Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Scholar Engagement Instrument (SEI) — Version 1.0

 

Scholar Engagement Instrument (SEI) — Version 1.0

Demonstration Run: The Socratic Elenchus

Scholar: Donald J. Robertson

Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling’s corpus. Prose rendering: Claude. 2026.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Target: the Socratic elenchus as a philosophical method — its structure, aims, terminal states, and primary ancient documentation. Stated in propositional form: the Socratic elenchus is a method of cross-examination by which Socrates tests proposed definitions of moral concepts, identifies contradictions or counterexamples, and either produces a revised definition or arrives at aporia.

Scholar: Donald J. Robertson. The instrument will range across his public record — The Philosophy of Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy (2010, 2nd ed.), Stoicism and the Art of Happiness (2013), How to Think Like a Roman Emperor (2019), How to Think Like Socrates (2024), published articles and blog posts at donaldrobertson.name, Substack newsletter, interviews, and documented public exchanges including the contra-Peterson posts — as broadly as available sources permit.

No prior conclusion about synthesis findings or comparison outcomes.

  • Target stated in propositional form? Yes. ✓
  • Scholar identified? Yes. ✓
  • Prior conclusion stated or implied? No. ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. Proceeding to Step 1.


Step 1 — Target Specification

Governing question: What is the target, what are its textual boundaries, and which primary ancient sources are most likely to bear on it?

Target Stated Precisely

The Socratic elenchus (ελεγχος, elenchos) is the method of cross-examination that defines Socratic philosophical practice as documented in the primary ancient sources. Its core features as they appear in the ancient record are: a request for definition rather than example; a process of testing the proposed definition through counterexample or internal contradiction; a pattern of revised definition followed by further testing; and a characteristic terminal state, which is in the early dialogues typically aporia — acknowledged ignorance — rather than positive resolution.

Historical-textual dimensions (within SEI scope): Which ancient sources document the elenchus; what structural features those sources attribute to it; how those accounts agree and differ; what the sources say about its aims and terminal states; how Socrates himself characterizes the method in his own reported speech; how Aristotle and Xenophon characterize it relative to Plato’s account.

Philosophical dimensions (outside SEI scope): Whether the elenchus is epistemologically sound; whether aporia is a genuine epistemic achievement; whether the method presupposes the theory of recollection; whether the elenctic method is compatible with or requires any particular account of moral knowledge. These questions are outside the instrument’s reach.

Primary Ancient Sources Identified

The primary documentation is concentrated in Plato’s early dialogues, with supplementary accounts in Xenophon, Aristotle, and Diogenes Laërtius.

Plato — early (Socratic) dialogues: Apology (Socrates’s account of his own method); Euthyphro (on piety; paradigm aporetic elenchus); Laches (on courage; aporetic); Charmides (on temperance; aporetic); Lysis (on friendship; aporetic); Meno (on virtue; the slave boy passage; theory of recollection); Protagoras (on whether virtue can be taught; Socrates vs. the great Sophist); Gorgias (on rhetoric; the confrontational exchange with Callicles); Hippias Major (on beauty; aporetic); Republic Book I (the exchange with Thrasymachus); Theaetetus (the midwifery passage, 148e–151d).

Xenophon: Memorabilia (four books; Socrates’s character and method; especially Book IV.2, the examination of Euthydemus); Apology of Socrates; Symposium.

Aristotle: Metaphysics 987a–b and 1078b (on Socrates and universal definition); Sophistical Refutations 183b (Socrates questioned but did not answer); Nicomachean Ethics (references to Socratic intellectualism).

Diogenes Laërtius: Lives of the Eminent Philosophers Book II.18–47 (life and method of Socrates).

Scope boundaries: The run will examine the elenchus as a method — its structure, characteristic moves, aims, and terminal states. It will not examine Socratic ethics, the theory of recollection, or the metaphysics of the Forms, except as those appear in direct descriptions of the elenctic method itself.

  • Target precisely specified with textual/philosophical dimensions distinguished? Yes. ✓
  • Primary sources identified? Yes. ✓
  • Scope boundaries stated? Yes. ✓
  • Robertson’s work consulted at this step? No. ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. Proceeding to Step 2.


Step 2 — Primary Source Synthesis

Governing question: What does the primary ancient record say about the Socratic elenchus, ranging independently across the sources identified in Step 1?

Robertson’s work has not been consulted at this step. The synthesis is produced from primary sources alone.

Part A — Source Map

Apology (Plato): The most direct first-person account of the elenctic mission. Socrates describes receiving the oracle’s report that no one is wiser (20e–21a), his decision to test it by examining those reputed wise (21b), his finding that those most reputed wise are most ignorant (21c–22e), and his conclusion that his own wisdom consists in knowing that he does not know (21d). He characterizes his activity as a service to the god (23b–c) and identifies caring for the soul over body and wealth as its practical aim (29d–30a). The examined life formulation appears at 38a.

Euthyphro (Plato): The paradigm case of the aporetic elenchus. Euthyphro proposes four successive definitions of piety (5d, 6e, 9e, 12d); each is refuted by Socrates through counterexample or internal contradiction. The dialogue ends at 15e with Euthyphro departing and the question unresolved. The structural sequence — definition proposed, counterexample identified, definition revised, further refutation, aporia — is most clearly exhibited here.

Meno (Plato): Two features directly relevant to the elenchus. First, Meno’s paradox (80a–b): if you don’t know what virtue is, how will you recognize it when you find it? This challenge arises directly from the elenctic failure to produce a stable definition. Second, the slave boy passage (82b–85b): Socrates demonstrates that a geometrical truth can be drawn out of an uneducated boy through questioning alone, without teaching. The passage documents a positive elenctic outcome — the drawing-out of knowledge — rather than pure aporia. At 84a–c Socrates characterizes the value of the induced aporia: the slave boy is now better off for knowing that he does not know.

Theaetetus (Plato): The midwifery passage (148e–151d) is Socrates’s most sustained self-description of his method. He characterizes himself as a midwife who helps others give birth to their own ideas; he produces nothing himself; the knowledge or opinion examined belongs to the interlocutor. He explicitly notes that some of what he helps deliver turns out to be wind-eggs — false or empty ideas that collapse under examination (150c). The metaphor frames the elenchus as primarily extractive rather than instructional: the method reveals what is already present, including its falseness.

Protagoras (Plato): The elenchus in a more evenly matched exchange. Socrates and Protagoras debate whether virtue can be taught and whether the virtues are one or many. The dialogue does not end in pure aporia but in an acknowledged reversal of positions. Socrates, who began by arguing virtue cannot be taught, finds himself arguing it can; Protagoras moves the other direction. The reversal is itself an elenctic result: the method has destabilized both positions.

Gorgias (Plato): The most confrontational elenctic dialogue. The exchange with Callicles (481b–522e) shows the elenchus deployed against a resistant interlocutor who explicitly refuses to play by Socratic rules. Callicles’s resistance documents a limit case: the elenchus requires a cooperative interlocutor willing to answer sincerely. When that cooperation is withdrawn, the method stalls (509a).

Xenophon’s Memorabilia: Presents a substantially different Socratic method. Book IV.2 documents Socrates’s examination of the young Euthydemus, who has amassed a library of wisdom-texts and believes himself already educated. Socrates draws out his contradictions across several conversations, but the trajectory is constructive: the dialogue is designed to bring Euthydemus to the point of genuine philosophical inquiry, not to leave him in aporia. The Xenophontic Socrates is more consistently didactic than the Platonic Socrates; he is willing to offer positive guidance once the ground is cleared.

Aristotle, Metaphysics 987a–b and 1078b: Aristotle credits Socrates with two contributions: inductive arguments and universal definition. “Socrates occupied himself with the excellences of character, and in connection with them became the first to raise the problem of universal definition” (1078b17–19). Aristotle distinguishes Socrates from Plato: Socrates did not make the universals exist apart from particular things; that was Plato’s innovation. At Sophistical Refutations 183b, Aristotle notes that Socrates asked questions but did not himself answer, because he confessed he did not know.

Diogenes Laërtius, Lives II.18–47: Reports that Socrates was the first to discuss how one ought to live (II.21); that he used the method of question and answer (II.22); that he examined moral questions, not natural philosophy (II.21); and that those who came to him for instruction he did not instruct directly but led through questioning to the recognition of their own ignorance.

Part B — Claim Inventory

Claim 1 — The elenchus begins with a request for definition, not example. Source: Euthyphro 5c–d, 6d–e; Meno 71d–72a; Laches 190e; Charmides 159a. Socrates consistently refuses examples in response to the “what is it?” question (τí εστι, ti esti). He wants the form (ειδος, eidos) by which all instances of the concept are instances of it. This is the single most consistent structural feature of the elenchus across all sources.

Claim 2 — The elenchus operates through counterexample and internal contradiction, not through assertion of doctrine. Source: Euthyphro passim; Laches passim; Republic I.336b–354c (the Thrasymachus exchange). Socrates does not oppose a false definition with a true one. He finds cases in which the interlocutor’s definition produces results the interlocutor cannot accept, or finds that the definition contradicts a prior commitment the interlocutor has made. The method is negative and interrogative throughout.

Claim 3 — The elenchus typically terminates in aporia rather than positive definition. Source: Euthyphro 15e; Laches 200e; Charmides 176a; Lysis 223b; Hippias Major 304e; Meno 80a–b (the paradox arises from the aporetic pattern). The early dialogues share this terminal state. The Meno is a partial exception: the theory of recollection and the slave boy passage introduce a positive account, though the dialogue ends without a stable definition of virtue.

Claim 4 — Socrates characterizes the elenchus as a divine mission, not a personal preference or professional method. Source: Apology 21a–23b, 28e–30a. The oracle’s report is the original mandate. Socrates presents himself as the god’s gift to Athens (30e) and compares himself to a gadfly that the city would be better served to keep than to kill (30e–31a). This grounding of the method in divine commission is unique to the Apology and has no equivalent in the non-Platonic sources.

Claim 5 — Socrates characterizes his own wisdom as awareness of ignorance, not positive knowledge. Source: Apology 21d (“I am wiser than this man; for neither of us knows anything beautiful and good, but he thinks he knows when he does not, whereas I, as I do not know anything, so I do not think I do”); Sophist 230b–d (the Stranger’s account of the elenctic method as cleansing the soul of false belief). Aristotle confirms this at Sophistical Refutations 183b.

Claim 6 — Socrates uses the midwifery metaphor to describe the method’s extractive character. Source: Theaetetus 148e–151d. The knowledge or opinion belongs to the interlocutor; Socrates draws it out but does not supply it. Some of what is drawn out is false (wind-eggs) and collapses under examination. The method reveals the character of what the interlocutor already holds, including the possibility that it is empty.

Claim 7 — Aporia is presented in at least one dialogue as a positive epistemic state, better than false confidence. Source: Meno 84a–c. After the slave boy’s initial false answers are refuted, Socrates notes that the boy is now better off: he was numbed by the elenchus as by a stingray, but this is an improvement over his prior false confidence. The aporia is productive rather than merely negative. This claim is not prominently made elsewhere in the early dialogues.

Claim 8 — The elenchus requires cooperative interlocutors answering sincerely. Source: Gorgias 495a (Callicles refuses to answer sincerely); Republic I.336b–c (Thrasymachus refuses to be bound by his own concessions). The method stalls when the interlocutor withdraws genuine engagement. This is a structural dependency, not a peripheral feature.

Claim 9 — Xenophon’s account presents a more constructive and less aporetic Socratic method. Source: Memorabilia IV.2 passim. The Xenophontic Socrates moves from the clearing of false belief to positive guidance more readily than the Platonic Socrates. The terminal state in Xenophon is more often genuine inquiry than aporia.

Claim 10 — Aristotle credits Socrates with originating the search for universal definition but distinguishes his method from Plato’s doctrine of separately existing Forms. Source: Metaphysics 987a–b, 1078b17–32. For Aristotle, Socrates sought the universal in particular cases; Plato then elevated the universal into a separately existing entity. The elenchus, for Aristotle, is a procedure for identifying the universal within particulars — not for ascending to a transcendent realm.

Part C — Agreement and Tension Map

Agreement across sources: All primary sources agree that the elenchus is a method of questioning rather than assertion; that Socrates did not himself supply positive answers to the questions he posed; that the method is directed at moral concepts (virtue, piety, courage, justice) rather than natural philosophy; and that the method regularly exposes the ignorance of those who claim knowledge.

Tension 1 — Platonic vs. Xenophontic Socrates. The most significant tension in the primary record. Plato’s Socrates characteristically ends dialogues in aporia; Xenophon’s characteristically proceeds to positive guidance after clearing false belief. Both cannot be equally faithful to the historical Socrates. The tension is irresolvable from the texts alone; it is the central problem of Socratic scholarship. (Gap Type 2 below.)

Tension 2 — The midwifery metaphor vs. the aporetic terminal state. If the elenchus draws out knowledge the interlocutor already has (Theaetetus midwifery), why do the early dialogues end without the interlocutor arriving at stable knowledge? The midwifery metaphor implies a positive deliverable; the aporetic endings imply that what is delivered is consistently the recognition of emptiness rather than genuine knowledge. The Meno’s theory of recollection attempts to bridge this gap, but introduces a further set of commitments beyond the elenctic method itself.

Tension 3 — The divine mission framing vs. the philosophical method framing. The Apology grounds the elenchus in divine commission (the oracle, the god’s gift). The other dialogues treat it as a philosophical method practiced for its own intellectual and moral rationale. These framings are not contradictory but they produce different accounts of why the elenchus matters and what authorizes it. The divine mission framing is absent from Xenophon and from Aristotle’s account.

Tension 4 — Aporia as terminus vs. aporia as stage. In most early dialogues, aporia is the final state. In the Meno slave boy passage, aporia is explicitly a productive intermediate stage on the way to genuine knowledge. The two accounts are not obviously compatible: if aporia is systematically a stage toward knowledge (as the Meno implies), why does it consistently appear as a terminus in the other early dialogues? One resolution is that the Meno represents a transitional dialogue in which Platonic doctrine begins to supplement the purely elenctic method. Whether that resolution is correct is a scholarly question outside the SEI’s adjudication.

Part D — Open Questions

The primary ancient record leaves the following questions open. They cannot be resolved by further ranging within the textual sources alone.

Whether the historical Socrates is better represented by Plato or Xenophon, and on what grounds that determination can be made. Whether the aporetic endings of the early dialogues reflect the limits of the elenctic method or are pedagogically staged. Whether the midwifery metaphor applies to the aporetic dialogues or only to a later, more constructive phase of Socratic practice. Whether Aristotle’s account of Socrates as the originator of universal definition is compatible with the Platonic portrait of a Socrates who denies having knowledge to transmit.

  • Robertson’s work consulted at any point during Step 2? No. ✓
  • All claims traceable to specific primary sources? Yes. ✓
  • Tensions identified rather than smoothed over? Yes. ✓
  • Philosophical claims excluded? Yes. ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. Proceeding to Step 3.


Step 3 — Scholar Comparison Layer

Governing question: How does Robertson’s documented record map against the primary synthesis?

Sources consulted: The Philosophy of Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy (2010, 2nd ed.); How to Think Like a Roman Emperor (2019); How to Think Like Socrates (2024); donaldrobertson.name blog archive; Substack newsletter; published interviews including the Daily Stoic series; the contra-Peterson posts published across Medium, Substack, and his personal website.


Convergences

Convergence 1 — The ti esti structure. Robertson independently identifies and emphasizes the “what is it?” question as the elenchus’s characteristic opening move. He correctly distinguishes Socrates’s demand for definition from the interlocutor’s initial offer of examples. This aligns precisely with Claim 1. Robertson’s treatment of this feature in the Socrates book follows the primary sources accurately.

Convergence 2 — The negative-interrogative character. Robertson consistently presents the elenchus as a method of questioning rather than assertion. He does not present Socrates as a teacher who supplies doctrine; he presents him as a questioner who exposes unexamined assumptions. This aligns with Claims 2 and 5.

Convergence 3 — Socratic irony and professed ignorance. Robertson engages seriously with Socratic ignorance as a genuine feature of the method, not merely a rhetorical pose. His presentation of Socratic irony draws on the Apology’s account accurately.

Convergence 4 — The cooperative requirement. Robertson’s account of Socratic dialogue in the Socrates book correctly identifies that the method requires sincere engagement from the interlocutor. He presents the dialogue form as a collaborative practice, not an adversarial one. This aligns with Claim 8.

Convergence 5 — The practical-moral focus. Robertson consistently emphasizes that the elenchus is directed at practical wisdom and moral concepts — how to live — rather than at theoretical or natural philosophy. This aligns with the primary record across all sources.


Divergences

Divergence 1 — The divine mission framing. Robertson’s account of the elenchus consistently frames it as a philosophical method with therapeutic and psychological rationale. The Apology’s grounding of the method in divine commission — the oracle, the gadfly, the god’s gift — is present in Robertson’s biographical treatment of Socrates but is not load-bearing in his account of what the method is. Robertson’s elenchus is a method anyone can practice; the Apology’s elenchus is a divinely commissioned vocation specific to Socrates. Whether this difference is historically significant or is Robertson’s appropriate extraction of the method from its singular biographical context is a judgment the SEI does not issue.

Divergence 2 — The terminal state. Robertson’s account of the elenchus consistently presents it as moving toward cognitive clarity, values clarification, and revised belief — a constructive outcome. The primary record’s characteristic terminal state is aporia. Robertson engages with aporia but treats it consistently as a stage toward further inquiry rather than as a terminal state in its own right. The Meno slave boy passage supports the staging account; the pattern of the early aporetic dialogues supports the terminal account. Robertson’s reading selectively draws on the Meno paradigm and understates the terminal aporetic pattern. This is the most significant divergence between his documented reading and the primary synthesis.

Divergence 3 — The Platonic vs. Xenophontic question. Robertson draws primarily on the Platonic dialogues for his account of the elenchus but treats the Xenophontic Socrates as broadly compatible rather than in tension. The primary synthesis identifies this as the most significant irresolvable tension in the record. Robertson’s CBT-oriented reading of Socrates is arguably closer to the Xenophontic portrait — a constructive, guidance-oriented practitioner — than to the Platonic portrait, but he does not address this alignment explicitly.

Divergence 4 — Aristotle’s account. Robertson’s documented engagement with Aristotle’s account of Socrates is limited relative to his engagement with the Platonic dialogues. Aristotle’s distinction between Socratic universal definition and Platonic separately existing Forms — a distinction that bears directly on how to read what the elenchus is ultimately searching for — does not figure prominently in Robertson’s account. Whether this absence affects his overall interpretation is a question for expert judgment.


Additions

Addition 1 — Biographical and historical contextualization. Robertson’s Socrates book provides sustained biographical and historical reconstruction: the military campaigns, the political upheaval of the Thirty Tyrants, the trial context, the social world of the Athenian agora. The primary ancient sources contain this material but do not organize it as contextual framing for the elenctic method. Robertson’s biographical synthesis adds an organizing layer that the primary synthesis, working from the texts alone, does not independently produce.

Addition 2 — The operationalization of the two-column exercise and related techniques. Robertson’s practical instruments — the two-column exercise, values clarification, the double-standards strategy — are Robertson’s own contribution. They are not found in the primary sources. Robertson presents them as operationalizations of the elenctic method; the primary synthesis cannot confirm or contest whether the ancient sources support or undermine that derivation, since the derivation is Robertson’s own analytical work. This is an Addition that the SEI registers without evaluating.

Addition 3 — The CBT lineage documentation. Robertson’s systematic documentation of the Socratic-Stoic-CBT intellectual lineage — most fully developed in The Philosophy of Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy — goes well beyond what the primary ancient sources contain. The primary sources document the elenchus; the lineage argument is Robertson’s scholarly contribution. The SEI registers it as an Addition without evaluating the lineage argument itself.


Extensions

Extension 1 — The elenchus as cognitive restructuring technique. Robertson’s account extends the elenchus into a cognitive restructuring technique in the CBT sense: a systematic procedure for identifying and challenging irrational beliefs, producing cognitive flexibility, and building psychological resilience. This extension goes beyond what the primary sources support as a characterization of the elenchus. The primary sources present the elenchus as a method of philosophical examination aimed at moral concepts; they do not present it as a psychological technique aimed at emotional resilience. The extension is Robertson’s own interpretive contribution.

Extension 2 — Universal accessibility of the elenchus. Robertson’s account presents the elenctic method as a practice anyone can adopt and apply in daily life. The primary record contains a tension here: the Apology’s divine mission framing makes the elenchus Socrates-specific; the Theaetetus’s midwifery metaphor and the Meno’s slave boy passage suggest something more universally applicable. Robertson’s universal accessibility claim resolves this tension in favor of universal applicability without engaging the divine mission constraint.

  • Scholar’s work treated as comparison layer, not authoritative layer? Yes. ✓
  • Divergences assigned to gap declaration rather than adjudicated? Yes. ✓
  • Extensions noted without evaluation? Yes. ✓
  • Additions registered honestly? Yes. ✓
  • Scope Drift — philosophical findings issued? No. ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. Proceeding to Step 4.


Step 4 — Expert Validation Gap Declaration

Governing question: What specific judgment calls does this run require that only Robertson’s expertise can resolve?


Gap Type 1 — Translation Choice Gaps

Gap 1a — Elenchos: refutation, examination, or cross-examination? The synthesis has used “cross-examination” as its primary translation and “examination” secondarily. “Refutation” (Gregory Vlastos’s preferred term) places the adversarial and negative dimension at the center. “Examination” (used by many contemporary translators) foregrounds the investigative dimension. The choice is not neutral: “refutation” makes the elenchus primarily destructive and negative; “cross-examination” imports a legal register that may not be appropriate; “examination” understates the confrontational character documented in the Gorgias. Robertson’s judgment on which translation best captures the method’s character across the range of dialogues is needed here.

Gap 1b — Aporia: perplexity, impasse, or puzzlement? The translation of aporia affects whether the terminal state reads as productive (perplexity that motivates further inquiry) or merely negative (impasse that ends inquiry). Robertson’s documented reading tends toward the productive reading; the primary record does not consistently support it. His judgment on whether the productive reading is textually warranted across the early dialogues or applies specifically to the Meno is needed.

Gap 1c — Eidos in Euthyphro 6d: form, essence, nature, or character? The translation of the term Socrates uses when requesting a definition affects whether the request is read as proto-Platonic (form, suggesting the theory of Forms) or as more ordinary (nature, character, what-it-is). The choice bears on whether the elenchus is already committed to a Platonic metaphysics or whether it is methodologically prior to it. This is a textually and philosophically contested point on which Robertson’s judgment is specifically valuable.


Gap Type 2 — Attribution Gaps

Gap 2a — The historical Socrates problem. The synthesis has used both Plato and Xenophon as primary sources without adjudicating which is more historically reliable. This is the central unsettled problem of Socratic scholarship. Robertson’s documented reading draws predominantly on Plato; his CBT-oriented interpretation of the method aligns more closely with the Xenophontic portrait. His judgment on how to handle the Platonic-Xenophontic tension — and on whether his reading of the Platonic dialogues is implicitly importing Xenophontic constructivism — is needed here.

Gap 2b — The authenticity of the Hippias Major. The synthesis has used the Hippias Major as a primary source for the aporetic terminal state. Its Platonic authenticity is disputed. Robertson’s judgment on whether it should be included in the primary elenctic record is needed.

Gap 2c — The date and status of the Gorgias. Whether the Gorgias belongs to the early Socratic dialogues or represents a transitional text in which Plato’s own views begin to displace the historical Socratic portrait affects how much weight the Callicles exchange should carry in an account of the elenctic method. Robertson’s judgment on the Gorgias’s place in the elenctic record is needed.


Gap Type 3 — Historical-Contextual Gaps

Gap 3a — The agora as venue. The primary sources are largely set in specific Athenian contexts — the agora, the gymnasium, the symposium. Robertson’s biographical reconstruction provides contextual detail about these venues. The synthesis has not attempted to map elenctic practice onto its specific social and spatial contexts. Robertson’s judgment on whether the venue matters for the character of the method — whether the agora elenchus differs from the symposium elenchus — is needed.

Gap 3b — The role of the audience in documented elenctic exchanges. Several of the primary dialogues have audiences present — Protagoras most prominently. Whether the elenchus is addressed to the interlocutor alone or performs for an audience affects how to read its structure and aims. The synthesis has not resolved this. Robertson’s contextual judgment is needed.


Gap Type 4 — Divergence Adjudication Gaps

Gap 4a — Aporia as terminal state vs. aporia as stage (Divergence 2). The primary synthesis finds aporia as the characteristic terminal state of the early dialogues; Robertson’s documented reading consistently treats aporia as a productive stage toward further inquiry. The Meno slave boy passage supports Robertson’s reading for that dialogue; the early aporetic dialogues support the synthesis’s reading more broadly. Robertson’s judgment is needed on whether his staging account can be sustained across the full range of early dialogues or whether the Meno paradigm is being applied more broadly than the texts warrant.

Gap 4b — The divine mission framing as load-bearing or contextual (Divergence 1). The synthesis finds the divine mission framing in the Apology to be a genuine feature of Socrates’s account of his own method, not merely biographical decoration. Robertson’s reading treats it as contextual. The divergence cannot be adjudicated from the texts alone: it requires a judgment about how much weight the Apology’s self-characterization should carry in an account of the method that is supposed to be universally applicable. Robertson’s judgment on this is needed.

Gap 4c — The Xenophontic alignment (Divergence 3). The synthesis notes that Robertson’s CBT-constructive reading of the elenchus is closer to the Xenophontic portrait than to the Platonic aporetic portrait, but that Robertson does not address this alignment explicitly. Robertson’s judgment on whether this observation is accurate — whether his reading is implicitly Xenophontic — and on what grounds he prefers the Platonic sources while reaching Xenophontic conclusions is needed.


Gap Type 5 — Passage-to-Claim Assignment Gaps

Gap 5a — Meno 84a–c as evidence for productive aporia. The synthesis has assigned the claim “aporia is presented as a positive epistemic state” to this passage. Robertson’s judgment on whether 84a–c warrants that assignment for the early dialogues generally, or whether it is specific to the Meno’s context (the theory of recollection, the slave boy’s particular situation), is needed.

Gap 5b — Theaetetus 148e–151d as description of the early Socratic method. The synthesis has used the midwifery passage as a description of the elenctic method applicable to the early dialogues. The Theaetetus is generally dated to Plato’s middle or late period. Robertson’s judgment on whether the midwifery metaphor applies retrospectively to the early elenctic dialogues or represents a later Platonic characterization of a method that had evolved is needed.

Gap 5c — Aristotle Sophistical Refutations 183b as corroboration of Socratic ignorance. The synthesis has used this passage as corroboration that Socrates did not answer questions because he confessed ignorance. Robertson’s judgment on whether Aristotle’s brief account here is independently reliable or is derivative of the Platonic portrait is needed.


Gap Type 6 — Coverage Gaps

The following sources in Robertson’s public record were not fully accessible for this run: the full text of The Philosophy of Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy (2nd ed.) chapter-by-chapter; his documented lecture series and conference presentations not available in text form; any unpublished or forthcoming work. Robertson is positioned to identify whether any of these sources contain readings of the elenchus that differ from or supplement the documented positions mapped in Step 3.

  • Each gap stated with enough precision to be actionable? Yes. ✓
  • Generic hedges removed and replaced with specific gaps? Yes. ✓
  • Gap Minimization? No. ✓
  • Gap Inflation? No. ✓
  • Coverage gaps declared? Yes. ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. Proceeding to Step 5.


Step 5 — Demonstration Summary

Governing question: What has this run demonstrated, and what does it mean for how Robertson and AI might work together?

Part A — What AI Has Contributed

The primary source synthesis ranged across fourteen ancient texts in Step 2, producing a structured map of the elenchus across Plato’s early dialogues, Xenophon, Aristotle, and Diogenes Laërtius. It identified ten distinct claims in the primary record, organized them by source, and mapped agreements and tensions across the corpus. It produced this synthesis independently — before consulting Robertson’s documented record — and the Step 3 comparison then mapped Robertson’s documented positions against it.

The most significant convergence findings are Convergences 1, 2, and 3: Robertson’s documented account of the elenchus is accurate on its most distinctive structural features — the ti esti demand, the negative-interrogative character, and Socratic professed ignorance. The primary synthesis independently reaches the same readings Robertson has documented. This confirms that his account of these features is not idiosyncratic.

The most significant Addition finding is Addition 1: Robertson’s biographical and historical reconstruction of Socrates’s context contributes a layer of organization that the primary sources contain but do not themselves supply. This is a genuine scholarly contribution that AI independent ranging across the ancient texts does not produce.

Part B — Where Robertson’s Judgment Is Needed

Three gaps are most consequential for the synthesis as a whole.

Gap 4a is the most significant: whether Robertson’s staging account of aporia — which the synthesis finds applied more broadly than the early dialogues straightforwardly support — can be sustained across the full range of early aporetic dialogues or whether the Meno paradigm has been selectively extended. This gap directly affects how the elenchus’s characteristic terminal state is characterized, which is the most significant divergence between the primary synthesis and Robertson’s documented reading.

Gap 4c follows from it: if Robertson’s constructive, progressive reading of the elenchus is closer to the Xenophontic portrait than to the Platonic aporetic portrait, the question of which tradition he is actually drawing on — and whether his reading of the Platonic dialogues is importing Xenophontic conclusions — is one that his expertise is specifically positioned to address.

Gap 1a bears on the entire synthesis: the translation of elenchos is not a terminological preference but a substantive interpretive choice that affects whether the method is read as primarily negative and adversarial or as primarily investigative and collaborative. Robertson’s documented reading consistently favors the collaborative reading; the primary synthesis has preserved the tension. His judgment on which reading the full range of primary sources supports is needed.

Part C — The Working Relationship

This run has produced, in the time it takes to read, a structured map of fourteen primary ancient sources, ten identified claims, four agreement-tension pairs, and nine expert validation gaps organized into six categories. Producing that map manually — locating passages, cross-referencing sources, identifying convergences and tensions, organizing them into a structured synthesis — is the kind of work that takes hours of careful reading. AI can do it in minutes. The map it produces is not authoritative: it contains translation choices Robertson may contest, source weightings he may revise, and passage-to-claim assignments he may find inadequate. That is precisely the point.

Robertson’s expertise does what the synthesis cannot do: it evaluates whether the synthesis has made the right choices; identifies where the primary record has been read too quickly or too selectively; brings knowledge of the scholarly literature, the Greek text, and the contextual history that the instrument cannot access at the level of judgment required. The nine gaps declared at Step 4 are not admissions of AI failure. They are the honest account of where AI stops and scholarship begins.

Robertson has expressed skepticism about AI’s usefulness in his domain. The SEI does not contest that skepticism where it applies — AI cannot do philosophy, cannot read Greek with scholarly judgment, cannot evaluate whether a translation is adequate to the philosophical stakes of the original. What the SEI demonstrates is that there is a layer of work — primary source ranging, claim inventory, agreement-tension mapping — that AI can perform in service of the scholar’s judgment rather than in competition with it. The instrument is designed to produce not an answer but a better-organized set of questions for the expert to answer.

  • Part A includes Addition findings crediting Robertson’s contribution honestly? Yes. ✓
  • Part B identifies the most consequential gaps? Yes. ✓
  • Part C states the working relationship without inflating AI’s contribution? Yes. ✓
  • Philosophical claims excluded from demonstration summary? Yes. ✓
  • Summary addressed to Robertson rather than a general audience? Yes. ✓

Self-Audit Complete — No Failures Detected. SEI run complete.


Scholar Engagement Instrument (SEI) v1.0 — Demonstration Run. Target: The Socratic Elenchus. Scholar: Donald J. Robertson. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling’s corpus. Prose rendering: Claude. 2026.

The Scholar Engagement Instrument (SEI) — Version 1.0

 

The Scholar Engagement Instrument (SEI) — Version 1.0

Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling’s corpus. Prose rendering: Claude. 2026.


I. Purpose and Governing Question

The Scholar Engagement Instrument (SEI) is a demonstration instrument. Its governing question is:

What can AI contribute to a scholar’s research through independent primary source synthesis, and where does the scholar’s expert judgment become architecturally necessary?

The SEI is addressed to scholars who are skeptical of AI’s usefulness in their domain of expertise. Its purpose is not to argue for AI in the abstract. It is to demonstrate, through a concrete and specific run, two things simultaneously: what AI can do with the scholar’s field that would take him significant time to do manually, and where AI stops and his expertise necessarily begins. The demonstration is structural, not rhetorical. The expert validation gaps the SEI declares are not hedges or disclaimers. They are the instrument’s honest account of what it cannot resolve.

The SEI operates at the historical-textual layer. It does not issue philosophical findings. Doctrinal evaluation of what ancient texts mean philosophically belongs to instruments designed for that function. The SEI asks what the ancient record contains, how it maps, and where the scholarly record agrees, extends, or diverges — and it stops there.


II. What the SEI Is Not

The SEI is not an audit instrument. It does not evaluate the scholar’s presuppositions, findings, or philosophical commitments. It does not issue verdicts on the quality of the scholar’s work. It does not position AI as superior to or independent of scholarly expertise. An SEI run that produces findings embarrassing to the scholar has misused the instrument.

The SEI is not a research replacement. Its primary source synthesis is a starting point, not a conclusion. The scholar’s job after an SEI run is not to check whether AI got it right. It is to bring the judgment the instrument has declared it cannot provide.

The SEI is not a philosophical instrument. The distinction between the historical-textual layer and the philosophical layer is architecturally mandatory. A run that crosses from “what does this passage say” to “what does this passage mean philosophically” has drifted outside the SEI’s scope. The boundary must be maintained explicitly at every step.


III. The Two-Layer Architecture

The SEI produces output at two distinct layers, in strict sequence. Mixing the layers is a named failure mode.

Layer One — Primary Source Synthesis. AI ranges across the primary ancient record independently, before consulting the scholar’s work. The synthesis is the instrument’s independent contribution. It must be produced without reference to the scholar’s documented positions. A synthesis produced after consulting the scholar’s work is a reconstruction of the scholar’s reading, not an independent primary synthesis. The demonstrative value of the SEI depends on this independence being genuine.

Layer Two — Scholar Comparison. The instrument maps the scholar’s documented positions, citations, and interpretations against the primary synthesis. The scholar’s work is the comparison layer throughout — never the authoritative layer. The instrument ranges across the scholar’s public record as broadly as available sources permit. Gaps in coverage are declared at Step 4.


IV. Verdict Architecture

The SEI does not use the verdict categories of the audit instruments. Its output categories are descriptive, not evaluative.

Primary Synthesis Output: A structured map of the ancient record on the target concept. Organized by source, by claim, by agreement and tension across sources. Not a verdict — a map.

Scholar Comparison Output: Four categories.

Convergence — the scholar’s documented record aligns with the primary synthesis on this point. The scholar has reached the same reading the instrument independently produces.

Divergence — the scholar’s documented interpretation differs from the primary synthesis on this point. The instrument does not adjudicate which is correct. It identifies the divergence precisely and assigns it to the expert validation gap declaration.

Addition — the scholar’s scholarship contributes material, context, or connection that the primary synthesis missed or understated. The instrument registers this as a genuine scholarly contribution that AI independent ranging did not produce.

Extension — the scholar’s interpretation goes beyond what the primary sources plainly support. The instrument notes this without evaluating whether the extension is warranted. That evaluation belongs to the scholar’s peers, not to the SEI.

Expert Validation Gap Declaration: A structured inventory of specific judgment calls the instrument cannot resolve. Six gap types: (1) Translation choice gaps — where the instrument has made a translation choice the scholar may contest; (2) Attribution gaps — where multiple defensible readings of a passage’s author, date, or source exist; (3) Historical-contextual gaps — where the judgment call requires knowledge of context beyond what the text itself contains; (4) Divergence adjudication gaps — where the scholar’s documented reading and the primary synthesis diverge and the divergence cannot be resolved from the text alone; (5) Passage-to-claim assignment gaps — where the instrument has assigned a claim to a passage and the scholar is specifically positioned to evaluate whether the assignment holds; (6) Coverage gaps — sources in the scholar’s public record that were unavailable or inaccessible for this run.


V. Named Failure Modes

Failure Mode 1 — Gap Minimization. The instrument understates the expert validation gaps in order to make AI appear more capable or complete than it is. This undermines the demonstration’s honesty and produces a false picture of what AI can contribute independently. A scholar who discovers minimized gaps will distrust the entire output.

Failure Mode 2 — Gap Inflation. The instrument overstates the gaps, producing a synthesis so hedged that it demonstrates nothing useful. The demonstrative purpose requires genuine contribution from the primary synthesis layer. A run in which every finding is immediately qualified by an expert gap has failed to show what AI can do.

Failure Mode 3 — Scholar Subordination. The instrument treats the scholar’s documented work as the primary source layer rather than the comparison layer. The primary synthesis is then a reconstruction of the scholar’s reading dressed as independent AI work. This is the most consequential failure mode because it corrupts the architectural foundation of the demonstration.

Failure Mode 4 — Rhetorical Hedging. The instrument replaces structural, specific expert gaps with generic disclaimers: “please verify with an expert,” “scholarly judgment is required.” These add no information. Each gap must be stated with enough precision that the scholar can see exactly what his judgment is needed for and why. Rhetorical hedging is Gap Inflation at the level of form rather than substance.

Failure Mode 5 — Scope Drift. The instrument issues philosophical findings rather than historical-textual ones. The SEI operates at the textual layer: what the sources say, where they agree and differ, what the scholar’s documented work adds or diverges. Doctrinal evaluation of what those sources mean philosophically is outside the SEI’s reach. Scope drift produces the appearance of philosophical competence the instrument cannot honestly claim.

Failure Mode 6 — Independence Violation. The instrument consults the scholar’s work during Layer One rather than after it. The primary synthesis must be produced before the scholar comparison layer. Violation produces a synthesis that is not independent and cannot demonstrate independent AI leverage. This failure may be invisible in the output and requires explicit self-audit at Step 2.


VI. Operational Protocol

Execute all steps in strict sequence. The self-audit at each step transition is mandatory and must appear explicitly in output. It is not an internal check.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Before executing any SEI run, confirm the following.

The target concept, doctrine, or textual question has been received and is stated in propositional form. If the input is expressed as a question, it is restated as a proposition before analysis begins.

The scholar has been identified by name. The instrument will range across the scholar’s public record — books, articles, published lectures, recorded interviews, online publications — as broadly as available sources permit. No pre-specification of works is required. Coverage gaps discovered during the run are declared at Step 4.

The instrument is not operating under a prior conclusion about what the synthesis will find or how the scholar’s record will compare to it. The output is produced by the analysis, not confirmed by it.

Self-Audit — Step 0:

  • Has the target been stated in propositional form?
  • Has the scholar been identified by name?
  • Has any prior conclusion about the synthesis or comparison findings been stated or implied?

Self-Audit Complete. State result explicitly. Proceed to Step 1.


Step 1 — Target Specification

Governing question: What is the target, what are its textual boundaries, and which primary ancient sources are most likely to bear on it?

State the target concept, doctrine, or textual question precisely. Identify the dimensions of the target that are historical-textual — within the SEI’s scope — and those that are philosophical — outside the SEI’s scope. A philosophical dimension that appears in the target must be noted and excluded from the synthesis. The instrument does not follow philosophical questions into doctrinal territory.

Identify the primary ancient sources most likely to bear on the target. The SEI’s primary source range for Stoic and Socratic subjects includes: Plato’s dialogues; Epictetus (Discourses, Enchiridion, Fragments); Marcus Aurelius (Meditations); Xenophon (Memorabilia, Symposium, Apology); Diogenes Laërtius (Lives of the Eminent Philosophers, Book VII); Seneca (Letters, Essays); Cicero (Tusculan Disputations, De Finibus, De Officiis); Chrysippus and early Stoics via doxography (Stobaeus, Arius Didymus, Alexander of Aphrodisias). Sources outside this range are included when the target warrants it, with the source identified explicitly.

State the scope boundaries: what the SEI will examine, and what it will not. A narrow, well-bounded target produces a more useful demonstration than a broad one. If the target as received is too broad for a single run, the instrument narrows it and states the narrowing explicitly before proceeding.

Self-Audit — Step 1:

  • Has the target been stated precisely, with historical-textual and philosophical dimensions distinguished?
  • Have the primary ancient sources most likely to bear on the target been identified?
  • Have the scope boundaries been stated explicitly?
  • Has the scholar’s work been consulted at this step? If so, Independence Violation has occurred. Stop and restart Step 1.

Self-Audit Complete. State result explicitly. Proceed to Step 2.


Step 2 — Primary Source Synthesis

Governing question: What does the primary ancient record say about this target, ranging independently across the sources identified in Step 1?

The scholar’s work is not consulted at this step. The synthesis must be produced from the primary sources alone. This independence is architecturally mandatory and must be confirmed explicitly in the self-audit.

Produce the primary synthesis in four parts.

Part A — Source Map. Which primary sources contain material bearing on the target? List them with specific passage references where identifiable. A source is included only if it has content bearing on the target — not because it is an important source in general.

Part B — Claim Inventory. What claims do the primary sources make about the target? State each claim with its source. Where multiple sources make the same claim, note the convergence. Where sources make different claims about the same point, note the tension.

Part C — Agreement and Tension Map. Where do the primary sources agree, and where are they in tension? Some tensions are irresolvable from the text alone. Some are irresolvable because the relevant ancient texts are lost and survive only in doxography. Both types are identified and distinguished.

Part D — Open Questions. What questions about the target does the primary record leave open? These are not failures of the synthesis — they are the honest boundaries of what the ancient texts settle. They feed directly into the expert validation gap declaration at Step 4.

Self-Audit — Step 2:

  • Has the scholar’s work been consulted at any point during this step? If so, Independence Violation has occurred. The synthesis is contaminated and must be restarted.
  • Are all claims in the synthesis traceable to specific primary sources?
  • Have tensions been identified rather than smoothed over?
  • Have philosophical claims been excluded from the synthesis, or has Scope Drift occurred?

Self-Audit Complete. State result explicitly. Proceed to Step 3.


Step 3 — Scholar Comparison Layer

Governing question: How does the scholar’s documented record map against the primary synthesis produced in Step 2?

The scholar’s public record is now consulted. Range as broadly as available sources permit: books, articles, published lectures, recorded interviews, online publications including blog posts, Substack, and documented public exchanges. Sources consulted are listed at the opening of this step. Sources unavailable or inaccessible are noted for the coverage gap declaration at Step 4.

Map the scholar’s documented positions against the primary synthesis using the four output categories.

Convergence. State the point of convergence, the primary synthesis claim it corresponds to, and the scholar’s documented source. Where the scholar and the primary synthesis reach the same reading independently, note this explicitly — it is evidence that the primary synthesis is not idiosyncratic.

Divergence. State the point of divergence precisely: what the primary synthesis finds, what the scholar’s documented record says, and why they differ. Do not adjudicate. Assign the divergence to the expert validation gap declaration at Step 4 with a statement of what the scholar’s judgment is needed to resolve.

Addition. State what the scholar’s scholarship contributes that the primary synthesis did not independently produce. Additions are genuine scholarly contributions — they belong in the demonstration summary as evidence of what expert knowledge adds to AI independent ranging.

Extension. Note where the scholar’s interpretation goes beyond what the primary sources plainly support. Do not evaluate whether the extension is warranted. State what the extension claims and what the primary sources contain, and assign the question to the expert validation gap declaration.

Self-Audit — Step 3:

  • Has the scholar’s work been treated as the comparison layer, not the authoritative layer?
  • Have Divergences been assigned to the gap declaration rather than adjudicated?
  • Have Extensions been noted without evaluation?
  • Have Additions been registered honestly, including those that strengthen the scholar’s contribution relative to the primary synthesis?
  • Has Scope Drift occurred — have philosophical findings been issued at this step?

Self-Audit Complete. State result explicitly. Proceed to Step 4.


Step 4 — Expert Validation Gap Declaration

Governing question: What specific judgment calls does this run require that only the scholar’s expertise can resolve?

Produce the gap declaration in six categories. Each gap is stated with enough precision that the scholar can see exactly what his judgment is needed for and why. Generic hedges are not gaps. A gap declaration that cannot be acted on by the scholar has failed.

Gap Type 1 — Translation Choice Gaps. Where the primary synthesis has made a translation choice for a Greek, Latin, or other ancient language term, state the term, the translation chosen, the alternative translations available, and why the choice matters for the synthesis. The scholar’s judgment on the correct translation in context is needed here.

Gap Type 2 — Attribution Gaps. Where a passage’s author, date, authenticity, or source is disputed or uncertain, state the dispute, the assumption the synthesis has proceeded on, and the alternative attribution. The scholar’s judgment on the more defensible attribution is needed here.

Gap Type 3 — Historical-Contextual Gaps. Where the synthesis has made an assumption about historical context — the circumstances of a text’s composition, the intellectual environment in which a doctrine emerged, the intended audience of a passage — that requires knowledge beyond what the text itself contains, state the assumption and what contextual judgment is needed to evaluate it.

Gap Type 4 — Divergence Adjudication Gaps. For each Divergence identified in Step 3, restate it here as a gap: what the primary synthesis finds, what the scholar’s documented record says, and what the scholar’s judgment is needed to determine. These are the gaps most directly useful to the scholar — they are points at which his own documented reading and the AI’s independent synthesis differ, and he is positioned to evaluate which is more defensible.

Gap Type 5 — Passage-to-Claim Assignment Gaps. Where the synthesis has assigned a specific claim to a specific passage, and where that assignment is contestable — where the passage might support a different claim, or might not support the assigned claim as well as the synthesis implies — state the assignment and what the scholar’s judgment is needed to evaluate.

Gap Type 6 — Coverage Gaps. State which sources in the scholar’s public record were unavailable or inaccessible for this run. State what those sources address, as far as is known from other documented references to them. The scholar is positioned to identify whether the coverage gaps affect any of the synthesis findings or comparison layer conclusions.

Self-Audit — Step 4:

  • Is each gap stated with enough precision to be actionable by the scholar?
  • Have generic hedges been removed and replaced with specific gap statements?
  • Has Gap Minimization occurred — have real gaps been suppressed to make the synthesis appear more complete?
  • Has Gap Inflation occurred — have non-gaps been added to appear appropriately humble?
  • Are coverage gaps declared accurately and completely?

Self-Audit Complete. State result explicitly. Proceed to Step 5.


Step 5 — Demonstration Summary

Governing question: What has the run demonstrated, and what does it mean for how this scholar and AI might work together?

Produce the demonstration summary in three parts. The summary is addressed to the scholar. It does not argue for AI in general. It draws exclusively on what this specific run has produced.

Part A — AI’s Contribution. State what the primary source synthesis has contributed: what it ranged across, what it mapped, what it found that organizes the ancient record on the target. Identify the most significant convergence findings from Step 3 — where independent AI synthesis and the scholar’s documented reading reached the same result. This is evidence that the synthesis is not idiosyncratic. Identify the most significant Addition findings — where the scholar’s scholarship contributed material the synthesis did not independently produce. This is evidence that the scholar’s expertise adds to what AI can do, not the reverse.

Part B — Where the Scholar’s Judgment Is Needed. State the most significant expert validation gaps from Step 4. Do not list all gaps in full — the full declaration is at Step 4. State the two or three gaps that are most consequential for the synthesis as a whole: the gaps whose resolution would most significantly affect the synthesis findings. This is the demonstration’s core claim: here is precisely what AI cannot determine, and here is why the scholar’s expertise is the appropriate instrument for determining it.

Part C — The Working Relationship. State what AI and the scholar can each contribute that the other cannot. AI can range across the primary ancient record in minutes, cross-reference sources, identify tensions, and produce a structured synthesis that would take significant time to produce manually. The scholar can evaluate the synthesis against his knowledge of the ancient languages, the textual tradition, the historical context, and the scholarly record — and he can identify where the synthesis has made contestable choices that the text does not force. Neither can do the other’s work. The SEI run is evidence of both halves of this claim simultaneously.

The demonstration summary does not make philosophical claims. It does not issue verdicts on the target concept. It does not position AI as having understood what the ancient sources mean. It demonstrates what AI can map and where expert judgment begins.

Self-Audit — Step 5:

  • Does Part A include Addition findings that credit the scholar’s contribution honestly?
  • Does Part B identify the most consequential gaps, not the most comfortable ones?
  • Does Part C state the working relationship without inflating AI’s contribution or deflating the scholar’s?
  • Have philosophical claims been excluded from the demonstration summary?
  • Is the summary addressed to the scholar rather than to a general audience?

Self-Audit Complete. State result explicitly. SEI run complete.


VII. Instrument Limitations

The SEI can demonstrate AI’s contribution to historical-textual scholarship and identify the specific points at which expert judgment is architecturally necessary. It cannot:

Determine whether the primary source synthesis is correct. That determination requires the scholar’s expertise and is the primary purpose of the expert validation gap declaration.

Issue philosophical findings. The SEI operates at the textual layer. What the ancient sources mean philosophically is outside its reach.

Replace the scholar’s judgment at any of the six gap types. The gaps are structural — they arise from the limits of what AI can determine from text alone, from available translations, and from the accessible record. They are not rhetorical. They cannot be closed by further ranging.

Guarantee that its primary source synthesis does not contain pattern-completion errors — cases where AI has produced a plausible-sounding synthesis that misrepresents what the sources actually contain. The expert validation gap declaration is the instrument’s honest acknowledgment that such errors are possible and that the scholar’s corrective judgment is needed. This limitation applies to every SEI run without exception.


The Scholar Engagement Instrument (SEI) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling’s corpus. Prose rendering: Claude. 2026.

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Stoic Training for High-Magnitude Life Events: A General Template

 

Stoic Training for High-Magnitude Life Events: A General Template

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

Corpus in use: The Little Enchiridion (Enchiridion Sections 1–5 and 30, Oldfather translation; Sterling introduction; indifferents chapter); Nine Excerpts from Grant C. Sterling (Excerpts 7 and 10); Sterling Logic Engine v4.0; Core Stoicism.


I. Training, Not Therapy

Sterling’s foundational claim is that Stoicism is training, not therapy. This distinction is not rhetorical. It determines what the system can promise, what it cannot promise, and what it is designed to do.

Therapy operates on distress already present. It aims to reduce, manage, or integrate negative emotional states. Its target is the suffering person as he currently stands, and its measure of success is relief or adjustment.

Training operates on the rational faculty before, during, and after events. Its target is the assent mechanism — the point at which impressions are accepted or refused. Its goal is not reduced distress but correct judgment: the habit of assenting only to true impressions and refusing false ones, including the false impression that any external event constitutes a genuine evil.

This distinction carries a practical consequence. A training document cannot honestly promise that distress will be reduced. What it can promise is that correct judgment, built through disciplined practice, eliminates the false assents that generate pathē. Distress that follows from a false assent already made cannot be directly extirpated. What can be done — and what this template addresses — is the long work of building the rational faculty so that false assents become progressively less probable.

The events addressed in this template are among those most likely to trigger false assents. That is why training for them is consequential.


II. The Events This Template Addresses

Research into life stressors — catalogued most famously in the Holmes–Rahe Social Readjustment Rating Scale — has identified the events that most consistently impose high demands on human beings. The list includes death of a spouse, divorce, marital separation, imprisonment, death of a close family member, serious personal illness or injury, job dismissal, retirement, major financial disruption, marriage, relocation, and acute family conflict, among others.

From the standpoint of the corpus, these events share a precise classification: they are externals — body, property, social relations, social position — and the impressions they generate carry strong value charges. Death of a spouse arrives as something genuinely evil has occurred. Job dismissal arrives as I have been harmed. Serious illness arrives as my body, which is genuinely valuable, is being destroyed. In each case the value charge embedded in the impression is false. None of these events is a genuine evil. All of them are dispreferred indifferents of high magnitude.

The magnitude is what makes the false assent probable. Ordinary daily disruptions — a traffic delay, a missed appointment — carry mild value charges that a partially trained rational faculty can resist without great difficulty. The events on the Holmes–Rahe scale carry impressions of sufficient force that even a well-practiced rational faculty may fail to withhold assent. That is why these events require a specific training program, not merely a reminder of the general doctrine.

These events cluster into four types:

  • Loss events: death of a spouse or close family member, divorce, marital separation.
  • Transition events: marriage, retirement, relocation, major role change.
  • Disruption events: personal injury, serious illness, imprisonment, financial collapse, job dismissal.
  • Relational conflict events: acute family conflict, marital difficulty, legal disputes.

Each type generates characteristic impressions and characteristic false assents. The general template applies to all four. Specific training documents derived from this template would address each type in detail.


III. The Four Textual Foundations

The training structure of this document rests on four texts. Each supplies a distinct element of the architecture.

Enchiridion Section 3 — The Continuous Labeling Practice

“With everything which entertains you, is useful, or of which you are fond, remember to say to yourself, beginning with the very least things, ‘What is its nature?’ If you are fond of a jug, say, ‘I am fond of a jug’; for when it is broken you will not be disturbed. If you kiss your own child or wife, say to yourself that you are kissing a human being; for when it dies you will not be disturbed.”

This is a daily practice, not an emergency procedure. It operates on ordinary life — trivial attachments first, significant attachments progressively — and builds the habit of correct ontological classification before any disruption occurs.

Enchiridion Section 4 — The Situational Pre-Event Rehearsal

“When you are on the point of putting your hand to some undertaking, remind yourself what the nature of that undertaking is… And thus you will set about your undertaking more securely if at the outset you say to yourself, ‘I want to take a bath, and, at the same time, to keep my moral purpose in harmony with nature.’”

This is anticipatory reflection before a specific engagement. Where Section 3 operates continuously and without a specific event in view, Section 4 is deployed situationally — before an anticipated encounter whose difficulty is already known.

Sterling’s Excerpt 10 — Rational Action Under Actual Conditions

“On the Stoic view, my ‘action’ is my choice, not anything I physically do… So it is utterly irrelevant if I am hit by a car before I get there, or my colleague changes his mind and decides not to go, or the restaurant turns out to be closed when I get there… All outcomes are out of our control and in the hands of the gods — hence, it would be irrational as well as productive of misery for us to assume that we can actually produce any outcome.” (Grant C. Sterling)

This excerpt supplies the architecture for rational engagement during actual events: identify rational goals, select rational means, make all choices with the explicit reservation that outcomes are not in one’s control. The restaurant being closed does not disturb the agent because he was never aiming at eating there as a genuine good — only as a preferred indifferent, with reservation.

Enchiridion Section 30 — Relational Duties Under Disruption

“Our duties are in general measured by our social relationships… ‘My brother does me wrong.’ Very well, then, maintain the relation that you have toward him; and do not consider what he is doing, but what you will have to do, if your moral purpose is to be in harmony with nature.”

Duty is determined by the relation, not by whether the other party fulfills his side of it. Applied to the Holmes–Rahe events — divorce, bereavement, family conflict, marital separation — the governing question is always: what does this relation require of me, regardless of what has occurred or what the other party has done?


IV. The Training Structure

Phase One: Pre-Event Training

Mode A — Continuous Labeling (Enchiridion Section 3)

The foundational training practice is daily. With every attachment — every relationship, every role, every valued external — the prokoptōn practices correct labeling: what is its nature? A spouse is a human being — mortal, an external, a preferred indifferent. A job is a social position — an external. Health is the condition of a body, which is an external. Income is property, an external. Beginning with trivial attachments and working progressively toward the most significant, this practice builds the habit of correct ontological classification before any disruption occurs.

The purpose is not cold detachment. The Stoic who practices Section 3 does not cease to love his spouse or aim at his health. He pursues them as preferred indifferents — appropriate objects of rational aim — while holding no desire for them in the technical sense, because desire involves the false judgment that they are genuine goods. The aim is rational. The desire is absent. These are two different things, and keeping them distinct is the whole work of this mode.

The training benefit is this: when the event arrives — the death, the illness, the dismissal — the impression meets a prepared rational faculty. The false value charge in the impression (“something genuinely evil has occurred”) arrives at a mind that has been practicing correct classification of that very attachment. The correct assent is not guaranteed, but it is vastly more probable than it would be for an unprepared faculty.

Practical instruction: Begin with objects of minor attachment — material possessions, comfort habits, daily conveniences — and practice naming their nature correctly. “This is a jug.” “This is a car.” “This is a morning routine.” Then work progressively toward persons and roles. “This is my colleague.” “This is my role as manager.” “This is my income.” “This is my health.” “This is my spouse.” “This is my child.” Each is a human being — mortal, subject to illness, subject to loss. Each role is a social position — subject to change, dismissal, and dissolution. The practice is daily. It does not require formal periods of contemplation; it is embedded in ordinary life as a consistent habit of mind, called up wherever the occasion presents itself.

Mode B — Situational Rehearsal (Enchiridion Section 4)

When a high-magnitude event is anticipated — a serious medical appointment, a scheduled legal proceeding, an impending job review, a known family confrontation — the situational pre-event rehearsal is deployed before the encounter. The agent sets before himself the likely nature of what he is about to face: not to catastrophize, but to ensure that the rational faculty is already aligned before the impression arrives.

“I am about to attend the medical appointment. I want to attend, and I also want to keep my rational faculty in harmony with nature. If the news is serious, I have the resources to receive it correctly, because I have already set before myself what kind of thing I am entering and what kind of outcomes may come.”

This mode presupposes that the event is known in advance. It cannot substitute for the continuous practice of Mode A when disruption arrives without warning. The two modes are not alternatives but complements: Mode A prepares the rational faculty for the unannounced; Mode B sharpens that preparation for the anticipated.


Phase Two: Engagement Under Actual Conditions

When the event occurs, the work of the moment is rational action under actual conditions. Sterling’s Excerpt 10 supplies the operative architecture:

  • Identify rational goals — what is the appropriate object of aim in this situation, given the relation and the role?
  • Select rational means — what acts of will are rationally required to pursue that goal?
  • Make all choices with reservation — with the explicit recognition that outcomes are not in one’s control and are in the hands of Providence.

The reserve clause is architecturally essential, not decorative. The moment an agent begins to require a particular outcome — to stake his equanimity on whether the medical news is tolerable, whether the divorce settlement is favorable, whether the dismissed job is recovered — he has converted a preferred indifferent into an object of desire, and the false value judgment has re-entered through that conversion.

The restaurant is closed; the agent is not disturbed, because he was never aiming at eating there as a genuine good. Applied to high-magnitude events: the diagnosis is severe — the agent is not destroyed, because he was never aiming at continued health as a genuine good, only as a preferred indifferent pursued with reservation. The position is lost — the agent is not shattered, because he was never aiming at continued employment as a genuine good. The outcome belongs to Providence. What was in the agent’s control — the quality of his aim, the rationality of his choice of means — is already complete at the moment of choice, regardless of what follows.

Sterling states this directly: “So my action is my choice, and as such it is appropriate (or inappropriate) at the instant the choice is made. So it is utterly irrelevant if I am hit by a car before I get there… I have already made the choice, and it is already appropriate or inappropriate.”


Phase Three: Relational Navigation

Most of the events on the Holmes–Rahe scale are relational disruptions or carry a significant relational dimension. Bereavement places the agent in relation with grieving family members. Divorce places him in ongoing relation with a former spouse, with children, with legal processes. Serious illness places him in relation with medical practitioners, family members, and employers. Job dismissal places him in relation with former colleagues, new employers, and financial institutions. Even events that appear individual — retirement, relocation — are disruptions of existing relational structures.

Enchiridion Section 30 supplies the governing principle for all of these: duty is measured by the relation, not by the conduct of the other party.

“Did nature, then, bring you into relationship with a good father? No, but simply with a father.”

The divorcing spouse may be acting unjustly. The dismissing employer may be acting wrongly. The grieving family member may be making false assents and demanding that the agent join him in them. None of this alters what the relation requires of the agent. The question is always: what does this relation, as it now stands, require of me, if my rational faculty is to be in harmony with nature?

This is not passivity or withdrawal. The relation may require assertive action — legal recourse, clear statement of the truth, refusal to comply with injustice. What Section 30 prohibits is assent to the impression that the other party’s conduct has determined whether the agent can fulfill his own role correctly. That assent is false. The other party does not determine the agent’s prohairesis. His conduct is an external.

Post-event, the relational navigation continues for as long as the relation continues. The template provides no terminus. Section 30 governs the ongoing engagements: look to the relation, determine what it requires, act from that determination without desire for any particular outcome, and with reservation regarding all outcomes that follow.


V. Application Across Event Categories

The template applies to all four event clusters. The architecture is the same in each case; what differs is the characteristic impression and the characteristic false assent. Specific derived documents would develop each in full. Brief notes follow.

Loss events. The characteristic false assent is something genuinely evil has occurred or I have been robbed of a genuine good. The training in Section 3 directly targets this: the beloved was always a human being — mortal, an external, a preferred indifferent. The relation persists in its obligations even after loss; Section 30 governs the ongoing engagement with surviving family members. Pathē already present at the time of loss cannot be directly extirpated; the training cannot retroactively undo false assents already made, but it guards future assents and shapes the character over time.

Transition events. The characteristic false assent is often positive — something genuinely valuable is arriving — or involves clinging to a prior role as a genuine good whose end would constitute a genuine evil. Marriage generates attachments that require the continuous labeling practice from the outset. Retirement ends a role; if that role was falsely valued as a genuine good, its loss will arrive with the full force of a loss event. Relocation ends a familiar environment; the same structure applies. The training addresses both the new attachment and the prior one.

Disruption events. The characteristic false assent is my body, property, or social position — which are genuinely valuable — is being damaged or removed. Each of these is an external and was always an external. Section 3 builds the correct classification in advance. Section 4 prepares the rational faculty for anticipated encounters with illness, legal proceedings, and financial reviews. Excerpt 10 governs the choices made during the disruption: rational aims, rational means, all with reservation.

Relational conflict events. Section 30 is the primary governing text. The other party’s conduct is outside the agent’s purview. The relation determines the duty. The characteristic false assent here is typically I have been harmed — meaning genuinely harmed, as though the other party’s action had reached inside the prohairesis and damaged it. It has not. Only the agent’s own false assents can harm him in the relevant sense. Section 5 of the Enchiridion states this with precision: “It is not the things themselves that disturb men, but their judgements about these things.”


VI. What This Template Cannot Do

This template does not eliminate pathē already established. If a false assent has been made and a pathē is already present, the training cannot directly extirpate it. The training is prospective: it guards future assents and builds correct character over time. This is not a limitation to be overcome by applying the template more energetically; it is an architectural fact about how assent and passion are related.

This template does not reduce high-magnitude events to trivialities. The events addressed carry genuine weight as dispreferred indifferents. Correct classification does not render them pleasant or inconsequential. The Stoic does not pretend that death is indifferent in the ordinary-language sense of that word. He classifies it correctly — as a dispreferred indifferent, not a genuine evil — and that classification, built through practice, is what makes correct engagement possible. The distinction between dispreferred indifferent and genuine evil is real, consequential, and governs every line of this document.

This template does not substitute for relational duties. Section 30 requires engagement with the relation, not withdrawal from it. The training does not license indifference to the persons involved. It licenses correct judgment about what the relation requires and correct aim at the welfare of those within the relation, pursued with reservation.

This template is not an emergency measure to be applied at the moment of crisis. Section 3 is a daily practice. The labeling practice must be running continuously for the pre-event preparation to be in place when unannounced disruption arrives. A practitioner who applies this document only at the moment of crisis has bypassed the architecture that makes Phase Two and Phase Three possible.


VII. Deriving Specific Training Documents

This template is a general framework. Specific training documents can be derived from it by substituting the characteristic content of a specific event type into the general architecture. The derivation procedure:

  • Identify the event type and its cluster (loss, transition, disruption, relational conflict).
  • Name the characteristic impressions that event type generates.
  • Name the characteristic false assents those impressions typically produce.
  • Apply the three-phase training structure with that specific content in place: Phase One (continuous labeling of the relevant attachments; situational rehearsal if the event is anticipated), Phase Two (rational goals, rational means, reserve clause under actual conditions), Phase Three (relational navigation — what the affected relations require, regardless of the other party’s conduct).
  • Note which relational duties are activated by the event and how Section 30 governs them.

Candidates for immediate derivation include: training document for death of a spouse or close family member; for serious personal illness or injury; for job dismissal; for divorce; for major financial disruption; for significant relocation. Each would retain the full architecture of this document while specifying the impressions, false assents, and relational duties characteristic of that event type.


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

The Philosophical Grounding Audit (PGA) — Version 1.0

 

The Philosophical Grounding Audit (PGA) — Version 1.0

Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude.


Instrument Position

The Philosophical Grounding Audit sits in the corpus instrument hierarchy as follows. The Sterling Logic Engine audits an individual agent’s assents against the 80 propositions. The Classical Ideological Audit audits an ideology’s presuppositions against the six commitments. The Classical Presupposition Audit audits a named public figure’s argumentative presuppositions against the six commitments. The Sterling Corpus Evaluator evaluates any idea against the full corpus. The Sterling Decision Framework determines action. The Philosophical Grounding Audit tests whether the six commitments of Sterling’s Stoicism are load-bearing for any specified practical ethics — whether the commitments are the correct philosophical ground for that practical ethics, not merely consistent with it.

Every existing instrument uses the six commitments as the measuring stick. The PGA reverses the direction. The practical ethics under examination is the fixed text. The six commitments are what is being tested for their load-bearing relationship to that text. This is a different question requiring a different procedure, and no existing instrument performs it.


Part One — The Evidential Question and the Load-Bearing Standard


Section 1: Three Possible Relationships

A philosophical framework can stand in three distinct relationships to a practical ethics. The PGA recognizes all three and tests only for the third.

Consistency. The framework is compatible with the practical ethics. Its commitments do not contradict the practical ethics’ claims. This is the weakest possible relationship. A position is consistent with many things it does not require. Consistency is not evidence of grounding.

Anticipation. The framework historically precedes the practical ethics and partially generates it. The practical ethics draws from the framework’s tradition and carries some of its commitments forward. This is a stronger relationship than consistency but still insufficient. A framework can anticipate a practical ethics at some commitments and diverge from it at others. Anticipation commitment by commitment is not the same as load-bearing necessity.

Load-bearing necessity. The practical ethics structurally requires the framework. Remove any commitment and a specific element of the practical ethics fails — not weakens, fails. The argument cannot proceed as stated without that commitment doing its structural work. This is the relationship the PGA tests for. A positive finding at this level establishes that the framework is the correct philosophical ground for the practical ethics, not merely an ancestral tradition or a compatible position.

The distinction between consistency and load-bearing necessity is the instrument’s central methodological claim. It must be maintained throughout every run. Any finding that rests on consistency rather than necessity is a named failure mode.


Section 2: The Strict Evidentiary Standard

For each of the six commitments, the demonstration must meet four requirements in sequence.

First — Passage identification. A specific argument or passage in the practical ethics under examination must be identified. General appeal to the overall character of the practical ethics is insufficient. The passage must be the locus where the commitment does its structural work.

Second — Function specification. What the commitment makes possible in that specific argument must be stated. This is not a description of what the commitment is. It is a statement of what would be unavailable to the argument without the commitment — what structural work the commitment performs that no other resource in the practical ethics can perform.

Third — The load-bearing argument. The structural dependency must be constructed explicitly. The argument must show why the practical ethics’ argument requires this commitment at this point, not merely why the commitment is compatible with it or historically associated with it.

Fourth — The named failure. The failure that results from removing the commitment must be stated precisely. This is the evidentiary crux. If the failure cannot be named — if removing the commitment only weakens the argument or creates a gap that could be filled by other resources — the finding is partial rather than fully load-bearing.

All four requirements must be met for a fully load-bearing verdict on any single commitment.


Section 3: The Fairness Constraint

The demonstration must work from the actual text of the practical ethics under examination. Attribution of commitments to the practical ethics must be grounded in specific passages, not in what characteristically accompanies those commitments in philosophical discourse, and not in what the practical ethics would need to hold in order to be more fully aligned with the corpus.

The governing question at every point is: does this argument, as this author states it, structurally require this commitment? Not: would this argument be stronger with this commitment? Not: is this commitment compatible with what this author says? The question is structural requirement, and the evidence must come from the text.

Failure to apply the fairness constraint is named as Failure Mode 3 — Presupposition Substitution.


Section 4: Scope of the Instrument

The PGA operates on two categories of practical ethics.

External practical ethics. Practical ethical systems that predate or exist independently of the corpus — primarily Epictetus’s ethical psychology as expressed in the Enchiridion and the Discourses. The PGA tests whether the six commitments are load-bearing for arguments Epictetus actually makes in those texts. This is the instrument’s primary historical application and the one for which it was first developed.

Corpus practical ethics. Practical documents produced within this project — the Five-Step Method, the role manuals, the Sterling Decision Framework, the Integrated Practical Model, the Governing Narrative Poetics framework, the Correct Stoic Attitude manual, and any future corpus output that carries a claim to rest on Sterling’s theoretical foundations. The PGA tests whether that claim holds at the passage level — whether the six commitments are genuinely operative in each document’s structure, or whether the attribution line is carried without the load-bearing relationship having been demonstrated rather than assumed.

The internal audit function is the PGA’s most significant ongoing application. The corpus has grown substantially. Not every document has been subjected to commitment-by-commitment load-bearing scrutiny. The PGA provides the procedure for verifying that the practical architecture is genuinely built on the theoretical foundations rather than merely labeled as such.


Part Two — The Commitment-by-Commitment Demonstration


Section 5: Structure of Each Commitment Test

Each commitment is tested using the following four-part structure, applied to the practical ethics specified at the opening of the run.

The passage. The specific argument or passage in the practical ethics where this commitment does its structural work.

What the commitment makes possible. The structural function the commitment performs in that argument — what would be unavailable without it.

The load-bearing argument. The explicit construction of the structural dependency, showing why the argument requires this commitment at this point.

Without this commitment. The named failure that results from removing the commitment. Stated in precise terms: which specific element of the argument fails, and how.


Section 6: Verdict Architecture

Four verdicts are available per commitment.

Fully load-bearing. All four requirements of the strict evidentiary standard are met. The commitment is structurally necessary for a specific argument in the practical ethics. Without it, a named element of that argument fails as stated.

Partially load-bearing. The commitment does real structural work but the failure without it is degradation rather than collapse. The argument weakens or loses precision but does not fail entirely. The specific element that degrades must be named.

Not load-bearing. The commitment plays no structural role in the practical ethics under examination. It may be consistent with the practical ethics or historically associated with it, but the practical ethics’ arguments do not require it. No failure results from its absence.

Structural conflict. The practical ethics requires something incompatible with the commitment. This is the strongest negative finding and is distinct from “not load-bearing.” A structural conflict means the practical ethics cannot accommodate the commitment without revising one of its own arguments. The specific incompatibility must be named.


Section 7: Summary Verdict

Following the six commitment tests, a summary verdict is issued covering three questions.

First: how many of the six commitments are fully load-bearing for the practical ethics under examination? The per-commitment verdicts are collected and the pattern is identified.

Second: are any structural conflicts present? A structural conflict is a significant finding that must be addressed in the summary — it means the practical ethics and the SCPC are incompatible at that commitment, not merely that the commitment is absent.

Third: what is the overall grounding verdict? If all six commitments are fully load-bearing, the finding is: the SCPC is the correct philosophical ground for this practical ethics. If fewer than six are fully load-bearing, the summary must specify whether the gaps are absences (not load-bearing) or conflicts (structural incompatibility), and what the implication is for the grounding claim.


Section 8: Named Failure Modes

Failure Mode 1 — Consistency Substitution. Treating compatibility between a commitment and a practical ethics position as evidence of load-bearing necessity. This is the instrument’s primary failure risk because consistency is easier to establish and easier to mistake for the stronger finding. A finding that rests on the absence of contradiction rather than on structural dependency is a Consistency Substitution failure.

Failure Mode 2 — Anticipation Substitution. Treating historical precedence or partial generation as evidence of load-bearing necessity. A practical ethics may draw from a philosophical tradition that carries a commitment without that commitment being structurally required by the practical ethics’ own arguments. The historical relationship is not the grounding relationship.

Failure Mode 3 — Presupposition Substitution. Attributing to the practical ethics commitments it does not actually require, drawn from the framework under examination rather than from the text itself. The governing question is always: does this argument, as this author states it, structurally require this commitment? Importing commitments the author would need in order to be more aligned with the corpus is a Presupposition Substitution failure.

Failure Mode 4 — Scope Inflation. Claiming a commitment is load-bearing for the whole practical ethics when the passage evidence supports only that it is load-bearing for one specific argument or element. The verdict must match the scope of the evidence. A fully load-bearing verdict for one passage does not establish a fully load-bearing verdict for the practical ethics as a whole unless the passage is genuinely foundational to the whole.

Failure Mode 5 — Text Bypass. Running the demonstration from general knowledge or training-data pattern-completion rather than from the actual text of the practical ethics. The fairness constraint requires the text. Without it the load-bearing argument cannot be distinguished from what characteristically accompanies a commitment in philosophical discourse. Text Bypass is the failure mode that ruled out a general version of this instrument applicable to external philosophical frameworks without corpus grounding.


Section 9: Mandatory Self-Audit

The self-audit is conducted at each commitment transition and at the summary verdict.

  • CONSISTENCY SUBSTITUTION — Is the load-bearing argument grounded in structural dependency or in the absence of contradiction?
  • ANTICIPATION SUBSTITUTION — Is the finding grounded in what the text structurally requires or in what the text’s tradition historically carried?
  • PRESUPPOSITION SUBSTITUTION — Are all attributed commitments drawn from what the text’s own arguments require, not from what the corpus would need them to hold?
  • SCOPE INFLATION — Does the verdict match the scope of the passage evidence?
  • TEXT BYPASS — Is the argument grounded in the actual text of the practical ethics under examination?

Any failure detected at audit halts the run. The failure is stated, its grounds specified, the correct procedure identified, and the run resumes only after the corrected analysis is produced.


Section 10: Completed Runs

PGA Run One — Epictetus’s Ethical Psychology. Practical ethics: Epictetus’s ethical psychology as expressed in the Enchiridion and the Discourses. Primary sources: Enchiridion 1, 2, 5; Discourses 1.29, 4.1. Summary verdict: all six commitments fully load-bearing. The Discourses 4.1 passage (“settled on the spot, by intuition, just as in a case involving sight”) established as primary passage-level evidence for C5. Full demonstration: Document 35. Ratified by Dave Kelly, May 2026.


Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude.