Classical Presupposition Audit: Malcolm Schosha
Classical Presupposition Audit: Malcolm Schosha
Source: Medium publication record including “Stoic Journey” series (2020–2025), “Roberto Assagioli, a Stoic Reappraisal” (2024), “Thinking in the Heart” (2024), and ISF participation as confirmed by thread records (2017).
Corpus in use: CPA v1.0. The audit operates exclusively from Schosha’s own published argumentative record. No source outside his own work enters the presupposition profile. Schosha is an artist living in New York City, 81 years old at the time of writing, who studied personally with the Italian psychiatrist Roberto Assagioli in 1969 and has engaged seriously with Stoicism for more than twenty years.
Preliminary Note: Schosha’s Position
Malcolm Schosha occupies a distinctive position in the contemporary Stoicism field. He is neither a professional academic nor a popular writer in Holiday’s commercial sense. He is a serious independent practitioner and student whose published work is characterized by unusually wide reading across multiple wisdom traditions, genuine engagement with classical Stoic texts and commentators, and a sustained interest in recovering aspects of classical Stoicism that modern reconstructions have discarded or ignored — particularly the cosmological and psychological dimensions of the tradition.
His most distinctive contribution is his advocacy for the heart-centered cognition claim: the classical Stoic doctrine that the hegemonikon — the ruling part of the soul — has its seat in the heart, not the head. He argues that modern Stoicism ignores this claim to its detriment, and that recovering it is essential to a full Stoic practice. This claim will be the most philosophically interesting point in the audit.
Schosha’s position in the CPA series is closest to Fisher, Marquis, and Daltrey — all traditional Stoics who hold that physics and ethics are interdependent and that the classical cosmological framework is not separable from the practical program. His distinctive feature within this group is the breadth of his cross-traditional sourcing and the experientialist dimension his heart-centered cognition claim introduces.
Step 1 — Presupposition Profile
P1 — Disturbance arises from incorrect judgment, and the harm done by others is always self-inflicted through one’s own false assessment. Schosha states this directly in his Stoic psychology article: “The Stoic point of view is that while we may be wronged by another person, the harm (if it happens) comes only from ourselves. The harm comes from our own incorrect judgment that the action of someone else has harmed us.” He reinforces this with the linguistic analysis from Bandler and Grinder on semantic ill-formedness — the claim that sentences of the form “X makes me feel Y” are semantically malformed because they assign responsibility for one’s emotional state to something outside one’s control. This is a clean and accurate rendering of the Stoic causal account of emotion.
P2 — The hegemonikon — the ruling part of the soul — has its seat in the heart, and thinking in the heart is fundamentally different from and superior to thinking in the head. Schosha argues this explicitly and at length, citing Diogenes Laertius, Scott Rubarth’s account of Stoic pneuma, Carl Jung’s encounter with the Taos Pueblo elder Mountain Lake, and Confucian philosophy as parallel support. He states: “Anyone who considers himself or herself on a Stoic path without incorporating this important point into their life is missing a key to Stoicism as a way of life.” This is treated as a non-negotiable feature of genuine Stoic practice, not a peripheral historical curiosity.
P3 — Stoic ethics and Stoic physics are interdependent and mutually supporting; neither without the other is uniquely Stoic. This is confirmed both by his ISF participation — where he agreed with Chris Fisher that Stoic ethics and physics are interdependent — and by his written work, which consistently treats the cosmological dimension of Stoicism as essential rather than separable. His engagement with pneuma, the hegemonikon, and the classical Stoic account of the soul as physically located in the heart presupposes that the physics is not dispensable.
P4 — Wisdom traditions in the plural illuminate Stoicism and can be drawn on as complementary sources of insight without undermining Stoic foundations. Schosha draws freely and explicitly across traditions: Assagioli’s Psychosynthesis, Jung’s analytical psychology, Confucian philosophy, Sufi teaching (Inayat Khan on justice), Zuni elder wisdom, Dante’s philosophical Stoicism, Neoplatonism (Simplicius’s commentary on Epictetus). He treats these not as competing alternatives but as different angles on the same truths. His July 2025 “Change of Perspective” post uses a Sufi quote to illuminate the Stoic virtue of justice. His Assagioli article treats Psychosynthesis as a Stoic-influenced system without explicit acknowledgment of its Stoic foundations.
P5 — Moral good and evil are objective facts, not social constructions; there is one target that all genuine ethical traditions aim at, and missing it is moral evil regardless of intention. Schosha’s article on good and evil in Epictetus draws on Simplicius’s commentary on Enchiridion XXVII, which uses the archery analogy: moral good is hitting the one genuine target, moral evil is missing it through lack of skill in thought and life. He presents this as the correct account against Gnostic dualism and New Age moral confusion. His moral language throughout is realist: there is a fact of the matter about what constitutes the good, it is accessible to reason, and frameworks that deny this — particularly Gnostic and New Age ones — are actively harmful.
P6 — Slow and patient engagement with primary classical texts is the correct method for approaching Stoicism; hasty reading produces misunderstanding. Schosha’s July 2025 article on slow reading argues that most contemporary students of Stoicism do not engage with primary texts carefully enough, and that genuine understanding requires the kind of patient, present attention he associates with philosophical study at its best. This is a methodological claim rather than a philosophical one, but it is load-bearing for his account of how Stoic knowledge is acquired.
Step 2 — Commitment Audit
Commitment 1 — Substance Dualism: Partially Aligned
Schosha’s record consistently treats the soul — specifically the hegemonikon — as the governing center of the person, categorically distinct in function from the body and from external conditions. His P1 explicitly locates harm in the agent’s own judgment rather than in external events. His P2 holds that the hegemonikon is the ruling part of the soul from which all rational life proceeds. These positions require the self to be identified with the rational faculty rather than with external conditions.
However, the classical Stoic cosmology Schosha endorses — the pneuma, the heart-seated hegemonikon, the physically located soul — is the traditional Stoic physicalist account, not a substance dualist one. For the classical Stoics, the soul is a physical substance (refined pneuma). It is categorically distinct from gross matter but not from all physical reality. This is not substance dualism in the classical sense Sterling’s framework requires — it is a version of hylomorphism in which the rational soul is physical but of a different grade of materiality than the body.
Schosha’s heart-centered cognition claim introduces a further complexity. By locating cognition in the heart rather than the head, and by connecting this to Jung’s encounter with Mountain Lake’s contrast between head-thinking and heart-thinking, Schosha introduces an experientialist and somatic dimension that is not consistent with the classical commitment’s requirement that the rational faculty be categorically distinct from all material conditions. Thinking in the heart is still thinking in the body.
Finding: Partially Aligned. Schosha’s record consistently identifies the self with the rational faculty (hegemonikon) and treats harm as self-inflicted through incorrect judgment. The classical Stoic physicalism he endorses is not substance dualism, and his heart-centered cognition claim introduces a somatic element that partially compromises the categorical distinctness the commitment requires.
Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free Will: Partially Aligned
Schosha’s P1 requires that the agent is the genuine author of his own emotional responses through the judgments he makes. His deployment of the semantic well-formedness argument is precise: the sentence “George made Mary angry” is semantically ill-formed because it incorrectly assigns causal responsibility for Mary’s emotional state to George. The correct account is that Mary’s judgment generates her anger, and that judgment is hers to make or not make. This requires genuine causal power of the agent over his own assents — which is the practical core of libertarian free will.
The residual divergence is that Schosha’s classical Stoic cosmological commitments include providence and the causal nexus of nature — a framework that in classical Stoicism was associated with determinism. He does not argue this tension explicitly; he holds the practical account of self-originating judgment alongside the cosmological account without resolving the tension between them. The practical position is compatible with libertarian free will; the cosmological position pulls toward providentialism.
Finding: Partially Aligned. Schosha’s practical account of emotional causation requires genuine originating agency over judgment. His cosmological commitments introduce providential determinism without resolving the tension. The same unresolved pattern as Marquis and Fisher, though arrived at through different emphasis.
Commitment 3 — Moral Realism: Aligned
Schosha’s moral realism is explicit and load-bearing throughout his record. His engagement with Simplicius’s commentary on Enchiridion XXVII argues directly that there is one genuine moral target, that hitting it is moral good, and that missing it is moral evil — regardless of cultural formation, preference, or New Age alternatives. His dismissal of Gnostic dualism and New Age moral confusion as “irrational” presupposes that moral rationality has a determinate standard that these frameworks fail to meet. His Sufi and Confucian cross-references are deployed not as relativist alternatives but as additional angles on the same objective moral reality.
Schosha’s moral realism is grounded in the classical cosmological framework — the divine rational cosmos supplies the moral order — rather than in Sterling’s foundationalist account grounded in the six commitments. But the moral realism itself is unambiguous and consistently maintained.
Finding: Aligned. Moral realism is load-bearing throughout Schosha’s published record. One genuine moral target, accessible to reason, not relative to culture or preference. This is the most fully established commitment in his writing.
Commitment 4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: Partially Aligned
Schosha’s historical and textual claims are made as claims about how things actually were and are — what Assagioli actually held, what the Stoics actually believed about the hegemonikon, what Simplicius actually argued. He is not a constructivist about historical or philosophical truth. His engagement with primary texts and commentators presupposes correspondence theory operationally.
The residual divergence is introduced by P4. His use of Zuni elder wisdom, Confucian philosophy, and Sufi teaching as complementary illuminations of Stoic truth implies a pluralist epistemology in which truth is accessible through multiple traditional lenses. This is not straightforwardly correspondence-theoretic. It suggests that different traditions can each partially access the same reality — a position that sits between correspondence theory and a kind of perennialist epistemology. The tension is not resolved in his record.
Finding: Partially Aligned. Operational correspondence theory for historical and textual claims. Perennialist epistemology for wisdom tradition claims partially diverges from strict correspondence theory.
Commitment 5 — Ethical Intuitionism: Partially Aligned
Schosha presents moral truths — particularly the claim that harm comes from one’s own judgment rather than from external events — as directly visible to the agent who examines the situation correctly. His archery analogy from Simplicius presents moral good and evil as facts about accuracy of aim that are in principle directly apprehensible. His cross-traditional sourcing — Zuni, Confucian, Sufi, Jungian — presents these traditions as independently arriving at the same directly apprehensible truths, which is the structure of perennialist intuitionism.
The residual divergence is significant. P2’s heart-centered cognition claim introduces an experientialist and somatic dimension to moral epistemology. Thinking in the heart rather than the head is presented as a different mode of knowing, not merely a metaphor for attentiveness. This suggests that correct moral apprehension is not simply a function of the rational faculty applying itself correctly, but requires a specific mode of engagement — heart-centered rather than head-centered — that is partly somatic and experiential. Ethical intuitionism in the classical sense requires that the rational faculty directly apprehends moral truth; Schosha’s account requires a mode of apprehension that is not straightforwardly rational in the classical sense.
Finding: Partially Aligned. The structure of direct moral apprehension is present. The heart-centered cognition claim introduces a somatic and experientialist dimension that partially diverges from the strictly rational apprehension ethical intuitionism requires.
Commitment 6 — Foundationalism: Partially Aligned
Schosha argues from a governing first principle — harm comes only from one’s own incorrect judgment — that functions architecturally as a foundational claim from which his practical prescriptions derive. His engagement with the hegemonikon as the governing center of the person is foundationalist in structure: there is a governing ruling part, and everything else is ordered in relation to it.
The residual divergence is P4. His explicit pluralism about wisdom traditions means that multiple traditions are treated as valid routes to the same foundational truths, which is anti-foundationalist in a specific sense: it treats the foundational claim as accessible through multiple paths rather than as a self-evident necessary truth that governs all other commitments from a single architecturally prior position. His method — slow reading across multiple traditions, allowing each to illuminate the others — is coherentist in character rather than foundationalist. The governing claim is present; the exclusive architectural priority foundationalism requires is qualified by the pluralism.
Finding: Partially Aligned. Governing first principle present and architecturally operative. Wisdom tradition pluralism introduces a coherentist element that qualifies the strict foundationalist structure.
Step 3 — Dissolution Finding
Commitment 1: Partially Aligned. Commitment 2: Partially Aligned.
Neither is Contrary.
Finding: No Dissolution.
Schosha’s practical framework consistently locates the agent’s governing center in the rational faculty — the hegemonikon — and treats harm as the product of the agent’s own incorrect judgment rather than of external events. The prohairesis is not dissolved into an external system. His cosmological commitments introduce a providential dimension that creates tension with libertarian free will, but that tension is unresolved rather than resolved in the determinist direction. No Contrary finding on C1 or C2 is produced.
Step 4 — Summary Finding
Commitment Pattern
Substance Dualism: Partially Aligned. Libertarian Free Will: Partially Aligned. Moral Realism: Aligned. Correspondence Theory: Partially Aligned. Ethical Intuitionism: Partially Aligned. Foundationalism: Partially Aligned.
One Aligned finding. Five Partially Aligned findings. Zero Contrary. Zero Inconsistent. Zero Non-Operative.
Dissolution: None.
Comparison with Fisher, Marquis, and Daltrey
Schosha’s pattern is closest to Fisher in the series: one Aligned finding (C3), five Partially Aligned, no Contrary. Fisher produced five Partially Aligned and one Aligned (also on C5 — ethical intuitionism). Schosha’s Aligned finding is on C3 (moral realism) rather than C5, reflecting the different emphasis in his published record: his most explicit and sustained argument is for objective moral reality against Gnostic and New Age alternatives, rather than for the epistemological structure of direct moral apprehension.
The comparison with Marquis is instructive. Marquis produced his most distinctive divergence on C6 (Contrary — pluralism about wisdom traditions). Schosha holds a similar pluralism but it produces a Partially Aligned finding rather than a Contrary, because his pluralism is deployed in the service of illuminating a governing first principle rather than replacing it. Marquis’s pluralism prevented the ethical core from being architecturally final. Schosha’s pluralism supplements a governing foundational claim rather than dissolving it.
The Heart-Centered Cognition Claim
The most philosophically distinctive feature of Schosha’s presupposition profile is P2. His argument that thinking in the heart is missing from modern Stoicism and essential to genuine Stoic practice is philologically defensible — the classical Stoics did locate the hegemonikon in the heart, and the pneuma account does place cognition somatically. But what Schosha does with this claim is philosophically significant for the CPA.
By connecting heart-centered cognition to Jung’s Taos Pueblo elder, to Confucian philosophy, and to the general critique of Western “head-thinking,” Schosha introduces a cross-cultural experientialist epistemology that is not reducible to the rational apprehension the classical commitments identify as the governing mode of moral knowledge. The claim that one must learn to think with the heart rather than the head in order to practice Stoicism correctly suggests that the mode of engagement with moral truth is partly somatic and trained rather than purely rational and direct. This is the source of the Partially Aligned finding on C5 rather than an Aligned finding: the apprehension of moral truth requires a specific experiential mode that the purely rational account of ethical intuitionism does not fully capture.
This is not a failure in Schosha’s engagement with the tradition. It is a philosophically interesting attempt to recover a dimension of classical Stoicism — the somatic location of the ruling faculty — that modern reconstructions have entirely abandoned. The CPA finding is that this recovery, while philologically grounded, introduces a complexity that the classical commitments as Sterling has reconstructed them do not accommodate straightforwardly. The classical commitments identify the rational faculty as the locus of genuine agency and moral apprehension; Schosha’s heart-centered cognition claim identifies a mode of rational engagement that is partly somatic, trained, and experiential — which is neither the pure rationalism of the commitment nor its straightforward denial.
Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling. Sources: Malcolm Schosha, Medium publication record, 2020–2025. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.