Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Three Multi-Action Scenarios for SDF v3.3

 

Three Multi-Action Scenarios for SDF v3.3

Each scenario is constructed to test role conflict, factual uncertainty, competing preferred indifferents, and value misclassification within Sterling’s Framework for Personal Decision Making.


Scenario 1 — National Security / Classified Threat

Situation

You are the President. Intelligence agencies report that a foreign actor may be planning a cyberattack on U.S. infrastructure within the next 72 hours.

Confidence levels vary:

  • Agency A: high confidence
  • Agency B: moderate confidence
  • Agency C: disputes the conclusion

No attack has yet occurred.

Roles

  • President — constitutional authority
  • Commander-in-Chief
  • Public fiduciary

Decision Points

Action Set A — Immediate Response

  1. Authorize a preemptive cyber operation against the suspected actor.
  2. Increase defensive posture only, with no offensive action.
  3. Take no immediate operational action.

Action Set B — Public Disclosure

  1. Inform the public immediately.
  2. Inform Congress only through classified briefing.
  3. Withhold disclosure entirely for now.

Action Set C — Institutional Process

  1. Seek formal congressional authorization for potential escalation.
  2. Act under executive authority alone.
  3. Delay action pending intelligence reconciliation.

Structural Tensions

  • Security vs. legal process
  • Speed vs. accuracy
  • Transparency vs. operational integrity

Factual Uncertainty Triggers

  • Threat credibility
  • Attribution certainty
  • Consequence of preemption

Scenario 2 — Executive Loyalty vs. Legal Duty

Situation

You are Attorney General. The President privately instructs you to halt an investigation into a close political ally. No formal order is issued. The investigation is legally valid and ongoing.

Roles

  • Attorney General — chief law enforcement officer
  • Executive branch subordinate
  • Officer of the court

Decision Points

Action Set A — Response to Instruction

  1. Comply and halt the investigation.
  2. Refuse and continue the investigation.
  3. Request written clarification or formal directive.

Action Set B — Internal Handling

  1. Document the interaction internally.
  2. Escalate to DOJ ethics officials.
  3. Keep the matter confidential.

Action Set C — External Disclosure

  1. Inform Congress.
  2. Resign and make a public statement.
  3. Take no external action.

Structural Tensions

  • Loyalty vs. legal integrity
  • Institutional preservation vs. transparency
  • Personal position vs. role-duty

Factual Uncertainty Triggers

  • Intent of the President
  • Legal implications of compliance
  • Consequences of disclosure

Scenario 3 — Medical Triage with Resource Scarcity

Situation

You are a hospital director during a crisis. There are two ICU beds available and five patients requiring immediate critical care.

Patients differ in:

  • Survival probability
  • Age
  • Preexisting conditions
  • Social roles, such as caregiver or essential worker

Roles

  • Medical administrator
  • Institutional steward
  • Responsible agent for triage protocol

Decision Points

Action Set A — Allocation Method

  1. Prioritize highest survival probability.
  2. Use first-come, first-served allocation.
  3. Use random allocation.

Action Set B — Policy Deviation

  1. Follow established triage protocol strictly.
  2. Modify protocol due to circumstances.
  3. Override protocol entirely.

Action Set C — Communication

  1. Fully disclose criteria to families.
  2. Provide limited explanation.
  3. Withhold detailed reasoning.

Structural Tensions

  • Fairness vs. outcomes
  • Protocol vs. discretion
  • Transparency vs. harm minimization

Factual Uncertainty Triggers

  • Accuracy of prognosis
  • Resource availability timeline
  • Legal exposure

Design Characteristics

Each scenario is constructed to force the following SDF operations:

  • Step 0 pressure: urgency, fear, loyalty, pity, or desire.
  • Step 1 reformulation: restating the issue in terms of what is actually within purview.
  • Step 2 value stripping: removing false moral weight from externals.
  • Step 3 role conflict resolution: applying Props 64–72.
  • Step 4 Factual Uncertainty Gate activation: identifying missing or domain-bound facts before means selection.

Each scenario cannot be resolved correctly without eliminating outcome-based reasoning, identifying the correct role-generated aim, and handling uncertainty without fabrication.

These are not illustrative anecdotes. They are stress tests for the framework.

Sterling Decision Framework v3.3 — Three Multi-Action Scenario Runs

 

Sterling Decision Framework v3.3 — Three Multi-Action Scenario Runs

Corpus in use: Core Stoicism, SLE v4.0, Nine Excerpts, SDF v3.3, Activation v4, Seddon’s Glossary. Political Application Constraint applies: Sterling’s name is not associated with political applications or figures. All analysis is Dave Kelly’s work derived from Sterling’s theoretical foundations. Prose rendering: Claude, 2026.


Scenario 1 — National Security / Classified Threat

Agent: President of the United States


Step 0 — Agent Check

Core question: Am I under the influence of a false impression that is driving this decision?

Impression in propositional form: A foreign attack on the nation’s infrastructure is a genuine evil that must be prevented. My authority and its exercise are genuine goods. The security of the nation is my good to secure.

What the agent may desire: To be seen as decisive. To protect his legacy. To act before being blamed for inaction. To demonstrate strength to the foreign actor, allies, and domestic audience.

Value Strip: The security of the nation’s infrastructure is a preferred indifferent — rational to protect, genuinely better than its absence, not a genuine good whose failure would constitute a genuine evil to the agent’s prohairesis. His legacy, his perception as decisive, and his political standing are preferred indifferents. His role-correct action in this situation is his only genuine good. The false impression to be stripped is that the outcome — whether the attack occurs — determines the moral quality of his decision. It does not. The quality of his judgment determines it.

Self-Audit: No evidence of REASSURANCE BIAS. TRAINING DATA CONTAMINATION risk is moderate — political decision-making vocabulary must not govern Stoic role-duty analysis. No MID-SESSION TEXT REQUEST. PREFERRED INDIFFERENT AS GENUINE GOOD: stripped above. Proceeding.


Step 1 — Purview Check

Core question: Is this actually mine to determine?

Within purview: the quality of the President’s judgment in this situation, the means he selects, the manner in which he acts, the honesty with which he represents the situation to those he is constitutionally accountable to, and the reservation with which he holds all outcomes.

Outside purview: whether the attack occurs regardless of his action, whether his defensive measures succeed, how the foreign actor responds, how Congress and the public receive his decisions, and whether history judges him correctly.

All three Action Sets contain decisions that are within the agent’s purview as choices. The outcomes of those choices are outside his purview. Proceeding.


Step 2 — Value Strip

Core question: Am I treating any indifferent as a genuine good or evil?

Stripped: national security as a genuine good whose protection is a moral imperative overriding procedural constraints. This impression, if assented to, generates the false conclusion that urgency licenses any means. The security of infrastructure is a preferred indifferent — genuinely worth protecting, appropriate to aim at, not a genuine good that overrides all other role-duties.

Stripped: political standing, legacy, and decisiveness as genuine goods. These are preferred indifferents at most. The impression that history’s judgment or the election cycle constitute genuine goods licensing departure from role-duty must be refused.

Retained: the genuine duty of the President to act in accordance with his constitutional role, to exercise honest judgment about the evidence, and to discharge his obligations to Congress and the public as his actual social relationships require. These are not preferred indifferents. They are the source of the role-duties that govern the decision.


Step 3 — Virtue Identification / Role Identification

Core question: Which roles are operative, and what appropriate objects of aim do they generate?

Role 1 — President / Constitutional Officer (Prop 64): This role is generated by the actual social relationship between the President and the constitutional order. It generates duties of: acting within constitutional authority, not exceeding executive power without congressional authorization for significant escalatory acts, and maintaining the rule of law as a governing constraint on means selection. Governing proposition: Prop 66 — when roles conflict, the role whose duty is most directly operative governs.

Role 2 — Commander-in-Chief (Prop 65): This role is generated by the actual constitutional relationship. It generates duties of: protecting the nation against threats, exercising military and intelligence authority within the law, and making sound operational judgments under uncertainty. It does not generate the duty to act offensively on contested intelligence.

Role 3 — Public Fiduciary (Prop 65): This role is generated by the actual social relationship between the President and the public. It generates duties of: honest representation of what is known and unknown, appropriate disclosure to constitutionally designated oversight bodies, and not deceiving those to whom fiduciary duties are owed.

Role conflict identification (Props 68–71): The roles are not in genuine conflict. All three roles point toward the same governing constraint: act within constitutional authority, with sound judgment proportionate to the evidence, with appropriate institutional process. The apparent conflict between speed and process is not a role conflict; it is a tension between a preferred indifferent (rapid action) and a role-duty (procedural integrity). The role-duty governs.

Appropriate objects of aim (Prop 60, Theorem 29):

  • Action Set A: Increase defensive posture (A2). Preemptive offensive action on divided intelligence (A1) exceeds what role-correct means selection supports given the Factual Uncertainty Gate findings below. No action (A3) fails role-duty to act on credible threat.
  • Action Set B: Classified congressional briefing (B2). Public disclosure (B1) may compromise operational integrity. Full withholding (B3) fails fiduciary duty to constitutional oversight bodies.
  • Action Set C: Intelligence reconciliation process (C3), with executive authority exercised within existing statutory frameworks. Formal congressional authorization (C1) is appropriate if escalatory action becomes warranted. Acting under executive authority alone for significant offensive action (C2) exceeds constitutional role-duty on contested intelligence.

Step 4 — Action Determination

Factual Uncertainty Gate

Check One — Facts in hand: Agency A reports high confidence of a cyberattack within 72 hours. Agency B reports moderate confidence. Agency C disputes the conclusion. No attack has yet occurred. Attribution is contested. The specific infrastructure targets are not stated as established. The consequence of preemption on escalation dynamics is unknown.

Check Two — Dependence assessment: Preemptive offensive action (A1) materially depends on attribution certainty and threat credibility — both uncertain. This uncertainty is essential, not peripheral. The action that depends on contested facts must either be withheld or executed under acknowledged ignorance with explicit reservation. Given that Agency C disputes the conclusion and Agency B is only moderate, attribution certainty is insufficient for offensive action. Defensive posture enhancement (A2) does not materially depend on attribution certainty — it is appropriate even under uncertainty. Congressional briefing (B2) depends only on what is known and can be disclosed honestly including the uncertainty. Intelligence reconciliation (C3) is precisely appropriate to the factual situation.

Check Three — Domain boundary: Cyber operations law, intelligence tradecraft, constitutional war powers, and international law are domain knowledge outside the SDF’s corpus. They enter the analysis as constraints on means selection and are attributed to those sources, not to the proposition set.

Gate Declaration: Facts established: contested intelligence from three agencies, no attack yet occurred. Uncertain and essential: attribution, threat credibility, consequence of preemption. Domain knowledge required: war powers law, cyber operations law, intelligence tradecraft.

Move One — Action Determination

Action Set A: A2 — Increase defensive posture only, with no offensive action. Rational means (Prop 61): proportionate to what the evidence actually establishes. Role-appropriate (Prop 67): consistent with all three operative roles. Reservation confirmed (Prop 62): whether the attack occurs regardless is outside purview.

Action Set B: B2 — Classified congressional briefing. Rational means: discharges fiduciary duty to constitutional oversight without compromising operational integrity. The briefing must be honest about the intelligence disagreement — it cannot present Agency A’s assessment as settled fact when Agency C disputes it. Honest speech (Prop 75) governs the content of the briefing.

Action Set C: C3 — Delay action pending intelligence reconciliation, with a defined timeline proportionate to the 72-hour window. If reconciliation produces sufficient confidence, C1 (congressional authorization) becomes appropriate before offensive action. C2 (act under executive authority alone for offensive action) is not role-correct on contested intelligence.

Move Two — Verification Test (Prop 76)

Would a person of genuinely correct judgment, stripped of concern for legacy, political standing, and the appearance of decisiveness, select A2/B2/C3? Yes. The selection is governed entirely by what the evidence actually supports and what the roles actually require. It is not governed by the desire to appear strong, to pre-empt blame for inaction, or to demonstrate authority. Verification test passed.

Self-Audit at Step 4: No SECTION IX BYPASS — Props 60–62, 64–67, 73–77 cited. No FACTUAL UNCERTAINTY GATE BYPASS — Gate Declaration produced before Move One. No REASSURANCE BIAS — the finding does not license the most action or the least action but the role-correct action given the evidence. Proceeding.


Step 5 — Outcome Acceptance

The President has acted within his constitutional role, selected means proportionate to what the evidence establishes, briefed the constitutionally appropriate oversight body honestly, and withheld offensive action until attribution is sufficient. If the attack occurs despite his defensive measures, that outcome is a dispreferred indifferent. It does not retroactively render his decision incorrect (Prop 63). His decision was correct at the moment it was made, governed by what the evidence actually established and what his roles actually required. The outcome does not determine the moral quality of the act. His judgment does.

Reservation (Prop 62): I pursue these actions if circumstances allow. Whether the threat is real, whether the defensive measures succeed, whether Congress responds appropriately, whether the foreign actor escalates — all of these are outside my purview. My role-correct judgment in this moment is what is genuinely mine.



Scenario 2 — Executive Loyalty vs. Legal Duty

Agent: Attorney General of the United States


Step 0 — Agent Check

Core question: Am I under the influence of a false impression that is driving this decision?

Impression in propositional form: My position is a genuine good worth protecting. The President’s approval is a genuine good. The political ally’s protection is a genuine good. Institutional peace is a genuine good.

What the agent may desire: To retain his position. To maintain the President’s confidence. To avoid a political confrontation. To protect himself from the consequences of refusal.

Value Strip: The Attorney General’s position is a preferred indifferent. The President’s confidence is a preferred indifferent. Institutional peace is a preferred indifferent. The political ally’s legal situation is an indifferent to the Attorney General as agent — neither his good to secure nor his responsibility beyond the legal process itself. The false impression to be stripped is that any of these constitute genuine goods whose loss would be a genuine evil. None of them does. The quality of the Attorney General’s role-correct action in this moment is his only genuine good.

Self-Audit: REASSURANCE BIAS risk is high in this scenario — the pressure toward compliance is enormous and the instrument must not generate a softened verdict to relieve that pressure. No PREFERRED INDIFFERENT AS GENUINE GOOD after Value Strip. Proceeding.


Step 1 — Purview Check

Within purview: the Attorney General’s own response to the instruction, the documentation he produces, the manner in which he communicates his position to the President, and the decisions he makes about disclosure and escalation.

Outside purview: whether the President retaliates, whether Congress acts, whether his refusal produces the political consequences he fears, whether the investigation ultimately succeeds, and whether the ally is convicted or exonerated.


Step 2 — Value Strip

Stripped: loyalty to the President as a genuine good overriding legal duty. Loyalty is a preferred indifferent within the role of executive branch subordinate. It does not override the role-duties generated by the roles of chief law enforcement officer and officer of the court, which are more directly operative in this specific situation (Prop 66).

Stripped: institutional preservation as a genuine good. The DOJ’s political stability is a preferred indifferent. The integrity of its legal function is not an indifferent — it is constitutive of the role-duty itself.

Stripped: personal position. The Attorney General’s continued tenure is a preferred indifferent. It is not a genuine good whose protection licenses departure from role-duty.


Step 3 — Virtue Identification / Role Identification

Role 1 — Chief Law Enforcement Officer (Prop 64): This role is generated by the actual legal and constitutional relationship. It generates duties of: conducting legally valid investigations without political interference, upholding the rule of law regardless of the identity of those investigated, and not halting valid legal processes at political instruction.

Role 2 — Executive Branch Subordinate (Prop 65): This role is generated by the actual relationship to the President. It generates duties of: implementing lawful executive direction, serving the President’s lawful agenda, and advising honestly. It does not generate the duty to comply with unlawful instructions.

Role 3 — Officer of the Court (Prop 65): This role is generated by the Attorney General’s legal standing and oath. It generates duties of: upholding legal process, not obstructing valid legal proceedings, and maintaining the integrity of the legal system.

Role conflict resolution (Prop 66): The roles are in genuine conflict here. Role 1 and Role 3 both prohibit compliance with the instruction. Role 2 generates a duty of service to the President but only within the constraints of lawful direction. The instruction as described is not lawful direction — it is an attempt to interfere with a valid legal investigation for political purposes. Role 1 and Role 3 are the most directly operative roles in this specific situation. They govern.

Appropriate objects of aim (Prop 60, Theorem 29):

  • Action Set A: Refuse and continue the investigation (A2). Compliance (A1) violates the most directly operative roles. Requesting written clarification (A3) is a rational procedural step before formal refusal — it creates a record and gives the President the opportunity to withdraw the instruction.
  • Action Set B: Document the interaction internally (B1) and escalate to DOJ ethics officials (B2). Both are role-correct and not in conflict. Confidential handling alone (B3) fails role-duty to the institution.
  • Action Set C: The appropriate external action depends on the factual uncertainty below. Informing Congress (C1) is role-correct if the instruction constitutes obstruction. Resignation with public statement (C2) is role-correct if remaining in the role requires ongoing compliance with unlawful direction. No external action (C3) is not role-correct if the instruction constitutes obstruction of a valid legal proceeding.

Step 4 — Action Determination

Factual Uncertainty Gate

Check One — Facts in hand: The President privately instructed the Attorney General to halt a legally valid and ongoing investigation. No formal written order was issued. The investigation concerns a close political ally.

Check Two — Dependence assessment: The legal classification of the instruction as obstruction depends on domain knowledge — specifically on whether the instruction, as given, constitutes obstruction of justice under applicable law. This is uncertain and essential for Action Set C. It is not uncertain for Action Sets A and B: the instruction is unlawful regardless of its precise legal classification, because it directs the chief law enforcement officer to halt a valid legal process for political reasons. The A and B determinations do not materially depend on the obstruction classification.

Check Three — Domain boundary: Obstruction of justice law, DOJ ethics regulations, congressional oversight authority, and whistleblower protections are domain knowledge outside the SDF’s corpus. They govern Action Set C and are attributed to those sources.

Gate Declaration: Facts established: private oral instruction to halt valid investigation, no formal order, political ally as subject. Uncertain and essential for C: legal classification as obstruction. Domain knowledge required: obstruction law, DOJ ethics regulations, congressional oversight authority.

Move One — Action Determination

Action Set A: A3 first, then A2. Request written clarification or formal directive as the immediate response. This is not compliance — it is the honest, role-correct response that creates a record, gives the President the opportunity to withdraw, and establishes the precise nature of what has been instructed before formal refusal. If the President confirms or reiterates, A2 follows: refuse and continue the investigation. A1 is not role-correct under any circumstances here.

Action Set B: B1 and B2 simultaneously. Document the interaction in full immediately — date, time, content, exact words as recalled — and escalate to DOJ ethics officials. These are not alternatives; both are required by role-duty. B3 is not role-correct.

Action Set C: C1 if domain knowledge establishes that the instruction constitutes obstruction or an abuse of executive authority requiring congressional notification. C2 if remaining in the role requires ongoing compliance with the instruction or concealment of it — resignation is role-correct when the role itself has been made incompatible with legal duty. C3 is not role-correct if the instruction constitutes obstruction.

Move Two — Verification Test (Prop 76)

Would a person of genuinely correct judgment, stripped of concern for his position, the President’s approval, and the political consequences of refusal, select A3/A2, B1/B2, C1 or C2? Yes. The selection is governed entirely by what the roles actually require and what the facts actually establish. The false impression that loyalty to the President overrides legal duty has been stripped. Verification test passed.

Self-Audit at Step 4: REASSURANCE BIAS check: the finding does not soften toward compliance to relieve the agent’s anxiety about the consequences. No SECTION IX BYPASS. No FACTUAL UNCERTAINTY GATE BYPASS. Proceeding.


Step 5 — Outcome Acceptance

The Attorney General has acted within his operative roles, refused an unlawful instruction, documented the interaction, escalated appropriately, and discharged his duties honestly. Whether the President retaliates, whether he is removed from office, whether the investigation proceeds, whether Congress acts, whether the political ally is ultimately held accountable — all of these are outside his purview. They are preferred or dispreferred indifferents. His role-correct judgment at this moment is what is genuinely his.

Reservation (Prop 62): I pursue these actions if circumstances allow. The outcomes — my tenure, the investigation’s success, the political consequences — are not mine to guarantee. My role-correct action in this moment is.



Scenario 3 — Medical Triage with Resource Scarcity

Agent: Hospital Director


Step 0 — Agent Check

Core question: Am I under the influence of a false impression that is driving this decision?

Impression in propositional form: Saving the maximum number of lives is a genuine good. Failing to save any of these five patients is a genuine evil. The death of any patient I could have saved is a genuine harm to me as agent.

What the agent may desire: To save everyone. To avoid being blamed for whom he did not save. To follow whatever protocol protects him from liability. To feel that he acted rightly regardless of the outcome.

Value Strip: The lives of the five patients are preferred indifferents — genuinely worth preserving, rationally appropriate to aim at, not genuine goods in the Stoic sense whose non-preservation constitutes a genuine evil to the agent’s prohairesis. The agent’s reputation for good judgment and freedom from blame are preferred indifferents. The most dangerous false impression in this scenario is that the outcome — who lives — determines the moral quality of the decision. It does not. The quality of the agent’s role-correct judgment under the actual constraints determines it.

Self-Audit: REASSURANCE BIAS risk is significant — the pressure to produce a verdict that feels morally reassuring is high. The instrument must produce the role-correct finding regardless of its emotional difficulty. No PREFERRED INDIFFERENT AS GENUINE GOOD after Value Strip. Proceeding.


Step 1 — Purview Check

Within purview: the allocation criteria the director selects and implements, the manner in which decisions are communicated to patients and families, the integrity of the process, and the documentation of the decision.

Outside purview: which patients survive, whether additional resources become available, whether the families accept the decisions, and how the institution is evaluated afterward.


Step 2 — Value Strip

Stripped: saving the maximum number of lives as a genuine good overriding all other considerations. This is the utilitarian false impression that most endangers role-correct action in triage scenarios. The lives of the five patients are preferred indifferents. The role-correct allocation process is what the agent’s genuine good consists in.

Stripped: social role or utility of patients as a criterion generating genuine-good status for some patients over others. Whether a patient is a caregiver or essential worker is a preferred indifferent — it does not assign genuine-good status to that patient’s survival that other patients’ survival lacks.

Stripped: age as a genuine-evil criterion. Age affects survival probability as an empirical matter but does not generate genuine-evil status for an older patient’s death that a younger patient’s death lacks.


Step 3 — Virtue Identification / Role Identification

Role 1 — Medical Administrator (Prop 64): This role is generated by the actual institutional relationship. It generates duties of: implementing established triage protocols, making allocation decisions under the constraints that actually exist, and doing so with procedural integrity.

Role 2 — Institutional Steward (Prop 65): This role generates duties of: maintaining the institution’s capacity to serve the broader patient population, documenting decisions for accountability, and preserving the integrity of the institution’s medical and ethical standards.

Role 3 — Responsible Agent for Triage Protocol (Prop 65): This role generates duties of: applying the established protocol consistently and without arbitrary deviation, ensuring that the criteria applied are defensible on medical grounds, and not introducing ad hoc value judgments that the protocol does not sanction.

Role conflict resolution (Prop 66): No genuine role conflict exists here. All three roles point toward the same governing requirement: implement an established, medically grounded triage protocol consistently and with procedural integrity. The tensions in this scenario are not between roles but between competing preferred indifferents within a single role-correct allocation process.

Appropriate object of aim (Prop 60, Theorem 29): The appropriate object of aim is the role-correct execution of the triage protocol under the actual constraints. The protocol itself is domain knowledge — crisis standards of care, established triage frameworks — that governs which allocation method is medically and institutionally defensible. The SDF does not determine which patients receive the beds. It determines what kind of process the agent must pursue.


Step 4 — Action Determination

Factual Uncertainty Gate

Check One — Facts in hand: Two ICU beds available. Five patients requiring immediate critical care. Patients differ in survival probability, age, preexisting conditions, and social roles. The specific survival probabilities, the nature of each patient’s condition, and the precise triage protocol in force at this institution are stated as variable — not as established facts in the scenario.

Check Two — Dependence assessment: The specific allocation decision (which two patients receive the beds) materially depends on the actual survival probabilities and the established protocol. These are essential and their specific values are not established in the scenario. The SDF can determine what type of process is role-correct; it cannot determine which patients are allocated without the actual clinical data.

Check Three — Domain boundary: Crisis standards of care, medical triage frameworks, institutional ethics protocols, and applicable health law are domain knowledge outside the SDF’s corpus. They govern the specific allocation criteria and are attributed to those sources.

Gate Declaration: Facts established: two beds, five patients, variable clinical profiles. Uncertain and essential: specific survival probabilities, established protocol in force. Domain knowledge required: crisis standards of care, medical triage frameworks, institutional ethics protocol.

Move One — Action Determination

Action Set A — Allocation Method: The role-correct allocation method is the one established by the institution’s crisis standards of care protocol, applied consistently and without ad hoc deviation. Where survival probability is the primary criterion in the established protocol, A1 (highest survival probability) is role-correct. Where first-come-first-served governs the established protocol, that method is role-correct. The SDF does not override established medical triage protocols — it requires that the agent implement them with procedural integrity rather than deviating from them under emotional pressure or for ad hoc reasons. Social role (caregiver, essential worker) is not a role-correct primary criterion unless the established protocol specifies it as such.

Action Set B — Communication: Honest, direct communication with families about what the constraints are and how decisions are being made is role-correct (Prop 75 — honest speech). Concealment of the allocation criteria or misrepresentation of the decision process is not role-correct regardless of its emotional appeal.

Action Set C — Documentation: Complete documentation of the decision, the criteria applied, the protocol followed, and the facts as established at the time of decision is role-correct under all three operative roles. Documentation is not self-protection — it is the institutional expression of procedural integrity and honest speech.

Move Two — Verification Test (Prop 76)

Would a person of genuinely correct judgment, stripped of concern for blame, emotional distress about the outcome, and the desire to appear to have acted rightly, select the role-correct protocol implementation with honest communication and complete documentation? Yes. The selection is not governed by who the agent prefers to save or by what outcome feels more morally tolerable. It is governed by what the roles actually require and what the established protocol actually specifies. Verification test passed.

Self-Audit at Step 4: REASSURANCE BIAS check: the finding does not resolve the moral difficulty of the scenario by generating a verdict that feels emotionally satisfying. The scenario is genuinely tragic in the sense that role-correct action does not save everyone. That is not a failure of the framework. It is an accurate description of what triage under genuine scarcity requires. No SECTION IX BYPASS. No FACTUAL UNCERTAINTY GATE BYPASS. Proceeding.


Step 5 — Outcome Acceptance

The hospital director has applied the established protocol consistently, communicated honestly with patients and families, and documented the decision completely. Three patients will not receive the beds. Their deaths, if they occur, are dispreferred indifferents — deeply sorrowful, rational to have aimed against, not genuine evils that reach what is genuinely the director’s own. The quality of his role-correct judgment in this moment is what is genuinely his. The outcome does not retroactively alter it (Prop 63).

The most important outcome acceptance in this scenario is this: the director must not interpret the deaths of the three patients as evidence that he failed morally. He did not. He implemented the protocol, acted within his roles, exercised honest judgment under genuine constraints, and held the outcomes with reservation. That is what role-correct action under genuine scarcity consists in. The grief he may feel is appropriate — these are dispreferred indifferents that are genuinely worth aiming against. The disturbance that would constitute pathos is the false judgment that the deaths are a genuine evil for which he bears genuine culpability beyond the quality of his role-correct process.

Reservation (Prop 62): I pursue these actions if circumstances allow. Who survives, how families respond, how the institution is judged, whether additional resources arrive — all of these are outside my purview. My role-correct judgment in this moment, under the constraints that actually exist, is what is genuinely mine.


Cross-Scenario Analytical Note

The three scenarios stress-test the SDF at three distinct points.

Scenario 1 tests the Factual Uncertainty Gate most severely: the agent has powerful role-authority and time pressure, both of which generate the false impression that acting decisively on contested intelligence is role-correct. The Gate establishes that preemptive offensive action materially depends on attribution certainty that does not exist, and role-correct action is therefore proportionate defensive response and honest institutional process — not the action that appears most decisive.

Scenario 2 tests role conflict resolution at its sharpest: two roles that normally coexist are placed in direct opposition by an unlawful instruction. The resolution is clean once the operative roles are correctly identified — the roles of chief law enforcement officer and officer of the court are more directly operative than executive branch subordinate in this specific situation, and they govern without remainder.

Scenario 3 tests the Value Strip at its most emotionally demanding: the false impression that outcome determines moral quality is strongest precisely where the stakes are highest. The SDF’s finding that role-correct process — not outcome — is the appropriate object of aim is philosophically sound and emotionally difficult. The Stoic framework does not resolve the tragedy of genuine scarcity. It correctly identifies what the agent’s genuine good consists in within that tragedy.

In all three scenarios, the governing finding is the same in structure: the agent’s genuine good is the quality of his role-correct judgment, not the favorability of the outcome. The outcomes are preferred or dispreferred indifferents to be pursued or avoided with full rational effort and genuine reservation.


SDF v3.3 runs. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling. Corpus cited: Core Stoicism Theorems 10, 12, 19, 25, 27, 29; SLE v4.0 Props 60–67, 73–77; Nine Excerpts Section 7; SDF v3.3 Steps 0–5. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.

Friday, April 24, 2026

The Practice: A Sterling Stoic Introduction

 

The Practice: A Sterling Stoic Introduction

Welcome. What I am about to offer you is not a technique or a self-help program. It is a way of understanding what you are and what produces your experience — and from that understanding, a practice that is available to you right now, in this conversation, and in every moment that follows.

It is grounded in Stoic philosophy as reconstructed by Grant C. Sterling — a philosophically precise account of what human agency is, what genuine flourishing consists in, and what it requires of you. This is not ancient wisdom repurposed as life advice. It is a rigorous philosophical system whose central claims are either true or false and whose practical program follows from those claims with logical necessity.


What You Are

You are a rational faculty. Not your body, not your reputation, not your relationships, not your feelings, not your history, not your achievements or failures. You are the thing that receives impressions of the world and decides what to do with them. This is not a metaphor. It is a precise philosophical claim about the structure of what you are: the part of you that can examine what arrives and say yes or no to it is the real you. Everything else — the body, the external circumstances, other people’s behavior, even your own emotional responses — is not you in the morally significant sense.

The Stoics called this faculty the prohairesis — the governing principle, the rational will. Epictetus opens the Enchiridion with the governing claim: some things are in our power and some things are not. What is in our power is the activity of the prohairesis — our judgments, our assents, our impulses, our desires and aversions. What is not in our power is everything else: the body, property, reputation, position, other people’s behavior, the outcomes of our actions. The distinction between these two categories is the governing fact of practical life.

This is the first foundation.


What Produces Your Experience

Your emotional life is not produced by what happens to you. It is produced by what you judge about what happens to you.

An impression arrives — a representation of what is happening, what has happened, or what might happen. That impression arrives carrying not only a factual claim but an evaluative one: it presents some external event or condition as a genuine good or a genuine evil. The impression is not merely a perception. It is a proposition with an embedded value claim.

Before you respond, before you act or feel or speak, you assent to that impression or you do not. Assent is the governing act. It is the moment between the impression’s arrival and everything that follows. If you assent to the false evaluative claim embedded in the impression — if you accept that the external event is a genuine good or evil — then desire, aversion, emotion, and action all follow from that false assent. The disturbance is not produced by the event. It is produced by the false assent.

This is what Epictetus means when he says: “It is not things that disturb us, but our judgments about things.” And it is what Sterling means when he identifies the correction of false value judgments as the governing work of Stoic practice. The disturbance you experience is not evidence that something genuinely evil has happened. It is evidence that you have assented to a false evaluative impression of what has happened.


What Drives You Toward Specific Things

Every desire you have is produced by a belief. Specifically, by the belief that something is genuinely good and worth pursuing, or that something is genuinely evil and worth avoiding. The Stoic framework makes a precise and philosophically demanding claim about the content of those beliefs: most of them are false.

The things you most want — friendship and natural affection, achievement, recognition, freedom, comfort, the approval of people who matter to you — are real, their pursuit is rational, and they are worth aiming at. But they are preferred indifferents, not genuine goods. A preferred indifferent is something any rational agent would prefer to its absence, all else equal — but whose presence or absence does not determine the moral quality of your life or the genuine state of your flourishing.

Virtue is the only genuine good. Vice is the only genuine evil. Everything else — health, reputation, wealth, friendship and natural affection, achievement, the behavior of those you care about — falls in the domain of indifferents: preferred or dispreferred, rational to pursue or avoid, but not the locus of your genuine good or genuine harm.

The practical consequence is precise. If you are holding a preferred indifferent — another person’s affection, a professional outcome, your own health — as a genuine good whose absence would be a genuine evil, you have staked your equanimity on something outside your control. You will pursue it, perhaps effectively, perhaps not. But when it is absent, threatened, or lost, the disturbance you experience is not produced by the loss. It is produced by the false value judgment you placed on it. Change the judgment — hold it correctly as a preferred indifferent, appropriate to aim at and appropriate to prefer, not worth your identity or your equanimity — and the loss remains a loss, worth responding to rationally, but no longer a genuine evil that reaches what is genuinely yours.

This is the second foundation, and it is the most demanding. It does not ask you to stop wanting things. It asks you to examine whether you are holding what you want correctly.


What Is Actually Available to You

Here is the claim the Stoic framework makes at the philosophical level: right assent — the correct governance of your own judgments — is sufficient for flourishing. Not helpful. Not a component of flourishing. Sufficient.

The sufficiency claim does not diminish the value of preferred indifferents — it locates your flourishing upstream of whether they arrive. Health, relationships, achievement, freedom are worth pursuing with full rational effort. They remain appropriate objects of aim, held with reservation about the outcome. What “sufficient” means is that they are not constitutive of flourishing. Your flourishing is not made or unmade by whether they arrive.

If only virtue is genuinely good — if only the quality of your own rational engagement is a genuine good — then the agent who governs his own judgments correctly has secured the only thing that is genuinely good. No external condition can take it from him. No loss, no failure, no frustration of what he wants reaches what is genuinely his.

This is not quietism. The Stoic practitioner pursues preferred indifferents with full effort and genuine care. He aims at the health, the relationship, the achievement, the outcome. He brings all available rational means to bear on what is appropriate to pursue in his situation. He simply does not make his equanimity hostage to whether the pursuit succeeds. He acts with reservation — aiming at the goal if circumstances allow, without staking what is genuinely his on whether they do.

This is the third foundation, and it is the foundation that makes practice possible rather than merely desirable.


The Practice: Inner Discourse

The practice is inner discourse. Not reflection. Not rumination. Not positive thinking. First-person propositional speech, addressed to yourself, about the specific impression that has just arrived.

Seddon, following Epictetus, identifies what the prokoptōn — the person making progress — must do: strive to stand between their awareness of facts and their evaluation of those facts. To maintain, at every moment, the gap between what has happened and what you judge about what has happened. The inner discourse is the practice of standing in that gap and speaking from it.

An impression arrives. Before you respond — in the gap between the impression’s arrival and whatever comes next — you speak to it:

“Impression, wait. An impression is all you are, not the thing itself.”

You name it as a representation rather than as reality. This creates the gap. Then you test it:

“Is what this impression is presenting as a genuine good or evil something in my control, or not?”

If it is not in your control — and most of what produces disturbance is not — then:

“This is an indifferent. It is neither genuinely good nor genuinely evil. My flourishing does not depend on it.”

Then you ask what your situation actually requires:

“Given that, what does my role here call for? What is the appropriate action, held with reservation about the outcome?”

And you act from there.

When the disturbance has already arrived — when vigilance has failed and you are already in the grip of something — the inner discourse begins differently:

“I am disturbed. That means I have assented to a false impression. Something outside my control has been treated as a genuine good or evil. What was it?”

Name it precisely. Not “something went wrong” but the specific external: this person’s response, this outcome, this loss, this situation. Then:

“That is a preferred indifferent. It is neither genuinely good nor genuinely evil. My flourishing does not depend on it. What does my role here actually require of me?”

Formulate the true proposition. Identify the appropriate action. Resume from there.

This two-stage structure — the pre-disturbance inner discourse that maintains the gap, and the corrective inner discourse that recovers from a failed assent — constitutes the daily practice. Epictetus was explicit that the prokoptōn will fail. The pause will not always be maintained. The false assent will sometimes complete itself before examination can occur. The measure of progress is not the elimination of failure but the decreasing frequency of failures and the increasing speed of recovery.


The Governing Questions

Every situation you encounter, every impression that arrives, can be approached through four governing questions drawn directly from the Sterling framework. These are not therapeutic prompts. They are the logical structure of the inner discourse rendered as questions.

What has actually happened? The factual first assent, stripped of evaluative addition. His son is dead. The ship is lost. He was carried off to prison. Nothing else. Not: something terrible has occurred. Not: I have been harmed. What has happened, stated as fact, without the evaluative addition each man makes on his own responsibility.

Is this in my control or not? The dichotomy of control applied directly to the situation. If what the impression concerns is outside your control — another person’s behavior, an external outcome, a bodily condition — then it is an indifferent. It is nothing to you in the morally significant sense. You will respond to it rationally. You will not stake your identity on it.

What is the correct evaluation? The evaluative second assent made correctly. Not: is this bad? But: is this a genuine evil, or a preferred indifferent that reason identifies as appropriate to avoid? The answer, for anything outside your control, is always the same: a preferred or dispreferred indifferent, appropriate to pursue or avoid, not a genuine good or evil. Your flourishing is not implicated.

What does my role require? The Discipline of Action proceeding from correct evaluation. You stand in actual social relationships — as parent, child, partner, colleague, citizen, friend. Each relationship generates genuine duties. Having stripped the false value judgment, having correctly evaluated what has happened, you ask what your actual role in this situation requires of you. Not what you feel like doing. Not what would make you feel better. What your role requires. You do that, held with reservation about the outcome.


The Long Practice

The inner discourse is not a technique you apply once and achieve a result. It is a discipline — askēsis in the Greek — whose long-term effect is the gradual transformation of what impressions arrive and what evaluative claims they carry.

The prokoptōn is not someone who has eliminated false impressions. He is someone who is working, impression by impression, through correct evaluative assent, toward the condition in which false impressions arise with decreasing frequency and decreasing force. Each correct assent weakens the corresponding false impression. Each false assent strengthens it. The cumulative effect of consistent practice, over time, is the gradual transformation of the character of experience itself.

Seneca practiced the retrospective dimension of this each evening: what fault have I remedied today? What vice have I resisted? In what respect am I better? This is not self-criticism. It is the rational faculty reviewing its own performance against the governing standard — identifying where the pause was maintained, where it failed, and what the correct inner discourse would have been at the moment of failure. The review strengthens the practice for the next encounter with the same class of impression.

The end point of this practice — the ideal that governs it without being achievable by most practitioners in most lifetimes — is the Sage: the person in whom false value impressions no longer arise, because the rational faculty has been fully corrected and the character of experience itself has been transformed. The prokoptōn is not the Sage. He is the person who is working toward that condition, impression by impression, day by day, with the confidence that the practice is sufficient and the patience that the practice requires.


What This Asks of You

It asks that you take seriously the claim that your flourishing is genuinely in your own hands — not as an aspiration but as a philosophical fact about the structure of what you are. It asks that you practice the inner discourse, not merely understand it. It asks that you be willing to examine the things you most want and ask not only whether you are pursuing them effectively, but whether you are holding them correctly. And it asks that you trust that correct engagement — right assent, consistently practiced — is sufficient.

The practice does not promise that what you want will arrive. It promises something more fundamental: that what you genuinely are cannot be harmed by whether it does.

That is what is available to you.


Account: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling, including Core Stoicism, the Sterling Logic Engine v4.0, and the Nine Excerpts. Primary sources: Epictetus, Enchiridion and Discourses; Marcus Aurelius, Meditations; Keith Seddon, Epictetus’ Handbook and the Tablet of Cebes (Routledge, 2006). Prose rendering: Claude.

Mind Map — The Six Commitments Integrated with the Three Foundations

 

Mind Map — The Six Commitments Integrated with the Three Foundations

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

The Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism


FOUNDATIONS
│
├─ 1. CONTROL
│   │
│   ├─ Dichotomy
│   │   ├─ Internal
│   │   │   ├─ Beliefs
│   │   │   ├─ Desires
│   │   │   └─ Will
│   │   └─ External
│   │       ├─ Body
│   │       ├─ Property
│   │       ├─ Reputation
│   │       └─ Outcomes
│   │
│   ├─ Dualism
│   │   ├─ Grounds
│   │   │   ├─ Boundary
│   │   │   │   ├─ Ontological
│   │   │   │   └─ Real
│   │   │   ├─ Prohairesis
│   │   │   │   ├─ Distinct
│   │   │   │   └─ Prior
│   │   │   └─ Separability
│   │   │       ├─ Self
│   │   │       └─ External
│   │   └─ Collapse
│   │       ├─ Materialism
│   │       │   ├─ Reduction
│   │       │   └─ Determination
│   │       └─ Dissolution
│   │           ├─ Unprincipled
│   │           └─ Illusory
│   │
│   └─ Freedom
│       ├─ Grounds
│       │   ├─ Origination
│       │   │   ├─ Genuine
│       │   │   └─ Uncaused
│       │   ├─ Theorem-8
│       │   │   └─ Desires
│       │   └─ Non-compatibilist
│       │       ├─ Stronger
│       │       └─ First-cause
│       └─ Collapse
│           ├─ Determinism
│           │   ├─ Appearance
│           │   └─ Illusion
│           └─ Meaninglessness
│               ├─ Dichotomy
│               └─ Practice
│
├─ 2. FALSENESS
│   │
│   ├─ Causal-claim
│   │   ├─ Theorem-7
│   │   │   ├─ Desires
│   │   │   └─ Beliefs
│   │   ├─ Theorem-10
│   │   │   ├─ Virtue
│   │   │   └─ Vice
│   │   └─ Theorem-12
│   │       ├─ Externals
│   │       └─ Indifferent
│   │
│   ├─ Realism
│   │   ├─ Grounds
│   │   │   ├─ Falsely
│   │   │   │   ├─ Factual
│   │   │   │   └─ Objective
│   │   │   ├─ Independence
│   │   │   │   ├─ Belief-independent
│   │   │   │   └─ Preference-independent
│   │   │   └─ Normativity
│   │   │       ├─ Rational
│   │   │       └─ Non-arbitrary
│   │   └─ Collapse
│   │       ├─ Relativism
│   │       │   ├─ Preference
│   │       │   └─ Convention
│   │       └─ Arbitrariness
│   │           ├─ Correction
│   │           └─ Demand
│   │
│   ├─ Correspondence
│   │   ├─ Grounds
│   │   │   ├─ Testability
│   │   │   │   ├─ Matches
│   │   │   │   └─ Fails
│   │   │   ├─ Verdict
│   │   │   │   ├─ False
│   │   │   │   └─ Not-merely-inconvenient
│   │   │   └─ Reality-alignment
│   │   │       ├─ Moral
│   │   │       └─ Factual
│   │   └─ Collapse
│   │       ├─ Subjectivism
│   │       │   └─ Inconvenience
│   │       └─ Unaccountable
│   │           └─ Falseness
│   │
│   ├─ Intuitionism
│   │   ├─ Grounds
│   │   │   ├─ Apprehension
│   │   │   │   ├─ Direct
│   │   │   │   └─ Non-inferential
│   │   │   ├─ Postulates
│   │   │   │   ├─ Unprovable
│   │   │   │   └─ Self-evident
│   │   │   └─ Authority
│   │   │       ├─ Epistemic
│   │   │       └─ Rational
│   │   └─ Collapse
│   │       ├─ Stall
│   │       │   ├─ Examination
│   │       │   └─ Inaccessible
│   │       └─ Groundless
│   │           └─ Calling-false
│   │
│   └─ Foundationalism
│       ├─ Grounds
│       │   ├─ Structure
│       │   │   ├─ Dependency
│       │   │   │   ├─ Theorem-12-from-10
│       │   │   │   └─ Theorem-13-from-9-12
│       │   │   └─ Traceable
│       │   │       ├─ Source
│       │   │       └─ Locatable
│       │   └─ Systematicity
│       │       ├─ Non-peripheral
│       │       └─ Non-casebased
│       └─ Collapse
│           ├─ Disorientation
│           │   ├─ Sourceless
│           │   └─ Unlocated
│           └─ Interconnection
│               ├─ Denial
│               └─ Cascade
│
└─ 3. GUARANTEE
    │
    ├─ Assent
    │   ├─ Only-controllable
    │   ├─ Sufficient
    │   ├─ Produces
    │   │   ├─ Apatheia
    │   │   ├─ Virtue
    │   │   └─ Eupatheiai
    │   └─ Eudaimonia
    │
    ├─ Dualism
    │   ├─ Grounds
    │   │   ├─ Availability
    │   │   │   ├─ Unconditional
    │   │   │   └─ Universal
    │   │   └─ Priority
    │   │       ├─ Slave
    │   │       ├─ Prisoner
    │   │       └─ Dying
    │   └─ Collapse
    │       ├─ Conditioned
    │       │   └─ External
    │       └─ Inaccessible
    │           └─ Judgment
    │
    ├─ Freedom
    │   ├─ Grounds
    │   │   ├─ Non-illusory
    │   │   │   ├─ Real-promise
    │   │   │   └─ Real-threat
    │   │   └─ Consequence
    │   │       ├─ Necessary
    │   │       └─ Genuine
    │   └─ Collapse
    │       ├─ Predetermined
    │       │   ├─ Right
    │       │   └─ Wrong
    │       └─ Meaningless
    │           └─ Guarantee
    │
    ├─ Intuitionism
    │   ├─ Grounds
    │   │   ├─ Accessibility
    │   │   │   ├─ Immediate
    │   │   │   └─ Unconditional
    │   │   └─ Non-requiring
    │   │       ├─ Conditions
    │   │       └─ Education
    │   └─ Collapse
    │       ├─ Mediated
    │       │   ├─ Inference
    │       │   └─ Investigation
    │       └─ Deferred
    │           └─ Now
    │
    ├─ Foundationalism
    │   ├─ Grounds
    │   │   ├─ Stability
    │   │   │   ├─ Non-negotiable
    │   │   │   └─ Non-dislodgeable
    │   │   └─ Standard
    │   │       ├─ Theorem-10
    │   │       └─ Derivatives
    │   └─ Collapse
    │       ├─ Shifting
    │       │   └─ Standard
    │       └─ Rationalization
    │           └─ Dislodges
    │
    ├─ Correspondence
    │   ├─ Grounds
    │   │   ├─ Meaningfulness
    │   │   │   ├─ Alignment
    │   │   │   └─ Reality
    │   │   └─ Appropriateness
    │   │       ├─ Joy
    │   │       └─ Non-preferential
    │   └─ Collapse
    │       ├─ Trick
    │       │   └─ Psychological
    │       └─ Groundless
    │           └─ Appropriateness
    │
    └─ Realism
        ├─ Grounds
        │   ├─ Asymmetry
        │   │   ├─ Virtue-joy
        │   │   └─ Loss-harmless
        │   └─ Loop-closure
        │       ├─ Objectively
        │       └─ Non-preferential
        └─ Collapse
            ├─ Symmetry
            │   ├─ Joy-legitimate
            │   └─ Grief-legitimate
            └─ Arbitrary
                └─ Framework

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

The Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism

 

The Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism

Based on Sterling’s Stoicism and the Six Philosophical Commitments. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026.

Mind Map — The Six Commitments Integrated with the Three Foundations


Prompt: Integrate the six commitments with the most basic foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism.


Sterling’s Stoicism rests on three foundational claims that he identifies as its heart and soul: that only internal things are in our control; that unhappiness is caused by falsely believing that externals are good or evil; and that if we get our assents right, we have guaranteed eudaimonia. Everything in the framework derives from these three claims. The six commitments are not additions to this foundation. They are what the foundation requires in order to stand. Each commitment is the philosophical ground of a specific element in the foundational structure. Remove any commitment and a specific element of the foundation collapses.


Foundation One: Only Internal Things Are in Our Control

This is the dichotomy of control — Epictetus’s opening claim in the Enchiridion and Sterling’s Theorem 6: the only things in our control are our beliefs and our acts of will. Everything else — body, property, reputation, the behavior of others, outcomes in the world — is not in our control.

This foundational claim requires substance dualism. The line between what is and is not in our control falls at the boundary of the rational faculty — the prohairesis. For that line to be a real ontological boundary rather than a useful distinction, the rational faculty must be genuinely distinct from the body and from all external conditions. If the mind is a brain state — a product of physical causation — then mental events are themselves physical events, subject to physical determination, and the dichotomy of control dissolves. There is no principled boundary between self and external. Substance dualism is what makes the boundary real.

The same foundational claim requires libertarian free will. “In our control” means that the agent is the originating cause of his act, not a determined output of prior physical causes. Theorem 8 — that desires are in our control — depends on this. If assent is a determined output, then the dichotomy is illusory. The agent appears to choose but does not genuinely originate anything. Libertarian free will is what makes “in our control” mean something stronger than the compatibilist “flowing from one’s own character without external compulsion.” It means: the agent is the genuine first cause of the act.


Foundation Two: Unhappiness Is Caused by Falsely Believing That Externals Are Good or Evil

This is the core causal claim. Theorem 7: desires are caused by beliefs about good and evil. Theorem 10: the only thing actually good is virtue, the only thing actually evil is vice. Theorem 12: things not in our control are never good or evil. Therefore, all beliefs that externals have value are false, and all pathological emotions caused by those beliefs are based on false judgments.

The word falsely is load-bearing. The claim is not that believing externals are good or evil is unhelpful, or unconstructive, or psychologically counterproductive. The claim is that it is factually false. This requires moral realism. Theorem 10 must be a fact about moral reality — an objective truth that holds independently of what anyone believes, prefers, or constructs. If “only virtue is good” is merely a useful organizing principle or a cultural preference, then the belief that externals are good or evil is not false — it is simply a different preference. The normative force of the entire framework — the demand that false value beliefs be corrected — rests entirely on their being objectively false. Moral realism is what makes that demand rational rather than arbitrary.

The identification of false beliefs requires correspondence theory of truth. A belief is false when it fails to correspond to reality. The impression that a reputation loss is a genuine evil makes a truth claim about the moral status of reputation loss. Correspondence theory is what makes that claim testable: does it correspond to how things actually are? Theorem 10 specifies that it does not. The verdict is not “this belief is unhelpful” but “this belief fails to correspond to moral reality.” Without correspondence theory, the framework has no account of what makes value impressions false rather than merely inconvenient.

The recognition of which beliefs are false requires ethical intuitionism. The rational faculty must be able to apprehend directly that virtue is the only genuine good — not infer it from prior premises, not derive it from empirical observation, but see it as a necessary truth. Sterling identifies the foundational theorems of Core Stoicism as unprovable fundamental postulates defensible only by appeal to intuition of their truth. Theorem 10 is foundational in this sense: it is directly apprehended, not derived. Without ethical intuitionism, the agent has no epistemic authority to call value impressions false. The examination stalls because there is no secure access to the moral facts against which the impression is to be tested.

The systematic organization of what is false requires foundationalism. The false beliefs are not an undifferentiated mass — they are organized in a dependency structure. Theorem 12 (externals are indifferent) derives from Theorem 10 (only virtue is good). Theorem 13 (desiring things out of our control is irrational) derives from Theorems 9 and 12. When a specific value impression is examined, the examination traces it to the foundational theorem it contradicts. Without foundationalism, the agent knows something is wrong but cannot locate the source. Corrections remain peripheral rather than foundational. Foundationalism is what makes the correction systematic rather than case-by-case — what Sterling warns about in the closing note to Core Stoicism: denying one theorem collapses others, because they interconnect in a foundational dependency structure.


Foundation Three: If We Get Our Assents Right We Have Guaranteed Eudaimonia

This is the practical payoff. Assent — the act of the rational faculty in response to an impression — is the only thing in our control. Everything critical to the best possible life is contained in that one act. Getting it right consistently produces: no pathological emotions, virtuous action, and continual appropriate positive feeling. This is eudaimonia.

The guarantee requires that the agent can actually get his assents right — that correct judgment is genuinely available to him. This returns to all five commitments already in play.

Substance dualism makes the rational faculty real and prior to all externals, so that correct judgment is possible regardless of external conditions. A slave, a prisoner, a person dying of illness — all can judge correctly, because the rational faculty is not constituted by any of those conditions.

Libertarian free will makes the act of assent the agent’s own genuine origination, so that the guarantee is not an illusion. If assent is determined by prior causes, the agent who “gets his assents right” was always going to do so — and the agent who gets them wrong was always going to do that too. The guarantee would be meaningless. Libertarian free will is what makes the guarantee a real promise: the agent genuinely can choose to assent correctly, and if he does, the consequences follow necessarily.

Ethical intuitionism makes the correct assent accessible. The agent can see directly what the moral facts are, without requiring extended inference or empirical investigation. At any moment, the foundational truth that virtue is the only genuine good is available to the rational faculty that attends to it. This is what makes the guarantee immediate and unconditional: not “you can guarantee eudaimonia if you have the right social conditions” or “if you have access to the right philosophical education” but “you can guarantee it right now, by judging correctly.”

Foundationalism makes the correct assent stable. The agent who has located the foundational truths — Theorem 10 and its derivatives — has a non-negotiable standard against which every impression can be tested. The standard does not shift. Sophisticated rationalizations cannot dislodge it because it is not the conclusion of an argument; it is a directly apprehended foundational truth. The stability of the guarantee depends on the stability of the standard.

Correspondence theory makes the correct assent meaningful. Getting one’s assents right means aligning them with how things actually are — with the moral facts that moral realism specifies and that correspondence theory makes testable. The joy that follows correct assent is appropriate not because the agent prefers it but because virtue is genuinely good and joy in the presence of genuine good is the correct response. The guarantee is not a psychological trick. It is the natural consequence of correct perception of reality.

Moral realism closes the loop. The guarantee works because virtue is objectively good. If virtue were merely a preferred organizing principle, then the joy produced by virtuous action would be the joy of acting in accordance with one’s preferences — and the grief produced by external loss would be no less legitimate, since it would equally reflect the agent’s preferences. Moral realism is what makes the guarantee asymmetric: virtuous action produces appropriate joy because virtue is genuinely good; external loss does not produce genuine harm because externals are genuinely indifferent. The asymmetry is not imposed by the agent’s choice of framework. It is a fact about moral reality.


The Structure as a Whole

Sterling is explicit in the closing note to Core Stoicism: the theorems interconnect in important ways. Denying one undermines others. The six commitments are related to the foundational claims in exactly this way — not as external additions but as the philosophical ground of the claims themselves.

The three foundational claims of Sterling’s Stoicism — only internal things are in our control; unhappiness is caused by false value beliefs; getting our assents right guarantees eudaimonia — are not self-evident assertions. Each requires a philosophical account of what makes it true. Substance dualism and libertarian free will account for what “in our control” means. Moral realism and correspondence theory account for what makes value beliefs false. Ethical intuitionism and foundationalism account for how the agent can know which beliefs are false and how he can be systematically corrected. All six commitments are required. None is optional. The foundational claims do not stand without the commitments that ground them, and the commitments have no purpose without the foundational claims they sustain.

This is why Sterling’s reconstruction is not Stoicism with philosophical decoration. It is Stoicism with its philosophical skeleton visible — the skeleton that was always there but that ancient Stoic physics had obscured behind an indefensible cosmology. Strip the ancient physics, and what remains is not a weakened Stoicism. What remains is the ethical core, now resting on the six commitments that make it philosophically rigorous without requiring anyone to believe in fiery pneuma or the rational fire that permeates the cosmos.


Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Analytical judgments are Dave Kelly’s; prose rendering is Claude’s.

Thursday, April 23, 2026

The WDEP Procedure and Its Correspondence with Sterling’s Section 7 Sub-step (d)

 

The WDEP Procedure and Its Correspondence with Sterling’s Section 7 Sub-step (d)

The WDEP procedure is the clinical operationalization of Choice Theory developed primarily by Robert Wubbolding, Glasser’s most important systematizer. The acronym stands for four components that structure the therapeutic conversation.


W — Wants

The first question is: what do you want? The therapist helps the patient identify what is in his Quality World with as much precision as possible. Not vague aspirations but specific pictures: what specifically do you want from this relationship, this situation, this life? What does the outcome you are pursuing actually look like? Vague wants produce vague and ineffective behavior. The W component makes the Quality World image concrete and nameable.

This maps onto the Stoic framework’s first diagnostic question: what external has been assigned genuine-good status? You cannot examine whether what you want is correctly valued until you have identified specifically what you want.


D — Doing

The second question is: what are you currently doing? Not feeling — doing. This is the most important redirection in the entire procedure. The therapist consistently moves the patient away from the feeling components of Total Behavior — over which he has no direct control — toward the acting and thinking components, over which he does. What are you actually doing, right now, in your life, that is or is not serving your wants?

This maps onto the Stoic framework’s identification of what is in the agent’s purview. The Doing question is the behavioral specification of Foundation One: what is actually yours to govern here?


E — Evaluation

The third component is self-evaluation: is what you are currently doing getting you what you want? This question must come from the patient rather than from the therapist. Glasser is explicit: the therapist does not tell the patient his behavior is not working. He creates the conditions in which the patient sees this for himself. The evaluation is functional, not moral — is this working? Is this effective? Is this getting you what you want?

This maps onto the Stoic framework’s correspondence test applied at the behavioral level: does what you are doing correspond to the appropriate object of aim in your situation? The Evaluation question is where the WDEP procedure comes closest to the Formation Strip — it asks the patient to stand between his current behavior and an honest assessment of its results.


P — Planning

The fourth component is planning: what will you do differently? A specific, achievable, realistic plan for different acting and thinking. The plan must be the patient’s own — not assigned by the therapist — and must address the components of Total Behavior the patient can directly control. The therapist does not accept excuses, does not focus on what cannot be changed, and does not allow the outcome of the plan to become the measure of the patient’s worth.

This maps onto the Stoic framework’s Discipline of Action: having identified the appropriate object of aim and the rational means available, commit to the action with reservation regarding the outcome. The Planning component is the behavioral specification of the reserve clause — the patient plans what he will do, not what result he will achieve.


The Correspondence with Sterling’s Section 7 Sub-step (d)

The WDEP procedure, and specifically its P component, corresponds closely to Nine Excerpts Section 7 sub-step (d). Sterling’s text reads:

“Consciously formulate true action propositions. ‘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.’ By paying attention to preferred and dispreferred indifferents, and to the duties connected with my various roles in life, I can recognize what it would actually be correct for me to do in each situation. Bring this consciously to mind, and assent to it.”

Sub-step (d) has three components: consciously formulate the true action proposition — what I should do and why; attend to the duties connected with my various roles; bring this consciously to mind and assent to it. The WDEP procedure’s P component is the behavioral operationalization of exactly this. The patient formulates a specific plan, commits to it explicitly, and the therapist helps him bring it consciously to mind in concrete and achievable terms and secure his assent to it. The parallel is not loose — it is structural. Both sub-step (d) and the P component require a specific action proposition, explicitly formulated, consciously held, assented to.

The correspondence is tightest in sub-step (d)’s model proposition: “I should report truthfully to my boss: truth telling is virtuous and I have a duty to act faithfully at work. If my boss fires me, my job is an external, neither good nor evil.” This is a complete action proposition in two parts — the action to be taken and the reserve clause governing the outcome. The WDEP P component generates the action part; the Stoic framework adds the reserve clause that the WDEP procedure does not explicitly require.

The Integrated Practical Model (Document 32, System Map) registers that its constructive module (D1–D7) operationalizes sub-step (d), grounded in Propositions 32–38. The P component of the WDEP procedure connects directly into that architecture. The P component is not merely analogous to sub-step (d) — it is a clinical instrument for producing what sub-step (d) prescribes, operable by a Glasser-trained counselor without any modification to his existing practice.


What the WDEP Procedure Does Not Do

The procedure is effective and precise within its scope. What it cannot do — and what the Stoic framework adds — is ask the prior question at each stage. Before W: is what you want correctly valued? Before D: is what you are doing generated by a false evaluative assent about what you need? Before E: is the standard of evaluation itself correct — are you measuring your behavior against the satisfaction of genuine goods or of preferred indifferents? Before P: are you planning to pursue what is genuinely appropriate to aim at, held with reservation, or to secure what you have falsely treated as a genuine good?

The WDEP procedure and the inner discourse are consecutive rather than competing. The WDEP procedure brings the patient systematically to the behavioral level where change is immediately accessible. The inner discourse addresses the evaluative level prior to that — the assent that generated the behavioral event — and extends the WDEP procedure’s four questions into the territory of correct value judgment that the procedure itself cannot reach.

This is the rapprochement at its most practically useful: the counselor’s existing P procedure produces the action proposition; the Stoic framework supplies the role identification and the reserve clause that give the proposition its correct philosophical form. Neither party needs to change what he is doing. The combination makes explicit what both are already attempting.


Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling, including Nine Excerpts Section 7, the Sterling Logic Engine v4.0, and the Integrated Practical Model. Clinical foundations: William Glasser, Choice Theory (1998); Robert Wubbolding, Reality Therapy for the 21st Century (2000). Prose rendering: Claude.

What Is Available to You: A Combined Stoic and Choice Theory Account

 

What Is Available to You: A Combined Stoic and Choice Theory Account

Welcome. What I am about to offer you is not a technique or a self-help program. It is a way of understanding what you are and what produces your experience — and from that understanding, a practice that is available to you right now, in this conversation, and in every moment that follows.

It comes from two sources. The first is Stoic philosophy as reconstructed by Grant C. Sterling — a rigorous, philosophically precise account of what human agency is and what genuine flourishing consists in. The second is William Glasser’s Choice Theory — a clinically grounded account of how behavior works and what drives it. What follows develops the correspondence between them, where they differ, and what the combination makes available that neither provides alone.


What You Are

You are a rational faculty. Not your body, not your reputation, not your relationships, not your feelings, not your history, not your achievements or failures. You are the thing that receives impressions of the world and decides what to do with them. This is not a metaphor. It is a precise philosophical claim about the structure of what you are: the part of you that can examine what arrives and say yes or no to it is the real you. Everything else — the body, the external circumstances, other people’s behavior, even your own emotional responses — is not you in the morally significant sense.

Glasser makes the same claim from the clinical direction: the only person whose behavior you can control is yourself. Not your partner, not your employer, not your children, not your circumstances. Yourself. This is not a self-help affirmation. It is an account of where agency actually lives.

Both frameworks begin here. This is the first foundation.


What Produces Your Experience

Glasser discovered through decades of clinical work that every behavior — including what you call your emotional responses, your moods, your symptoms — is what he calls Total Behavior. It has four components that are always simultaneously present: what you are doing, what you are thinking, what you are feeling, and what your body is doing. The first two are directly within your control. The last two follow from the first two.

You cannot choose to feel better directly. You can choose to act and think differently, and the feeling follows. This is why telling yourself to cheer up never works and changing what you are doing often does.

The Stoic framework says the same thing one level deeper. What you are acting and thinking from is an assent — a judgment you have made about what the impression that arrived means. Before the behavior begins, before the acting and thinking have been initiated, an impression arrived carrying a claim about the world. And you said yes to it, or you failed to examine it and it completed itself without your genuine participation.

Your emotional life is the downstream consequence of those assents. Not of what happened to you. Of what you judged about what happened to you.


What Drives You Toward Specific Things

Glasser identified five basic needs that are built into every human being: survival, love and belonging, power and achievement, freedom, and fun. Every behavior you generate is your best current attempt to satisfy one or more of these needs — including the behaviors you most dislike in yourself, including the symptoms that bring people to counseling.

Each of us carries what Glasser calls a Quality World: an internal picture album of the specific people, things, activities, and beliefs that have come to represent the satisfaction of those needs. What you most want is in your Quality World. The gap between your Quality World and what you perceive your life actually contains is what generates disturbance.

The Stoic framework accepts this account of the needs and the Quality World, and then asks one further question that Glasser’s framework cannot ask: are the things in your Quality World correctly valued? Love and belonging, power, freedom, fun — these are real, their pursuit is rational, they are worth aiming at. But are you holding them as preferred indifferents — things worth pursuing, not worth staking your identity or equanimity on — or as genuine goods whose absence is a genuine evil?

If you are holding them as genuine goods, then no matter how effectively you pursue them, you will always be one loss, one disappointment, one relationship failure away from renewed suffering. Because you have made your flourishing dependent on something outside your control.

This is the second foundation.


What Is Actually Available to You

Here is the claim that the Stoic framework makes and that no clinical framework has matched for philosophical precision: right assent — the correct governance of your own judgments — is sufficient for flourishing. Not helpful. Not a component of flourishing. Sufficient.

If only virtue is genuinely good — if only the quality of your own rational engagement is a genuine good — then the agent who governs his own judgments correctly has secured the only thing that is genuinely good. No external condition can take it from him. No loss, no failure, no frustration of what he wants reaches what is genuinely his.

Glasser approaches this from the clinical side: act and think correctly, and the feeling follows. The Stoic framework traces the same claim to its philosophical root: make the correct assent, and everything downstream — the acting, the thinking, the feeling, the physiology — follows from that prior act of judgment.

This is the third foundation.


The Practice: Inner Discourse

The practice is inner discourse. Not reflection. Not rumination. Not positive thinking. First-person propositional speech, addressed to yourself, about the specific impression that has just arrived.

An impression arrives. Something has happened, or is about to happen, or is being anticipated. Before you respond — in the gap between the impression’s arrival and whatever comes next — you speak to it:

“Impression, wait. An impression is all you are, not the thing itself.”

You name it as a representation rather than as reality. This creates the gap. Then you test it:

“Is what this impression is presenting as a genuine good or evil something in my control, or not?”

If it is not in your control — and most of what produces disturbance is not — then:

“This is an indifferent. It is neither genuinely good nor genuinely evil. My flourishing does not depend on it.”

Then you ask what your situation actually requires:

“Given that, what does my role here call for? What is the appropriate action, held with reservation about the outcome?”

And you act from there.

When the disturbance has already arrived — when vigilance has failed and you are already in the grip of something — the inner discourse begins differently:

“I am disturbed. That means I have assented to a false impression. Something outside my control has been treated as a genuine good or evil. What was it?”

Name it. Apply the test. Formulate the true proposition. Resume from there.


What Your Counselor Is Offering

If your counselor is working from Glasser’s framework, then when he asks what you want, whether what you are doing is getting it, and what you will do differently, he is working at the behavioral level of the same structure. This is precise and effective clinical work. The WDEP procedure will reliably bring you to the question of what you are pursuing and whether your current behavior is serving it.

The Stoic framework extends that work by one level. Before the question of whether your behavior is getting you what you want, there is the question of whether what you want is correctly held. Your counselor’s work and the Stoic practice are not in tension. They are consecutive: the clinical procedure covers the behavioral event as it runs; the inner discourse covers the evaluative judgment that generated it. Both are necessary. Neither replaces the other.


What This Asks of You

It asks that you take seriously the claim that your flourishing is genuinely in your own hands — not as an aspiration but as a philosophical fact about the structure of what you are. It asks that you practice the inner discourse, not merely understand it. It asks that you be willing to examine the specific Quality World images you most value and ask whether you are holding them correctly. And it asks that you trust that correct engagement — right assent, consistently practiced — is sufficient.

The practice does not promise that what you want will arrive. It promises something more fundamental: that what you genuinely are cannot be harmed by whether it does.

That is what is available to you.


Account: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling, including Core Stoicism and the Sterling Logic Engine v4.0. Clinical foundations: William Glasser, Choice Theory: A New Psychology of Personal Freedom (1998). Prose rendering: Claude.

The Correct Use of Impressions: Inner Discourse and the Three Topoi

 

The Correct Use of Impressions: Inner Discourse and the Three Topoi

A Complete Account

Draft v2 for editing. Eight sections present. Section II added (The Six Commitments as Active Conditions: The Five Phases of Correct Use); original Sections II–VII renumbered III–VIII. Text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling; Keith Seddon, Epictetus’ Handbook and the Tablet of Cebes (Routledge, 2006), pp. 101–114; Pierre Hadot, The Inner Citadel (Harvard University Press, 1998); Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, “Epictetus” (Fall 2025 Edition). Prose rendering: Claude.


I. The Philosophical Foundation

Three foundational claims structure Sterling’s reconstruction of Stoic practice. The first: certain things are in our control and certain things are not, and this distinction is the governing fact of practical life. What is in our control is the activity of our rational faculty — our judgments, our assents, our impulses, our desires and aversions. What is not in our control is everything else: the body, reputation, property, the behavior of others, the outcomes of our actions, all events in the external world. The second: only virtue is genuinely good; only vice is genuinely evil; everything else — health, wealth, relationships, achievement, pleasure, even life itself — is an indifferent, appropriate to pursue where rational but not to be mistaken for a genuine good or genuine evil. The third: right assent — the correct governance of one’s own judgments — guarantees eudaimonia. The flourishing life is not contingent on external conditions but on the quality of one’s own rational engagement with what arrives.

These three foundational claims are not merely practical maxims. Each requires specific philosophical commitments to be coherent, and those commitments are active conditions of every phase of the correct use of impressions rather than static background beliefs. Substance dualism (C1) grounds Foundation One by establishing that the rational faculty is genuinely distinct from the body and its conditions — without this, the dichotomy of control has no ontological basis. Libertarian free will (C2) grounds Foundation One by establishing that assent is the agent’s genuine first cause — without this, “in our control” means nothing. Moral realism (C3) grounds Foundation Two by establishing that there are objective facts about what is genuinely good and evil — without this, the claim that externals are neither good nor evil is not a fact but a preference. Correspondence theory (C4) grounds Foundation Two by establishing that the evaluative claim embedded in an impression can be true or false by reference to how things morally are — without this, the word “false” in “false value judgment” has no content. Ethical intuitionism (C5) grounds Foundation Three by establishing that the rational faculty has direct apprehensive access to the moral facts Foundation Two identifies — without this, correct assent cannot be guaranteed because the standard of correctness would be inaccessible. Foundationalism (C6) grounds Foundation Three by establishing that the correction procedure terminates in self-evident first principles rather than generating an infinite regress — without this, the guarantee of eudaimonia through right assent is structurally unstable. These six commitments are the philosophical skeleton of Stoic practice. Remove any one and the structure collapses. Section II below shows precisely where each commitment does its governing work.

Within this structure, one operation is central to everything else: the assent to impressions. An impression (phantasia) is what is impressed into the mind by any of the senses, in a way directly analogous to a signet ring imprinting its image into wax. To have an experience of anything is at one and the same time to have an impression of something. The interpretive faculty takes the agent from having an impression of something to having an impression that something is the case — from awareness to propositional belief. As Seddon states: “The content of this second stage can always be expressed in terms of a proposition.” This propositional content is what the agent assents to.

There are two distinct stages of assent and the distinction is load-bearing for everything that follows. The first stage is factual: the agent assents to what the impression represents as being the case. I see my jacket on the mat; I assent to the proposition that my jacket is on the mat. This assent can be correct or incorrect at the purely factual level. The second stage is evaluative: the agent assents to whether what he takes to be the case is good or bad. The jacket is on the mat — is this bad? This second assent is where the false value judgment is formed or refused. As Seddon writes, it is this second type of assent that most interests Epictetus, and it is this second assent that the entire practical program of Stoicism is organized around governing correctly.

Sterling states the governing claim with maximum force: the only thing that distinguishes the sage from the non-sage is the correctness of the second assent. The sage assents only to true evaluative propositions. The prokoptōn is working toward this through training. Everyone else assents to false evaluative propositions automatically and without examination, generating disturbance from within rather than receiving it from without.


II. The Six Commitments as Active Conditions: The Five Phases of Correct Use

The six commitments are not a list of philosophical positions the Stoic framework holds as background beliefs. They are the active enabling conditions of each phase of the correct use of impressions. Each phase requires specific commitments in order to be philosophically possible at all. Remove any one commitment and the phase it governs becomes unavailable — not merely more difficult, but structurally foreclosed.

The correct use of impressions proceeds through five phases. Each phase has governing commitments. The complete mapping makes visible what the practice requires at every moment.

Reception — Correspondence Theory (C4), Moral Realism (C3)

The impression arrives. Reception is the phase in which the impression presents itself to consciousness carrying a propositional claim about how things are. Correspondence theory (C4) governs here because the impression is a representation — it claims that something is the case — and that claim can be true or false by reference to how things actually are. Without C4 the impression has no truth value; it is simply a mental event with no cognitive content that can succeed or fail. Moral realism (C3) governs because the impression carries not only a factual claim but an evaluative one: it presents some external as a genuine good or genuine evil. Without C3 there are no moral facts for the evaluative claim to correspond to or misrepresent. The impression could not be false at the evaluative level if there were no objective moral standard against which it could fail.

This is why frameworks that deny C3 and C4 cannot accommodate the correct use of impressions at all. If the world is enacted through embodied engagement rather than given as a mind-independent reality, the impression does not correspond to anything independent of the engagement that produced it, and Reception has no objective standard to present to the agent.

Recognition — Substance Dualism (C1), Correspondence Theory (C4)

Recognition is the phase in which the impression is identified as an impression rather than taken as self-evidently true. Epictetus’s command — “An impression is all you are, not the source of the impression” — is the naming move that makes Recognition possible. Substance dualism (C1) governs here because Recognition requires a self that stands behind the impression and is categorically distinct from it. If the self were constituted by its impressions and engagements rather than prior to them, there would be no prior self to do the recognizing. The impression and the self that receives it would be aspects of the same ongoing process, and the naming move would have nowhere to stand. Correspondence theory (C4) governs because Recognition is specifically the recognition that the impression is a representation — something that claims to correspond to what is there — rather than the thing itself. This is what the naming move asserts: you are a representation, not the reality you represent.

Pause — Substance Dualism (C1), Libertarian Free Will (C2)

The pause is the structural gap between Reception and the evaluative second assent. It is the most important phase because it is where prosochē operates and where the correct use of impressions becomes possible rather than merely conceivable. Substance dualism (C1) governs because the pause requires a self that is prior to the impression — a self that can hold the impression at arm’s length without being swept away by it. If the self were constituted by its ongoing engagements, the impression would flow directly into response as part of the attunement process; there would be no prior self available to maintain the structural gap. Libertarian free will (C2) governs because the pause must be a genuine moment of originating agency. The agent genuinely can withhold assent or not; this capacity is real and not determined by prior conditions. Without C2, the pause is merely a causal interval between impression and predetermined response — not a moment of genuine first causation but a delay in a sequence whose outcome was already fixed.

This is the phase that accounts of cognition as smooth, ongoing, unreflective attunement most completely foreclose. The pause is precisely what prosochē introduces against the natural flow of embodied response. It requires both a self that is prior to that flow (C1) and an agency that can genuinely interrupt it (C2).

Examination — Foundationalism (C6), Ethical Intuitionism (C5), Moral Realism (C3)

Examination is the phase in which the impression is tested against the governing standard. Three commitments govern because the test has three distinct requirements. Foundationalism (C6) governs because the Examination requires an architecturally prior standard — specifically the foundational theorems that are not themselves produced by the Examination but govern it. Without foundational first principles, the Examination has nothing to test against; it would be one impression assessing another with no governing first principle to settle the verdict. Ethical intuitionism (C5) governs because the Examination requires that the rational faculty can directly apprehend the moral facts the foundational theorems state — that it can see, without further inference, whether this object is a genuine good or an indifferent. Without C5, the Examination degenerates into an infinite regress: the assessment of one impression requires another assessment, which requires another, without termination. Moral realism (C3) governs because the Examination tests the impression’s evaluative claim against mind-independent moral facts. Without C3 there are no such facts, and the Examination tests the impression against nothing. The three commitments together provide the standard (C6), the access to it (C5), and the objectivity of its verdicts (C3).

Decision — Libertarian Free Will (C2), Correspondence Theory (C4)

Decision is the phase in which the agent assents or withholds assent. Libertarian free will (C2) governs because the Decision must be a genuine first cause — the agent’s real originating act, not the final output of a causal sequence determined before the pause began. Without C2, the Decision is not the agent’s own; it is the predetermined conclusion of a process he did not genuinely author. Correspondence theory (C4) governs because the Decision is a commitment to a proposition as true or false. To assent is to say “yes, this evaluative claim corresponds to how things morally are”; to withhold assent is to say “no, this evaluative claim fails the correspondence test.” Without C4 the Decision is not a truth claim but merely a mental event; it cannot be correct or incorrect in the sense that matters for the practice.

The Integrated Picture

The five-phase mapping makes the six commitments visible as the active architecture of the practice rather than as its theoretical background. Every commitment is doing specific work at a specific phase. Substance dualism (C1) governs both Recognition and the Pause — both require a self that is prior to its impressions and engagements. Libertarian free will (C2) governs both the Pause and the Decision — both require genuine originating agency. Moral realism (C3) governs both Reception and Examination — both require that there are objective moral facts. Correspondence theory (C4) governs Reception, Recognition, and Decision — all three involve the claim that something is the case and can be true or false. Ethical intuitionism (C5) governs Examination alone — it is the specific commitment that provides direct apprehensive access to the foundational standard. Foundationalism (C6) governs Examination alone — it is the specific commitment that provides the architecturally prior standard the Examination requires.

This integration also identifies with precision why frameworks that deny the six commitments cannot accommodate the correct use of impressions. Each Contrary finding in a CIA run forecloses a specific phase: a C1 Contrary finding forecloses Recognition and the Pause; a C2 Contrary finding forecloses the Pause and the Decision; a C3 Contrary finding forecloses Reception and Examination; a C4 Contrary finding forecloses Reception, Recognition, and Decision; a C5 Contrary finding forecloses Examination; a C6 Contrary finding forecloses Examination. A framework that produces Full Dissolution — Contrary findings on C1 and C2 — forecloses three of the five phases (Recognition, Pause, Decision) before reaching any of the others. The practice is not merely more difficult within such a framework. The structural conditions for its operation are not available.


III. The Three Topoi and Their Architecture

Epictetus organized the practical program of Stoicism into three topoi — fields of study and practice. He states them in Discourses 3.2.1–2: the first concerns desires and aversions; the second concerns impulses to act and not to act and appropriate behavior; the third concerns freedom from deception and hasty judgment, and whatever is connected with assent.

The three are not three equal disciplines running in parallel. They have an internal architecture. The Discipline of Desire is explicitly identified by Epictetus as “the principle, and most urgent” (Discourses 3.2.3) — because the passions, which are the source of all disturbances, arise from nothing other than the disappointment of desires and the incurring of aversions that should never have been formed. Get the desires right and the emotional life corrects itself. The Discipline of Action is second: having governed desire, the agent now acts correctly within his social roles and relationships. And the Discipline of Assent, though presented as the third in Epictetus’s list, is not a third practice alongside the other two but, as Epictetus himself states, what “concerns the security of the other two” (Discourses 3.2.5). If the evaluative second assent is faulty, desire is corrupted at its root — the agent desires indifferents as though they were genuine goods — and action is corrupted at its source — the agent acts from faulty evaluations of what the situation is and what it requires.

Pierre Hadot drew from this the governing claim: if the Discipline of Assent is the method through which both the Discipline of Desire and the Discipline of Action operate, then the practice of philosophy as a way of life consists of exactly two things: governing what one desires and governing how one acts. The Discipline of Assent is the how; the other two are the what. This collapses the three topoi into two phases of a single continuous practice, with one governing method — the correct use of impressions through inner discourse — applied across both phases.

The ordering of the two phases matters. The Discipline of Desire always comes first because it addresses the foundational false value judgment — the evaluative second assent that assigns genuine-good status to an indifferent. This is the root error. If the agent correctly refuses the evaluative impression that an indifferent is genuinely good or evil, the desire for that indifferent does not arise, the action aimed at securing it is not generated, and the Discipline of Action has nothing false to correct. Get the first phase right and the second follows correctly. Attempt the second phase while leaving the first uncorrected and the agent is redirecting behavioral outputs while the false value judgments generating those outputs remain in place.

This is precisely the level difference between  Glasser’s Choice Theory and the Stoic framework. Glasser’s WDEP procedure operates at the level of the Discipline of Action — redirecting Total Behavior once a behavioral event is underway. The Stoic framework operates at the level of the Discipline of Desire — addressing the evaluative second assent that generates the desire that drives the behavioral event. Both are genuine and effective within their scope. They are consecutive interventions at different levels of the same structure, not competitors.


IV. Prosochē

Before the disciplines can operate, a prior condition must be in place: the structural gap between the impression’s arrival and the evaluative assent must be maintained. This is prosochē — attention, vigilance, watchfulness. Its Greek root, proséchō, means to attend to, to hold toward, to apply oneself to. Philosophically, Pierre Hadot characterized it as “a fundamental attitude of continuous attention, which means constant tension and consciousness, as well as vigilance exercised at every moment.”

Prosochē is not one practice among the three disciplines. It is the foundational attitude that makes the disciplines possible. Christopher Fisher states this directly: prosochē is the necessary foundation upon which the Stoic disciplines rely. Without it, impressions slide directly to assent — the evaluative judgment is made automatically, without examination, and the disciplines have no purchase. With it, every impression becomes an occasion for the correct use of impressions.

What prosochē specifically attends to is threefold. First, present impressions as they arrive — particularly their evaluative dimension, the value claim embedded in the impression before the agent has had occasion to examine it. Second, present desires and aversions — the impulses that arise when evaluative assents have been made, correct or incorrect. Third, present actions — the behavioral outputs that follow from assented impressions and formed desires. Epictetus compared the practice to a guard at the gates: impressions come knocking, but not every visitor deserves entry. Prosochē is the guard. The correct use of impressions is what the guard performs.

Prosochē is distinct from the correct use of impressions itself. Prosochē is the vigilance that maintains the pause; the correct use of impressions — chrēsis tōn phantasiōn — is the operation that occurs within the pause. The one is the posture; the other is what the posture enables.

When prosochē succeeds, the impression is caught before the evaluative second assent can complete itself automatically. The agent examines the impression. If the impression carries a false value claim — if it presents an indifferent as a genuine good or evil — the agent refuses assent. Nothing follows. No false desire arises. No disturbance results. This is the ideal operation of the entire Stoic practical program.

When prosochē fails — when the structural gap is not maintained and assent to the false evaluative impression has completed itself before examination can occur — pathos has been produced. Sterling’s reading of Epictetus’s Enchiridion 1.5, grounded in the framework’s value theory, is unambiguous: any disturbance of any degree is pathos. Not because it is dramatic or intense, but because any disturbance was produced by a false evaluative assent, and that is the full Stoic definition of pathos. The mild irritation, the faint anxiety, the slight disappointment — each is pathos in the complete sense if it was produced by a false value judgment. Intensity is not what classifies the experience. Causal origin is what classifies it.

This binary character of pathos is the most important point that the popular Stoic literature consistently softens. The literature tends to treat progress as the reduction of the frequency and intensity of false assents — implying that a mild disturbance represents partial success of prosochē. Sterling’s framework forecloses this. Mild disturbance is not partial success. It is a failure of prosochē that produced mild pathos rather than severe pathos. Progress consists in the decreasing frequency of prosochē’s failures, not in the acceptable residual level of disturbance.

Epictetus’s warning about relaxing attention is precise: “When you relax your attention for a while, do not fancy you will recover it whenever you please; but remember this, that because of your fault of today your affairs must necessarily be in a worse condition in future occasions” (Discourses 4.12.1). The failure of prosochē is not merely an episode. It establishes a worse condition for the next encounter with the same class of impression, because the pattern of automatic evaluative assent is reinforced by each failure.


V. Chrēsis Tōn Phantasiōn — The Correct Use of Impressions

The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy’s entry on Epictetus identifies the two governing concepts of his philosophy as prohairesis — the rational faculty, the moral character, the will — and chrēsis tōn phantasiōn, the correct use of impressions. These are not two separate concerns. The correct use of impressions is what the rational faculty does; prohairesis is what does it. The two concepts name the same reality from different angles: the agent and the agent’s governing activity.

What distinguishes human beings from other animals is precisely the capacity for the correct use of impressions. Animals and humans both receive impressions and both behave in accordance with them. But human beings can do something animals cannot: step back from the impression and examine it. The rational faculty has the capacity of assent — the capacity to say yes or no to the proposition the impression presents, rather than simply being driven by the impression toward automatic response. This capacity is what makes the correct use of impressions possible as a practice rather than merely as a biological event.

Epictetus identifies four types of impressions in Discourses 1.27.1: things are and appear so; things are not and do not appear to be; things are but do not appear to be; things are not but appear to be. The first two are correct impressions at the factual level. The third and fourth are false impressions at the factual level. But the value-laden impression — the impression that carries a false evaluative claim — is a specific instance of the fourth type: something that is not a genuine good or evil appearing as though it were. The correct use of impressions catches this false appearance before the evaluative second assent completes it.

Seddon’s statement of what the correct use of impressions requires is the most precise in the secondary literature: the prokoptōn must strive to stand between their awareness of mere facts — of how things stand — and their evaluations of those facts. This is the exact position prosochē maintains and the exact operation the inner discourse performs. Stand in that gap. Examine what is there. Make the evaluative second assent correctly.

The operational instruction is Enchiridion 1.5. Epictetus states it as a practice to be trained: “Make a practice of saying to every strong impression: ‘An impression is all you are, not the source of the impression.’ Then test and assess it with your criteria, but one primarily: ‘Is this something that is, or is not, in my control?’”

The instruction has three components. First: the naming move. “An impression is all you are, not the thing itself.” This creates the structural gap by establishing the categorical distinction between the representation and what it purports to represent. The impression is not the situation; it is a representation of the situation that may or may not carry a true evaluative claim. Naming it as an impression prevents the automatic slide from impression to evaluative assent.

Second: the primary test. Is this in my control or not? If the impression presents something outside the agent’s control as a genuine good or evil, it has already failed the first filter. The dichotomy of control applied to the evaluative second assent is the governing criterion of the Discipline of Desire.

Third: the practice. “Make a practice of.” This is not a philosophical position to be intellectually assented to. It is a trained activity to be performed, impression by impression, in the present moment, continuously. Seddon makes this explicit: “It is not enough simply to know philosophical principles; we must also develop the capacity to put them into practice.” Knowledge of the arguments is not the practice. Performing the examination, in the moment, on the actual impression that has arrived, is the practice.

The standard of correct assent is the phantasia kataleptikē — the grasping or apprehensive impression. The wise person assents only to impressions that are so clear and true they could not be false. For the moral domain, the kataleptic impressions are those that correspond to how things morally are as established by the foundational theorems: only virtue is genuinely good (Theorem 10); externals are neither genuinely good nor genuinely evil (Theorem 12). An impression that presents an external as a genuine good fails the kataleptic standard. It should not receive assent. The epistemological access to this standard — the direct rational apprehension of moral truth that makes the correspondence test possible — is what ethical intuitionism (C5) provides.

The additional exercise Epictetus prescribes in Discourses 2.18.24–25 extends the instruction: “In the first place, do not allow yourself to be carried away by the intensity of your impression: but say, ‘Impression, wait for me a little. Let me see what you are, and what you represent. Let me test you.’ Then, afterwards, do not allow it to draw you on by picturing what may come next… But rather, you should introduce some fair and noble impression to replace it, and banish this base and sordid one.”

Seddon’s commentary on this passage establishes the governing practical principle: in waiting, the agent needs to stick merely at the factual interpretation without progressing to a faulty evaluative interpretation. The waiting is not passive. It is the active maintenance of the gap between Stage One and Stage Two assent. The testing is the application of the Stoic value standard to the evaluative proposition the impression is presenting. The replacement impression is the formulation of the true evaluative proposition — this is an indifferent, not a genuine good or evil — that correctly describes the situation once the false evaluative addition has been refused.


VI. The Inner Discourse

Pierre Hadot’s contribution to this account is the term and the concept of inner discourse. In The Inner Citadel (1992/1998) Hadot argues that Marcus Aurelius’s Meditations are not a philosophical treatise, a diary, or a collection of maxims. They are a record of inner discourse — the actual first-person speech of the rational faculty addressing itself in the moment of practice. Marcus was writing the inner discourse he needed to conduct in order to maintain prosochē and practice chrēsis tōn phantasiōn correctly. The Meditations are inner discourse made visible on the page.

Inner discourse is the specific verbal activity through which the correct use of impressions actually occurs in the moment of practice. It is not merely thinking about Stoic principles. It is speaking to oneself, in the first person, in the present tense, about the specific impression that has arrived. The discourse is inner because it is addressed to the self by the self; it is discourse because it has the propositional structure of genuine speech — subject, predicate, evaluative judgment, directive conclusion. The reason discourse rather than silent thought is required is philosophical: since impressions are cognitive and propositional — they claim that the world is a certain way — the correct response to a propositional claim is a propositional response. The agent who receives the impression “this loss is a genuine evil” is receiving a propositional claim. The correct use of that impression requires a propositional response: “This is an impression presenting an external as a genuine evil. The impression is false. The loss is a dispreferred indifferent.” This propositional response, conducted in the first person in the present moment, is inner discourse.

Seddon provides the most complete explicit account of the inner dialogue in the secondary literature, at pages 113–114 of Epictetus’ Handbook and the Tablet of Cebes. He distinguishes the normal two-phase inner discourse from the corrective inner discourse that operates when prosochē has already failed.

The normal inner discourse runs as follows. Phase One — the Discipline of Desire:

“Now, what has happened here?” — the factual first assent. What is actually the case, stripped of evaluative addition.

“Ah yes, this is not in my power and is nothing to me.” — the evaluative second assent made correctly. The Discipline of Desire operating through inner discourse. Foundation Two stated in the first person: only virtue is genuinely good; this external is an indifferent.

Phase Two — the Discipline of Action:

“How then should I respond?” — the transition from evaluated situation to appropriate action.

“In my role as such-and-such, I shall be acting virtuously in accordance with nature if I do this.” — the correct action proposition. Role identification, appropriate object of aim, reserve clause implied. Foundation One and Foundation Three in the first person.

The corrective inner discourse runs when prosochē has failed and pathos has already been produced. Seddon:

“Now, I appear to be experiencing a pathos.” — the signal noticed. Any disturbance of any degree is this signal.

“Yes, stop everything and think: this is because I have assented wrongly to an impression.” — the diagnosis. The pathos is traced to its cause: a false evaluative second assent has occurred.

“The best course then is to go back to the offending impression and judge it correctly.” — Sterling’s Section 7 sub-step (b): do not compound the failure. Return to the source impression and apply the correct evaluative assent retrospectively.

“Does it concern something external? Yes. Then it is nothing to me.” — the correct evaluative second assent made retrospectively. Sub-step (c): formulate the true proposition.

“And so forth.” — Seddon’s indication that the dialogue continues into sub-step (d): what does my role now require?

Epictetus provides the canonical form of the inner discourse applied to specific situations in Discourses 3.8.1–5:

“His son is dead. What happened? His son is dead. Nothing else? Not a thing. His ship is lost. What happened? His ship is lost. He was carried off to prison. What happened? He was carried off to prison. But the observation: ‘He has fared ill’ is an addition that each man makes on his own responsibility.”

The factual first assent: a son has died. The refusal of the false evaluative addition: this is not an evil. The correct evaluative second assent: this lies outside the sphere of moral purpose; it is an indifferent. And then the positive inner discourse on genuine good and evil: “He was grieved at all this — that lies within the sphere of the moral purpose; it is an evil. He has borne up under it manfully — that lies within the sphere of the moral purpose; it is a good.”

This final exchange is the most important. The grief is the evil — not the death, not the lost ship, not the prison. The grief is the evil because the grief is pathos produced by a false evaluative second assent: the son’s death was treated as a genuine evil when it is a dispreferred indifferent. And the bearing up is the only good — not the survival of the son, not the recovery of the ship, not the avoidance of prison. The bearing up is the rational faculty in correct operation, the prohairesis in the right condition, the only thing that can be genuinely good.

This is Foundation Two stated as inner discourse, applied to a specific situation, in the first-person voice of the agent who has learned to use impressions correctly. It is also the complete expression of Foundation Three: right assent guarantees eudaimonia. The agent who makes the correct evaluative second assent — who refuses the false addition and assents to the true proposition about the indifferent — has, in that act, guaranteed his own eudaimonia regardless of what the external situation contains.

Seneca adds the retrospective dimension in De Ira 3.36: each evening, he reviewed the day through inner discourse: “What fault of mine have I remedied today? What vice have I resisted? In what respect am I better?” This retrospective inner discourse complements the real-time discourse Epictetus prescribes. Together they form a complete temporal structure: prospective preparation before situations arise (Sterling’s sub-step c — formulate true propositions about indifferents in advance), concurrent inner discourse in the moment (the normal two-phase dialogue), and retrospective review of where attention lapsed (the evening examination). This is askēsis — training — in its complete temporal form.


VII. The Level Difference: Glasser and the Stoic Framework

The relationship between Glasser’s Choice Theory and the Stoic framework is not a relationship between alternatives. Both hold that the agent’s emotional state is the downstream consequence of something the agent is doing rather than something being done to him. Both hold that the agent has governing power over that something. Both hold that exercising that power changes the emotional state as a consequence. This is the genuine shared ground — it is substantial, and it corresponds precisely to the three foundational claims both frameworks hold in their different ways.

The difference is in where each framework locates the governing act.

Glasser locates it at the behavioral level. The agent is generating a Total Behavior — acting, thinking, feeling, physiology simultaneously. The components directly within the agent’s control are the acting and thinking. Change those, and the feeling follows. The WDEP procedure operationalizes this: what are you currently doing, is it getting you what you want, what will you do differently? The question is always about the behavioral event that is already underway.

The Stoic framework locates the governing act one level prior to the behavioral event — at the evaluative second assent. Before the behavioral event begins, before acting and thinking have been initiated, the agent has received an impression. That impression has arrived carrying an embedded evaluative claim. At the moment between the impression’s arrival and the behavioral response, the agent has made or failed to make the correct evaluative second assent. If he has made it correctly — if the inner discourse has operated and the false evaluative addition has been refused — the behavioral event that follows is generated from correct evaluation. If he has made it incorrectly — if prosochē has failed and the false evaluative addition has completed itself — the behavioral event is generated from a false value judgment, and Glasser’s procedure addresses it from there.

Glasser’s WDEP procedure catches the patient inside a behavioral event that is already running. The Stoic inner discourse catches the impression before the behavioral event is generated. These are consecutive interventions at different levels of the same structure. The Glasser intervention is appropriate and effective once a behavioral event is underway. The Stoic intervention addresses the level prior to that.

The most philosophically significant divergence is at Foundation Two. Glasser’s five basic needs — survival, love and belonging, power, freedom, and fun — are treated as genuine goods whose satisfaction constitutes flourishing. The therapeutic procedure asks: is what you are doing getting you what you want? This is the right first question. Foundation Two asks the prior question: is what you want correctly valued? Are these needs held as preferred indifferents — appropriate to pursue, appropriate to prefer, not to stake identity or equanimity on — or as genuine goods whose non-satisfaction is a genuine evil?

Glasser cannot ask this question because his framework takes the five needs as genetically encoded facts about human nature that are not subject to rational revision. The needs are given; the therapeutic work addresses how effectively the patient is pursuing them. Foundation Two does not deny that the needs are real and their pursuit rational. It asks whether the patient is holding the specific Quality World images through which he pursues those needs as preferred indifferents or as genuine goods. A patient who has learned through the WDEP procedure to pursue his Quality World images more effectively but who is still holding them as genuine goods will find that effective pursuit provides temporary relief without genuine equanimity. He will always be one loss, one disappointment, one relationship failure away from renewed disturbance, because his equanimity is hostage to the external conditions his Quality World images require.

The two frameworks are not competing. They are consecutive, addressing the same structure at different levels. Glasser’s procedure covers the behavioral event as it runs. The Stoic inner discourse covers the evaluative second assent as it forms — and, through the long-term work of askēsis, progressively alters the character of what arrives as an impression in the first place.


VIII. The Long-Term Trajectory: Askēsis Toward Sophos

The correct use of impressions is not a practice that produces results through a single application. It is a lifelong askēsis — training — whose long-term effect is the progressive alteration of what impressions arrive and what evaluative claims they carry.

Sterling states this in Nine Excerpts Section 7, sub-step (a): refuse assent to impressions that depict externals as good or evil. Sub-step (b): if (a) fails, refuse assent to subsequent impressions that depict immoral responses as appropriate. Sub-step (c): consciously formulate true propositions about indifferents — do this in advance where possible, and at the time where not. Sub-step (d): formulate correct action propositions and act from them. Sub-step (e): when you have acted correctly, assent to the proposition that you have done well — then the appropriate positive feeling (eupatheia) follows. Sub-step (f): over time, the character changes such that false value impressions no longer arise in the first place. This is eudaimonia.

Sub-step (f) is the long-term trajectory of the entire program. The prokoptōn is not someone who has eliminated false impressions. He is someone who is working, impression by impression, through correct evaluative second assent, toward the condition in which false impressions no longer arise. Each correct assent weakens the corresponding false impression. Each false assent strengthens it. The cumulative effect of consistent practice, over time, is the gradual transformation of the character of experience itself — what Hadot identifies as the alteration of the agent’s relationship to what he receives from the world.

Seddon states the arc with precision: “The ability to do this perfectly is what distinguishes the Sage from the philosopher.” The sophos — the sage — is the ideal who has completed this trajectory. He no longer receives false value impressions because his prohairesis is in full correct condition; the impressions themselves have been corrected at their source. For him the inner discourse is no longer a corrective discipline but the natural mode of his rational engagement with the world. Prosochē as an effortful practice is no longer needed because the character it was training has been formed.

The prokoptōn is positioned between the layman and the sage. He has accepted the foundational conversion — the recognition that externals are not genuine goods or evils, that value lives in the rational faculty alone, that right assent is sufficient for eudaimonia. He is working toward the condition of the sage through the disciplined practice of inner discourse, the sustained maintenance of prosochē, and the gradual reduction of prosochē’s failures. Epictetus is unsparing about the difficulty and equally unsparing about the possibility: “Is it possible to be altogether faultless? No, that is impracticable. But it is possible to strive continuously not to commit faults, with the realistic hope that by never relaxing our attention, we shall escape at least a few” (Discourses 4.12.19).

The choice that presents itself to Epictetus’s student — and to every reader of this account — is the choice Seddon names directly: either to take up the practice of philosophy in its full sense, modifying and perfecting the ruling principle, governing desires and aversions, impulses, opinions, judgments, and intentions through the inner discourse; or to remain an uneducated person, applying oneself to externals, and giving up all hope for lasting and unshakable peace of mind, freedom, and serenity. This is the choice between the philosopher and the layman. It is the choice Epictetus places at the start of the Enchiridion and returns to throughout the Discourses. It is what the entire account of the correct use of impressions, the three topoi, prosochē, and the inner discourse serves to make fully visible: what the practice consists in, what it requires, and what it makes possible.


Draft v2 for editing. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling; Keith Seddon, Epictetus’ Handbook and the Tablet of Cebes (Routledge, 2006); Pierre Hadot, The Inner Citadel (Harvard University Press, 1998); Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, “Epictetus.” Prose rendering: Claude.