predetermined conclusion. It is the experience of the outcome being open. Both paths present themselves as genuinely available. The choice has not yet been made. Something is about to be settled, and what settles it is the act of will itself.

This is not a philosophical inference constructed after the fact. It is the phenomenon as it presents itself in the moment of choice. The experience of genuine openness — that either path remains available until the will moves — is the experiential basis for the philosophical claim that the agent originates his choices rather than receiving them as outputs of prior causes.


2. What Deliberation Presents

In genuine deliberation three things appear simultaneously.

A. The options as genuinely open

Both paths present themselves as available — not as one real path and one merely imagined alternative, but as two paths either of which the agent can actually take. The future is not yet fixed. The agent is at a fork, not at a point on a rail.

B. The agent as the one who will settle it

The resolution does not arrive from outside. The agent does not wait for the stronger impulse to win. He is aware that he will decide — that the settling of the question belongs to him as its originator, not to the balance of forces acting on him.

C. Genuine weight on both sides

The options have different characters — different costs, different merits, different relationships to what the agent values. The deliberation is not random. It is responsive to reasons. The agent is not flipping a coin. He is exercising judgment about what to do. And yet the outcome remains open until he acts.

These three features — openness, origination, and rational responsiveness — appear together in every genuine act of deliberation. They are not added by philosophical reflection. They are present in the experience itself.


3. The Compelled Act Presents Something Different

The contrast clarifies the phenomenon. When a man acts under genuine compulsion — when his arm is physically moved, when he speaks under direct threat to someone he loves, when addiction overrides his judgment — something different appears in experience.

  • The options do not present themselves as equally open. One path presents itself as closed off.
  • The agent does not experience himself as the originator of the act. He experiences himself as subject to a force that is producing the act through him.
  • He may resist, or feel the pull of resistance, precisely because the act is not fully his — because something outside his will is determining what happens.

The compelled act and the free act feel different because they are different. The experience of origination — of being the one who settles the question — is present in one and absent in the other. This experiential distinction is not a philosophical construction. It is what grounds the legal, moral, and personal distinction between what a man does and what is done to him or through him.


4. The Originated Act as the Subject Pole’s Distinctive Operation

In the two-pole model of experience, the subject pole is defined as the standing point from which everything at the object pole is received and acted upon. Judgment, assent, withholding — these are acts of the subject pole. They do not arrive; they are performed.

Metaphysical libertarianism is the claim that the subject pole’s acts are not themselves object-pole events arriving from prior causes. The act of will that settles a deliberation does not arrive at the subject pole from the object pole. It originates there.

This is why the two commitments — substance dualism and libertarian free will — stand or fall together. Substance dualism establishes the categorical distinction between the subject pole and everything at the object pole. Libertarian free will establishes that the subject pole’s operations are not secretly object-pole events running under a different description. If they were, the distinction would be nominal: the rational faculty would be categorically separate in name while causally continuous with the physical order in fact.


5. Where the Experience of Origination Becomes Undeniable

As the experience of active resistance made the two-pole distinction undeniable in the case of substance dualism, certain moments make the experience of origination undeniable in the case of libertarian freedom.

These are the moments when the agent acts against the preponderance of felt inclination — when he does what he judges right while every other force in him pulls toward something else:

  • the man who tells the truth when lying would cost him nothing and benefit him considerably
  • the man who refuses to assent to a judgment he knows to be false even though assenting would relieve enormous pressure
  • the man who returns to correct action after a period of failure, not because conditions have changed but because he chooses to

In each case the experience is this: the act did not follow from the balance of forces. It followed from the agent. He was the difference between what happened and what would otherwise have happened. That experience is not a post-hoc narrative. It is the phenomenon itself, directly present at the moment of choice.

These moments matter not only as illustrations but as the primary site of Stoic training. Epictetus returns to them repeatedly because they are the moments at which the agent’s genuine causal power is most visible to himself — and therefore most available as a foundation for practice.


6. What Happens When the Experience of Origination Collapses

When the agent ceases to experience himself as the originator of his choices — when he identifies with the forces acting on him rather than with the faculty that acts — determinate practical failures follow.

  • Deliberation becomes performance. The agent goes through the motions of weighing options while already treating the outcome as fixed. He is not genuinely open to either path.
  • Responsibility dissolves. The agent attributes his choices to his circumstances, his upbringing, his temperament, his neurological constitution — to anything except himself as their originator. This is not humility. It is the abandonment of the subject pole.
  • Training becomes pointless. If the agent’s judgments are outputs of prior causes rather than acts he originates, correcting them is not something he does. It is something that happens to him under favorable conditions. He cannot undertake it as a project because he is not the kind of thing that undertakes projects.
  • The Stoic claim that assent is always the agent’s own act becomes a motivational slogan rather than a philosophical truth. Epictetus does not mean it as a slogan. He means it as a description of what is actually the case.

This collapse is not always dramatic. It often presents as a low-grade fatalism — a habitual sense that the agent’s choices are constrained by forces he cannot alter, that what he does next is already in some sense determined by what he is. Stoic training is in part the sustained practice of returning from this fatalism to the direct experience of origination that deliberation itself presents.


7. The Objection from Determinism

The standard objection holds that the experience of origination is an illusion. The agent feels as though he is settling an open question, but the outcome was in fact determined by prior neurological, psychological, and environmental causes. The experience of freedom is a product of the agent’s ignorance of those causes, not evidence of their absence.

The libertarian response is that this objection moves in the wrong direction. The experience of origination is not inferred from ignorance of causes. It is directly present in deliberation. The determinist claim that the outcome was already fixed is itself an inference from a theoretical commitment to universal causal closure — a commitment that is not itself directly presented in experience and that has not been demonstrated to hold across the domain of rational agency.

More precisely: the determinist must explain why the experience of origination presents itself as it does if determinism is true. The compatibilist answer — that the experience is real but refers only to the absence of external compulsion, not to the absence of causal determination — is a reinterpretation of the experience, not a description of it. The experience does not present itself as the absence of external compulsion. It presents itself as the agent being the originating cause of what follows. That is a stronger claim, and the compatibilist account does not preserve it.

Metaphysical libertarianism holds that the experience should be taken at face value unless there is compelling reason not to — and that the theoretical commitment to universal causal closure, which has not been demonstrated and which conflicts with what deliberation directly presents, does not constitute such a reason.


8. The Connection to Sterling’s Commitment

Sterling’s libertarian free will commitment is not introduced as a speculative metaphysical position. It is the philosophical articulation of what Epictetus takes to be obviously true: that assent is always the agent’s own act, that no external compels a judgment, that the one thing absolutely in the agent’s control is his own rational faculty’s operation.

This claim requires libertarian free will to be literally true. A compatibilist reading — that assent is the agent’s own in the sense that it flows from his character even if his character was determined by prior causes — does not preserve what Epictetus asserts. He asserts that the tyrant cannot compel assent, that exile cannot force a judgment, that no circumstance determines what the rational faculty does. These are not claims about the absence of external compulsion in the compatibilist sense. They are claims about the absolute causal independence of the rational faculty’s operations from everything outside it.

That is metaphysical libertarianism. And its experiential basis is not obscure. It is present in every act of genuine deliberation — in the openness of the options, in the weight of origination, in the difference between a choice made and a process completed. Sterling’s commitment preserves at the theoretical level what deliberation presents at the operational level: that the agent is not the last link in a causal chain but the first link in one.


The Model

Name: The Origination Model of Choice

Definition

Every genuine act of choice presents three features simultaneously: the options are genuinely open, the agent is their originator rather than the recipient of a determined outcome, and the resolution is responsive to reasons rather than random. These three features together constitute the experience of libertarian freedom. The agent does not infer this freedom from the absence of felt compulsion. He directly experiences himself as the one who settles what was genuinely unsettled.

The Core Distinction

The model turns on the distinction between originating and transmitting. A causal chain transmits: each link receives a force and passes it on. An agent originates: he is the source of what follows, not the conduit through which prior causes flow. The experience of deliberation presents the agent as originator. Determinism reinterprets him as transmitter. Metaphysical libertarianism holds that the experience is correct and the reinterpretation fails.

The Two Moments of Choice

1. Deliberation. The options present themselves as genuinely open. The agent holds them before the rational faculty, weighs their character in relation to what he values, and remains genuinely undetermined until he acts. This is not processing toward a fixed output. It is the subject pole operating on material that has not yet been resolved.

2. Origination. The act of will moves. What was open is now settled. The agent has not received a verdict from the balance of forces — he has issued one. The choice is his in the full sense: he is its origin, not its last cause.

The Practical Criterion

The model is functioning when the following is true in experience: I am about to settle this, and I am the one who will settle it. The outcome is genuinely open. The act of will that closes it originates with me. What follows is mine in a way that a reflex, a compelled act, or a determined output is not mine.

The model is failing when the following is true: what I do next is already fixed by what I am. That is the moment of collapse into fatalism, and it is always recoverable by returning attention to the direct experience of origination that deliberation presents.

Adoption

To adopt this model is not to assert a metaphysical thesis in the abstract. It is to take seriously what deliberation directly presents: that the agent is genuinely the originator of his choices, not the terminal point of causes that run through him. The moments of acting against the preponderance of felt inclination — choosing correctly when everything else pulls away from correct choice — are the training ground because they make the experience of origination most vivid and most available as a foundation for practice. Regular attention to those moments builds the practical certainty that the model requires: not a philosophical argument for freedom, but the direct recognition of what freedom feels like when it is exercised.


Status: Dave Kelly’s independent contribution. Consistent with Sterling’s metaphysical libertarianism commitment and Epictetus’s account of assent as the agent’s own absolute act. Not a source of governing propositions for framework runs.