Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Saturday, May 09, 2026

Manual of Stoic Rational Agency — Version 1.0

 

Manual of Stoic Rational Agency — Version 1.0

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


Preliminary: What This Manual Does and Does Not Do

This manual converts the theoretical framework of Stoic rational agency into operational instructions. It is organized around the Five-Step Method — Reception, Recognition, Pause, Examination, Decision — and integrates the six philosophical commitments and Propositions Th6–14. (Core Stoicismat each step where they are required.

This manual is not a general introduction to Stoicism. It presupposes the framework. It is not a philosophical argument for the framework's truth. The arguments appear in the source documents. What it provides is instruction: what the agent does, in sequence, when an impression arrives, and what constitutes correct and failed performance at each step.

The five steps are not five separate operations. They are one continuous act with five distinguishable moments. The manual treats them sequentially for clarity of instruction. The agent performs them as a single movement.


Foundational Orientation: What You Are Working With

Before instructions can be followed, three foundational facts must be understood. They are not suggestions or organizing principles. They are facts about the structure of the agent's situation.

Fact One: The boundary of control. The only things in your control are your beliefs and will, and anything entailed by your beliefs and will (Th6). Everything else — every external circumstance, physical outcome, other person, bodily state, and event in the world — is outside that boundary. This boundary is real, not metaphorical. It is grounded in the fact that the rational faculty is a distinct substance (substance dualism C1), not reducible to the body or to physical causes. Without this, the concept of control has no determinate meaning.

Fact Two: The causal order of desire. Desires are caused by beliefs — specifically, by judgments about what is good and what is evil (Th7). You desire what you judge to be good and desire to avoid what you judge to be evil. Because beliefs are acts of the will and therefore in your control (Th6), desires are also in your control (Th8). This is not a claim that desires are easy to change. It is a claim about what they depend on: change the belief, and the desire changes with it.

Fact Three: The structure of value. The only thing actually good is virtue. The only thing actually evil is vice (Th10). This is not a preference or a ranking. It is a moral fact that exists independently of what anyone believes, prefers, or constructs (moral realism, C6). Its immediate consequences are: since virtue and vice are types of acts of will, they are in your control (Th11); and since everything else is not in your control, externals are never genuinely good or evil (Th12). Desiring things out of your control is therefore irrational — it involves false judgment about where value lies (Th13). If you value only virtue, you will judge truly and be immune to all unhappiness (Th14).

These three facts are the operational foundation of everything that follows. Read them again before proceeding if they do not yet feel like facts rather than claims.


Chapter One: Reception

What Is Happening at This Step

An impression arrives. You have not yet done anything. Something has been presented to the rational faculty. The impression does not ask permission. It arrives and makes a claim about reality.

Two philosophical commitments are active before you act. Moral realism (C6) makes the arriving impression a claim about something real: the impression presents a circumstance as genuinely good, genuinely evil, or indifferent, and there is already a moral fact that determines whether the claim is correct. Correspondence theory (C5) specifies the character of the impression as a truth-claim: it is not merely a feeling or a psychological coloring of experience. It is a propositional claim that can be true or false, tested against how things actually are. The truth value of the impression exists before you engage with it.

What the Agent Does

At Reception, the primary task is noticing. Specifically: notice that an impression has arrived, and notice whether it contains a value component — that is, whether it is presenting something as genuinely good or genuinely evil.

Value components in arriving impressions are often embedded and concealed. The impression “I have been treated unjustly” does not announce itself as a value claim. But it contains one: it presents another person's action as something that bears on your genuine good or evil. The impression “this is a disaster” contains the claim that something bad in the genuine sense has occurred. The impression “I need this” contains the claim that the thing in question is a genuine good whose absence is a genuine evil.

At Reception, do this:

Register that an impression has arrived. Do not proceed automatically. Ask: does this impression contain a value component? Is it presenting something as genuinely good or genuinely evil? If yes, flag it. It will be examined.

What Correct Performance Looks Like

The impression is registered as an arriving claim, not as an established fact about reality. The value component, if present, is noticed before automatic assent has run. The process is not yet over — the agent has received the impression and flagged it. Nothing more has occurred.

Failure Signatures at Reception

Failure of moral realism: The impression does not arrive as a claim about something real. It arrives as a stimulus or a feeling. There is no sense that a truth-value question is in play. What follows is emotional management rather than rational engagement.

Failure of correspondence: The impression arrives but is not registered as a propositional claim that could be true or false. The value component passes unnoticed. Automatic assent runs, and the process is over before it has begun.


Chapter Two: Recognition

What Is Happening at This Step

Having received the impression, you now explicitly register what has occurred. Recognition is the cognitive act of locating yourself as distinct from the arriving claim. Two philosophical commitments are active here.

Substance dualism (C1) makes the separation real. The rational faculty is not the impression. It is not the body the impression may be about. It is not the event being presented. It is the entity that receives the presentation — the subject pole. You are the one doing the receiving, not the thing being received. This is not a meditative posture. It is a fact about what you are.

Correspondence theory (C5) continues its work. You now explicitly register the impression as a claim about reality rather than as reality itself. There is a three-way structure: you, the impression, and the reality the impression claims to represent. These are three distinct things. The impression and the reality it purports to describe are not the same thing. Registering this explicitly is Recognition.

What the Agent Does

At Recognition, the primary task is separation. Locate yourself as the subject pole — the rational faculty — and locate the impression as content that the faculty is receiving, not as reality that the faculty is inside of.

At Recognition, do this:

State explicitly to yourself: “An impression has arrived. It is making a claim. I am the one receiving the claim. I am not the claim, and I am not the situation the claim is about.” This need not be spoken aloud. It must be genuinely performed. The Three-Way Separation — between you, the impression, and the reality the impression purports to describe — must be explicit, not assumed.

What Correct Performance Looks Like

You are aware of yourself as the faculty receiving a claim, not as a person engulfed by a situation. The impression is registered as making an assertion about something — as a proposition to be evaluated, not as a reality to be reacted to. You are outside the impression in the sense that matters: you can see it as content rather than living inside it as reality.

Failure Signatures at Recognition

Failure of substance dualism (Merger): You do not separate yourself from the impression. You are the impression. The Three-Way Separation does not occur because the subject pole has not maintained its position. The impression simply is your situation. Examination is not possible from inside the impression — there is no distance from which the faculty could assess it.

Failure of correspondence: You separate yourself from the impression but do not register it as a claim about reality. You note that an impression has arrived without registering that it is making an assertion about something. What follows is management of a psychological state rather than evaluation of a truth-claim.


Chapter Three: The Pauseĺ

What Is Happening at This Step

You stop. You do not proceed immediately to act on what the impression presents. You hold the process open at the point where automatic assent would otherwise occur. The Pause is what separates genuine engagement from conditioned response.

Libertarian free will (C2) is what makes the Pause real rather than nominal. If your response to an impression is fully determined by prior causes — your character, your conditioning, your neurological constitution — then what presents itself as a Pause is a longer processing delay. The outcome was fixed before the apparent stopping occurred. What looks like a held-open moment is the determined process running its course. Libertarian free will holds that the Pause is genuinely what it presents itself as: a moment at which you, as the originating cause of your next act, hold the process open. Both paths — assent and withholding — remain genuinely available until the will moves.

Substance dualism (C1) does its work here as well. The rational faculty exercises a causal power that belongs to it and not to the physical order. The ability to interrupt the process is a power of the soul, not a function of the body. This connects directly to Th6: beliefs are in your control only if assent is genuine origination. A determined assent dissolves the control dichotomy.

What the Agent Does

At the Pause, the task is simple and the execution is the hardest thing the method asks: stop, and hold the stopping.

At the Pause, do this:

Do not assent to the impression yet. Do not act on it. Do not let the impression run to its natural conclusion — the automatic generation of desire, emotion, or response. Hold the moment open. You are the originating cause of this interruption. The causal power to hold the gap open belongs to you and not to whatever the impression is presenting. Hold it long enough to examine.

Note: the Pause is not a long deliberation. It is the structural recognition that the impression has arrived but the faculty has not yet responded — and that the response is still yours to perform. In practiced agents, the Pause becomes very brief. In early practice, it requires deliberate effort. Either way, it must be real: if the determination has already run, what follows is not genuine examination.

What Correct Performance Looks Like

The impression is held before the faculty without the faculty having responded to it. The process is open. Examination can now occur because the outcome has not been settled. The agent is genuinely at the branch point between assent and withholding.

Failure Signatures at the Pause

Explicit failure: The agent does not attempt to stop because he has implicitly accepted that his response is determined anyway. The Pause is skipped.

Subtle failure (Nominal Pause): The agent goes through the motions of stopping while the determination has already run. He believes he is pausing while the outcome has already been settled. What follows from a nominal Pause can look like examination and decision from outside. It is the completion of a determined sequence, not genuine engagement. This is the failure to watch for: it is invisible from the inside if the agent is not vigilant about whether the gap is genuinely open or merely apparent.


Chapter Four: Examination

What Is Happening at This Step

With the impression held before the rational faculty and the process held open, you examine the impression. You ask whether it is true: whether what it claims about the value status of its object corresponds to how things actually are. Three philosophical commitments are simultaneously active, each doing distinct work.

Moral realism (C6) supplies the target of the examination. The impression is tested against moral facts that exist independently of what anyone believes. Th10 — that virtue is the only genuine good and vice the only genuine evil, and therefore that externals are genuinely neither (Th12) — is the standard. The impression either matches it or it does not. You are finding something that was already there, not constructing a standard to test against. The examination is a cognitive act of discovery.

Foundationalism (C4) organizes the target so that the examination can be conducted systematically. A false value impression typically fails at Th12: it presents an external as genuinely good or evil, which contradicts the proposition that externals are indifferent. That proposition derives from Th10. The examination traces the failure to its foundational source. This means the verdict is not merely “something seems wrong.” It is: a specific claim contradicts a specific foundational theorem, and the correction required is foundational, not peripheral.

Ethical intuitionism (C3) provides the epistemic access that makes the examination authoritative Th10 is not derived from prior premises by inference. The rational faculty apprehends it directly, as a self-evident necessary truth. This matters practically because it gives the examination authority to refuse a sophisticateìd rationalization. If an impression arrives accompanied by an argument concluding that this particular external really is a genuine good, given the circumstances, the examination does not follow the argument to its conclusion. It tests the conclusion against the directly apprehended moral fact. If the conclusion conflicts with Th10, the argument has a false premise — however plausible its premises appeared. Without intuitionism, the examination is at the mercy of whatever rationalization is most sophistkicated.

What the Agent Does

At Examination, the task is to test the impression against the foundational value standard. Apply the following sequence:

Check One — External or Internal? Is the impression presenting something as a genuine good or genuine evil? If yes, identify the object: is it an external (a circumstance, outcome, other person, bodily state, event in the world) or is it an act of will (a virtue or vice)?

Check Two — Apply Th12. If the object is external: the impression is false. Externals are never genuinely good or evil (Th12, derived from Th10). The impression is making a claim that contradicts a foundational moral fact. Name the contradiction explicitly: “This impression presents [external] as genuinely [good/evil]. It is not. It is an indifferent. The impression is false.”

Check Three — Preferred Indifferent? If the object is an external, ask whether it is a preferred indifferent — something appropriate to aim at, though not genuinely good. Life, health, and similar things fall in this category. A preferred indifferent is a rational object of aim but not an object of desire in the full sense. The appropriateness of pursuing it does not depend on its being a genuine good. Correct the impression accordingly: “This is a preferred indifferent. I may aim at it. I may not desire it as a genuine good or treat its absence as a genuine evil.”

Check Four — Rationalization present? If an argument accompanies the impression — if a case is being made that this external really is a genuine good, given the circumstances — apply the intuitionist check: does the conclusion of that argument conflict with Th10? If yes, refuse the conclusion regardless of the argument's apparent validity. The foundational moral fact takes precedence over formal inference from disputed premises.

What Correct Performance Looks Like

The examination produces a determinate verdict: the impression is true or false. If false, the source of the falsity is located in the foundational dependency structure — specifically in the conflict with Th12, derived from Th10. The agent does not merely feel that something is wrong. He has identified what is wrong and why, traced to its foundational source. The correction he must now make is foundational, not incidental.

Failure Signatures at Examination

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

If foundationalism is not operative: The examination is unfocused. The agent detects that something is wrong but cannot locate the source. Corrections are peripheral. The false impression is adjusted rather than corrected at its root, and it returns.

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


Chapter Five: Decision

What Is Happening at This Step

The examination has produced a verdict: the impression is false. It presents an external as a genuine good or evil when it is neither. You now act: you withhold assent. The Decision closes what the Pause held open.

Libertarian free will (C2) makes the Decision a genuine act rather than a determined output. The examination has produced a verdict. The Pause has kept the outcome open. But neither the verdict nor the open moment automatically produces the Decision. You must close it. The act of withholding is genuinely yours: you originate it, you are responsible for it, and it is genuinely different from what would have occurred if the determined process had run without interruption.

Correspondence theory (C5) specifies what the Decision accomplishes. When you withhold assent from a false impression, you are not merely choosing a preferred cognitive stance. You are bringing your assent into correspondence with reality. The impression claimed that an external is a genuine evil. The moral fact — established by Th12, derived from Th10 — is that it is not. The Decision to withhold assent is the act by which your cognitive state is aligned with how things actually are. This is a truth-aligning act, not a preference selection. Note the distinction between Examination and Decision: Examination tested the impression against reality and produced a verdict. Decision is the act by which your assent is brought into correspondence with the verdict. The test was at Examination. The alignment is at Decision.

What the Agent Does

At Decision, the task is to close the act correctly. Apply the following sequence:

Move One — Withhold assent from the false impression. The examination has returned a verdict of false. Do not assent to the impression. The specific act is: do not allow the false value claim to generate desire or emotion. Do not act on the impression as though what it presents is genuinely good or genuinely evil. Withhold.

Move Two — State the correct value proposition. Explicitly formulate the true proposition that replaces the false one. Sterling's Nine Excerpts Section 7 identifies this as a practical necessity: consciously formulate true propositions regarding the lack of value of external things. The formulation is not merely internal confirmation. It is the agent assenting to the truth in place of the falsehood. Example: “My position at this organization is an external. It is a preferred indifferent. Its loss would not be a genuine evil. My virtue — how I act from this point — is the only genuine good available to me here.”

Move Three — Identify the appropriate object of aim. Th14 delivers its full payoff only when the Decision is followed by correct action. Correct action requires an appropriate object of aim: a preferred indifferent pursued without false desire, or a virtuous act of will directed at what role and reason require. Ask: given that the external I was falsely valuing is indifferent, what is the appropriate object at which to aim in this situation? Identify it. Pursue it with reservation — that is, aim at it if Providence allows, without making your contentment conditional on the outcome.

What Correct Performance Looks Like

Assent has been withheld from the false impression. The true value proposition has been explicitly formulated and assented to. An appropriate object of aim has been identified. The agent proceeds to action, if action is required, directed at the appropriate object with reservation. The chain from Th6 through Th14 has been enacted in a single act of engagement: beliefs governed, desires corrected, false judgment replaced with true judgment, and the conditions for immunity from unhappiness satisfied — in this instance, at this moment.

Failure Signatures at Decision

Failure of libertarian free will (Determined completion): The act is not genuine origination. The agent completes a determined sequence rather than closing an open moment. What presents itself as a decision is the arrival of a predetermined outcome. The examination ran. The verdict was reached. But the closing was not the agent's act — it was the process completing itself. Formation does not occur here. The agent was not the source of the act.

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


Chapter Six: Systematic Checks

The five steps are one continuous act. These checks apply to the act as a whole and to the agent's practice over time.

The Propositional Spine Check

The following chain must remain intact. If any link fails, locate where the chain has broken and trace back to the foundational theorem.

Th6 — beliefs and will are in your control → Th7 — desires are caused by beliefs → Th8 — desires are therefore in your control → Th10 — only virtue is genuinely good → Th12 — externals are therefore indifferent → Th13 — desiring externals involves false judgment → Th14 — valuing only virtue produces true judgment and immunity from unhappiness.

Each proposition is load-bearing. Th7 is the critical dependency: if desires are not caused by beliefs, the entire account of control over desire collapses, and with it Th8, Th9, Th13, Th14, and the argument for the possibility of eudaimonia.

The Commitment Distribution Check

Each philosophical commitment operates at specific steps. If the act is failing at a given step, identify which commitment is not operative and address the gap there.

Substance dualism (C1) is required at Recognition and the Pause. If Recognition is failing — if the agent cannot separate himself from the impression — the commitment is not functioning. If the Pause is nominal rather than real, check whether the agent genuinely holds that the rational faculty has causal power independent of physical determination.

Libertarian free will (C2) is required at the Pause and the Decision. If either is nominal rather than genuine, the commitment is not operative. The practical correction is to notice whether both paths are genuinely available at the branch point, or whether the outcome feels settled before the will has moved.

Ethical intuitionism (C3) is required at Examination. If the examination is being overridden by sophisticated rationalization, the commitment is not operative. The practical correction is to return to the direct apprehension of Th10 as a foundational moral fact and refuse to follow arguments whose conclusions contradict it.

Foundationalism (C4) is required at Examination. If corrections are peripheral — if the same false impression returns in slightly different form — the examination is not tracing the failure to its foundational source. Apply the foundational dependency structure explicitly: locate which derived proposition the impression contradicts, then trace it to Th10.

Correspondence theory (C5) is required at Reception, Recognition, and Decision. At Reception, it makes the impression a testable truth-claim. At Recognition, it makes the agent register the impression as a claim about reality. At Decision, it specifies the act as truth-alignment rather than preference selection. If any of these three is failing, check which moment in the act has lost the correspondence orientation.

Moral realism (C6) is required at Reception and Examination. If the impression does not arrive as a claim about moral reality at Reception, or if the examination has no fixed target at Examination, the commitment is not operative. The practical correction is to return to Th10 as a mind-independent moral fact — not a useful principle, not a ranking of preferences, but a fact about how things are.

The Formation Check

This manual governs individual acts of engagement. But the goal is not the correct performance of individual acts. The goal is character formation: the accumulation of correct acts over time in the direction of an increasingly settled rational disposition, culminating in eudaimonia as Th14 describes it. Apply this check periodically:

Are the same false impressions recurring? If yes, the corrections have been peripheral rather than foundational. The examination at Th12 is correct, but the foundational proposition Th10 has not yet been genuinely assented to as a fact about reality. The work is at Reception: is Th10 operative as a moral fact, or merely as a remembered principle? A remembered principle will not correct impressions at their source. A genuinely held moral fact will, over time, prevent false impressions from forming with the same strength they currently have.

Are the Pauses real or nominal? If the process runs to its conclusion before examination can occur, the Pause is not functioning. The practical work is in low-stakes situations: practice holding the gap open when the impression is mild and the stakes are low. The gap that can be held in mild cases becomes available in difficult ones.

Is the appropriate object of aim consistently identified at Decision? If the agent withholds assent from false impressions but does not replace them with correct action directed at an appropriate object of aim, the act is incomplete. Th14 delivers its full payoff — true judgment and immunity from unhappiness — when the Decision is followed by action that accords with what the examination revealed.


Summary Procedure

Step One — Reception: Notice that an impression has1111 arrived. Identify whether it contains a value componQent. Flag it if it does.

Step Two — 1: Separate yourself from the impression. Locate yourself as the subject pole receiving a claim. Register the Three-Way Separation: you, the impression, the reality the impression purports to describe.

Step Three — Pause: Stop. Hold the process open. Do not assent yet. Both paths are available. Hold the gap until examination is complete.

Step Four — Examination: Test the impression against the foundational value standard. Is the object external or internal? If external, apply Th12: the impression is false. Locate the contradiction in the foundational dependency structure. Refuse any rationalization whose conclusion conflicts with Th10.

Step Five — Decision: Withhold assent from the false impression. Formulate and assent to the true proposition that replaces it. Identify the appropriate object of aim and proceed toward it with reservation.


Manual of Stoic Rational Agency — Version 1.0. Dave Kelly. Standalone corpus document. Framework: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.

Thursday, May 07, 2026

Stoic Rational Agency: The Six Commitments, the Five Steps, and Propositions Th6–14

 

Stoic Rational Agency: The Six Commitments, the Five Steps, and Propositions Th6–14

Mind Map of Stoic Rational Agency

Core Stoicism

Dave Kelly — Framework: Grant C. Sterlin Eastern Illinois University. Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.



I. The Control Dichotomy (Th6–9)

The architecture of the Sterling/Kelly Stoic framework rests on a foundational division: some things are in our control, and everything else is not. Propositions Th6 through Th9 establish this division and draw its immediate practical consequence.

Theorem 6 states the boundary precisely: the only things in our control are our beliefs and will, and anything entailed by our beliefs and will. This is not a claim about influence or probability. It is a claim about the ontological structure of agency. The rational faculty — and only the rational faculty — is the domain of genuine control. Everything outside it, every external circumstance, physical outcome, other person, bodily state, and event in the world, lies beyond that boundary. This distinction is ontologically real, not merely a convenient organizing principle. It is the philosophical commitment called substance dualism (C1) that makes it real: the rational faculty is a distinct substance, not reducible to the body or to any configuration of physical causes. Without substance dualism, the boundary between self and external dissolves, and the control dichotomy loses its ground.

Theorem 7 extends the analysis inward: desires are caused by beliefs, that is, by judgments about good and evil. We desire what we judge to be good and desire to avoid what we judge to be evil. This is not a psychological hypothesis offered tentatively. It is a structural claim about the causal order of the rational life. Beliefs are prior to desires; desires are downstream entailments of beliefs. Because beliefs are in our control — they are acts of the will, specifically acts of assent — Theorem 8 follows: desires are in our control. The causal chain runs from belief to desire, and belief is ours to govern.

This is where libertarian free will (C2) performs its first essential work. Theorem 8 is only true if assent is genuine origination — if the agent is the real first cause of his own acts of judgment, not a determined output of prior physical causes. A compatibilist reading of “in our control” is insufficient. If assent flows inevitably from prior causes, then the agent who “controls his desires” was always going to do so, and the one who does not was equally determined not to. Libertarian free will is what makes “in our control” mean something stronger: the agent is the genuine originating cause.

Theorem 9 issues the first verdict: desiring things out of our control is irrational. The argument is tight. If desires can be governed through belief, and if desiring things out of our control exposes us to unhappiness whenever those things fail to materialize, and if complete uninterrupted happiness is the goal, then directing desire at what cannot be guaranteed is self-defeating. It is irrational not in a loose sense but in the strict sense: it involves false judgment about where value lies.


II. Value Theory (Th10–12)

Theorem 10 is the load-bearing center of the entire system: the only thing actually good is virtue, and the only thing actually evil is vice. From this single claim, the framework derives its normative structure, its account of unhappiness, and its prescription for eudaimonia.

The word “actually” in Theorem 10 is doing heavy philosophical work. The claim is not that virtue is the most important thing, or the highest-ranked preference, or the organizing principle of a well-lived life. The claim is that virtue is the only thing in the domain of genuine goodness — and that this is a fact about moral reality. This is the commitment called moral realism (C6): moral facts exist independently of what anyone believes, prefers, or constructs. Theorem 10 is not a useful fiction or a useful organizing principle. It is a truth about how things are. Without moral realism, Theorem 10 loses its normative force. If “only virtue is good” is merely a preference or a cultural stance, then the belief that money or reputation is genuinely good is not false — it is simply a different preference. The demand that false value beliefs be identified and corrected rests entirely on their being objectively, mind-independently false.

The rational faculty’s capacity to know that Theorem 10 is true depends on the commitment called ethical intuitionism (C3). Theorem 10 is not derived from prior premises by inference; it is not established by empirical observation. Sterling identifies the foundational theorems of Core Stoicism as unprovable fundamental postulates defensible only by appeal to intuition of their truth. The rational faculty apprehends Theorem 10 directly, as a self-evident necessary truth. Without ethical intuitionism, the agent has no secure epistemic access to the moral facts. He can suspect that virtue is the only good, but he cannot know it in the way the system requires.

Foundationalism (C4) organizes how Theorem 10 relates to what follows from it. The system’s propositions are not an undifferentiated collection of claims with equal standing. They are organized in a dependency structure: some are foundational, others derived. Theorem 10 is foundational. Theorem 12 — that externals are never genuinely good or evil — derives from it. Theorem 13 — that desiring things out of our control is irrational because it involves false judgment — derives from Theorem 12. This organization matters practically: when a specific false value impression is examined, the examination does not have to survey the whole field at once. It traces the impression to the foundational theorem it contradicts. Sterling warns explicitly about “Smorgasbord Stoicism” in Core Stoicism: the theorems interconnect in a foundational dependency structure, and denying one can collapse others. If Theorem 7 is denied — if desires are not caused by beliefs — then Theorems 8, 9, 13, 14, 28, and 29 all fall. Foundationalism is what makes the correction of a false impression systematic rather than isolated.

Theorem 11 draws the immediate consequence: since virtue and vice are types of acts of will, they are in our control. The good and the evil — the only genuine good and evil — are located precisely in the domain over which the agent has genuine governance. This is not an accident of the system. It is its central structural feature: the things that actually matter are the things that are genuinely ours.

Theorem 12 states the corollary: things not in our control — all externals — are never genuinely good or evil. Life, death, health, sickness, wealth, poverty, reputation, the actions of others, physical outcomes — none of these fall within the domain of genuine value. OSome are preferred indifferents (life, health), some dispreferred, but none are genuine goods or evils in the sense Theorem 10 establishes. The category of preferred indifferent is real and practically important: the Stoic agent pursues appropriate objects of aim, including preferred indifferents, and the selection among them is the content of virtuous action. But the pursuit is conducted without desire in the full sense — without the false judgment that the preferred indifferent is a genuine good whose absence or loss would constitute genuine evil.


III. Reception (Step One)

The Five-Step Method is the operational sequence through which the Stoic practitioner engages with an impression from the moment of its arrival to the moment of decision. Each step activates specific philosophical commitments. The commitments are not background assumptions present throughout; each appears at the moment the act specifically requires what it provides.

Step One is Reception. An impression arrives. The rational faculty has not yet done anything. Something has been presented to it. The impression does not ask permission. Theorem 12 states the corollary: things not in our control — all externals — are never genuinely good or evil. Life, death, health, sickness, wealth, poverty, reputation, the actions of others, physical outcomes — none of these fall within the domain of genuine value. sion. It arrives and makes a claim.

Two commitments are already operative before the agent has acted at all. Moral realism (C6) is what makes the arriving impression a claim about something real. The impression presents a circumstance as genuinely good, genuinely evil, or indifferent. For that presentation to have a truth value — for it to be the kind of thing that can be correct or incorrect rather than merely useful or unhelpful — there must be a moral fact for it to correspond to or fail to correspond to. Moral realism is that fact. Theorem 10 exists as a pre-existing moral truth that the impression either matches or fails to match. The agent has not yet tested it. The truth value is already there, waiting. Without moral realism at Reception, the impression does not arrive as a claim about moral reality. It arrives as a stimulus with no fact of the matter attached to it.

Correspondence theory (C5) specifies the character of the impression as a truth-claim. The impression is not merely a psychological event, a feeling in the mind, or an emotional coloring of experience. It is a propositional claim: it asserts that something in the world has a certain value status. Correspondence theory makes that claim testable against an external standard. The impression’s truth value is determined by whether it corresponds to how things actually are — to the moral facts moral realism has established. Falsity, at this step, means mismatch with reality, not inconvenience, not unhelpfulness, not difficulty. A false value impression is one that makes a factually incorrect claim about the moral status of its object. This is what makes examination, when it comes, a test of truth rather than an exercise in preference adjustment.

Value components in arriving impressions are often embedded and concealed. The impression “I have been treated unjustly” does not announce itself as a value claim. But it contains one: it presents an external event — another person’s action — as something that bears on the agent’s genuine good or evil. The work of Reception, when practiced, includes noticing the value component before automatic assent has run.


IV. Recognition and Pause (Steps Two and Three)

Step Two is Recognition. Having received the impression, the agent now explicitly registers what has occurred. Two commitments are active at this step.

Substance dualism (C1) enables the agent to locate himself as categorically distinct from the arriving claim. The rational faculty is not the impression. It is not the body that the impression may be about. It is not the event being presented. It is the entity that receives the presentation — the subject pole, as the corpus terms it, in a three-way structure: agent, impression, and the reality the impression claims to represent. Substance dualism makes this separation real rather than nominal. If the rational faculty were simply a function of the body or an output of physical causes, there would be no principled separation between the one doing the receiving and what is being received. Recognition requires that separation to be genuine.

Correspondence theory (C5) continues its work at this step. The agent not only locates himself as distinct from the impression but registers the impression explicitly as a claim about reality — not as reality itself. This is the cognitive act the corpus calls the Three-Way Separation: the agent recognizes that the impression is making an assertion about something, and that the assertion and the thing it purports to describe are different. Failure at Recognition takes two forms. The first is the failure of substance dualism: the agent does not separate himself from the impression and is simply the impression, unable to examine it. The second is the failure of correspondence theory: the agent achieves separation but does not register the impression as a truth-claim, treating it instead as a psychological state to be managed rather than a proposition to be evaluated.

Step Three is the Pause. Having recognized the impression as a claim distinct from himself, the agent stops. He does not proceed immediately to act on what the impression presents. He holds the process open at the point where automatic assent would otherwise occur.

Libertarian free will (C2) is what makes the Pause real rather than nominal. If the agent’s response to an impression is fully determined by prior causes — his character, his conditioning, his neurological constitution — then what presents itself as a Pause is simply a longer processing delay. The outcome was fixed before the apparent stopping occurred. What looks like a held-open moment is the determined process running its course. Libertarian free will holds that the Pause is genuinely what it presents itself as: a moment at which the agent, as the originating cause of his next act, holds the process open. Both paths — assent and withholding — remain genuinely available until the will moves. Substance dualism (C1) does its work here as well: the rational faculty exercises a causal power that belongs to it and not to the physical order. The ability to interrupt the process is a power of the soul, not a function of the body.

The connection to Theorem 6 is direct and load-bearing. Beliefs are in our control only if assent is genuine origination. A determined assent dissolves the control dichotomy: if the agent was always going to assent to this impression in this way, then the belief that resulted is not genuinely in his control in any meaningful sense. The real Pause — the genuinely held-open moment — is the structural enactment of Theorem 6. Without it, the system’s foundational claim that beliefs are in our control becomes a description of a determined process, not a warrant for genuine agency.


V. Examination (Step Four)

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

Moral realism (C6) supplies the target of the examination. The impression is tested against moral facts that exist independently of what anyone believes. At Reception, moral realism made the impression a claim about something real. At Examination, moral realism is the something real against which the claim is tested. Theorem 10 and its derived propositions — that virtue is the only genuine good, that vice is the only genuine evil, that externals are therefore neither — are facts about moral reality. The impression either matches them or it does not. The examination reveals which. The agent examining the impression is finding something that was already there, not constructing  a standard to test against. Without moral realism at Examination, there is nothing to discover — only a standard the agent has adopted, which is a different kind of thing entirely and one that lacks the normative authority to require correction.

Foundationalism (C4) organizes the target so that the examination can be conducted systematically. The moral facts that moral realism posits are organized in a dependency structure: some foundational, some derived. A false value impression typically fails at Theorem 12: it presents an external as genuinely good or evil, which contradicts the proposition that externals are indifferent. That proposition derives from Theorem 10. The examination traces the failure to its source in the foundational dependency structure. The verdict is not merely that “something seems off” but that a specific claim contradicts a specific foundational theorem, and the correction required is foundational rather than peripheral. Sterling’s warning in Core Stoicism applies here: denying any load-bearing theorem without attending to what depends on it produces incoherence downstream. Foundationalism is what makes the examination tell the agent not only that the impression is false but why it is false and what the correction must touch.

Ethical intuitionism (C3) provides epistemic access to the moral facts against which the impression is tested. The rational faculty apprehends directly that Theorem 10 is true. It does not infer it from prior premises or derive it from observation. It sees it as a self-evident necessary truth. Without ethical intuitionism, the examination stalls: there is no secure epistemic authority from which to call the impression false. The agent can perform the procedure, but the verdict lacks the epistemic grounding that makes it authoritative. Intuitionism is what makes the Examination a genuine test rather than an approximation.


VI. Decision (Step Five)

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

Libertarian free will (C2) makes the Decision a genuine act rather than a determined output. The examination has produced a verdict. The Pause has kept the outcome open. But neither the verdict nor the open moment automatically produces the Decision. The agent must close it. He must originate the act of withholding. What libertarian free will provides at the Decision is this: the act is genuinely his, he is its source, and what follows belongs to him in a way that a determined output does not belong to its mechanism. This matters practically because the Stoic account of moral formation depends on it. The agent who withholds assent from a false impression is doing something. He is not completing a process that was going to produce a refusal regardless. He is refusing. That act is his in the full sense: he originated it, he is responsible for it, and it is genuinely different from what would have occurred if the determined process had run without interruption.

Correspondence theory (C5) specifies what the Decision accomplishes. When the agent withholds assent from a false impression, he is not merely choosing a preferred cognitive stance. He is bringing his assent into correspondence with reality. The impression claimed that an external is a genuine evil. The moral fact — established by Theorem 12, derived from Theorem 10 — is that it is not. The Decision to withhold assent is the act by which the agent aligns his cognitive state with how things actually are. This is the specific location of correspondence theory at the Decision rather than at Examination: Examination tested the impression against reality and produced a verdict. Decision is the act by which the agent’s assent is brought into correspondence with the verdict. The test was at Examination. The alignment is at Decision. The two are distinct moments in the act, and correspondence theory operates differently at each.

Theorem 14 closes the chain: if we value only virtue, we will both judge truly and be immune to all unhappiness. The Decision, correctly performed, is the enactment of this theorem at the level of a single impression. The agent who consistently withholds assent from false value impressions — who, at every Decision, aligns his assent with what the Examination has revealed — is building the pattern that Theorem 14 describes. True judgment follows from correctly valuing only virtue. Immunity to unhappiness follows from true judgment, because unhappiness is caused by the false belief that an external has failed to deliver what it could not genuinely deliver. The pattern of correct Decisions, repeated across a lifetime of practice, is what Stoic character formation consists of.


VII. Systematic Integration

The seven sections above present the system’s components in the order in which they operate on a single impression. But the system also has a logical spine that can be read independently of that operational order — a chain of propositions in which each link depends on the ones before it and supports the ones after.

Theorem 6 establishes the control dichotomy: beliefs and will are in our control, everything else is not. Theorem 7 establishes that desires are caused by beliefs. Theorem 8 derives from Theorem 7: if beliefs are in our control, and desires are entailed by beliefs, then desires are in our control. Theorem 10 establishes that only virtue is genuinely good. Theorem 12 is derived from Theorem 10: since only virtue is good, externals are never genuinely good or evil. Theorem 13 applies Theorem 12 to the irrationality of misplaced desire: desiring externals is irrational because it involves false judgment about their value status. Theorem 14 closes the chain: valuing only virtue produces true judgment, and true judgment produces immunity to unhappiness. Each proposition is load-bearing. Remove Theorem 7, and Theorem 8 loses its ground, and with it the claim that desires are in our control. Remove Theorem 10, and Theorem 12 collapses, and with it the account of irrationality in Theorem 13, and with it the guarantee in Theorem 14. Sterling’s warning is precise: the interconnection is not decorative. It is structural.

The six philosophical commitments are distributed across the five steps of the method, each appearing where the act specifically requires what it provides. Substance dualism (C1) does its foundational work at Recognition, where the agent locates himself as distinct from the arriving claim, and at the Pause, where the causal independence of the rational faculty is what makes the interruption real. Libertarian free will (C2) is required at the Pause and the Decision — the two moments of genuine origination — where the outcome must be genuinely open and the act must genuinely belong to the agent. Ethical intuitionism (C3) is the operative commitment at Examination, where the rational faculty must apprehend directly whether the impression matches moral reality. Foundationalism (C4) organizes the target at Examination so that the test is systematic and the verdict traces to its foundational source. Correspondence theory (C5) threads through Reception, Recognition, and Decision: at Reception it makes the impression a testable truth-claim; at Recognition it makes the agent register the impression as a claim rather than as reality; at Decision it specifies the character of the act as truth-alignment rather than preference selection. Moral realism (C6) grounds the arriving claim at Reception and supplies the examination target at Examination.

No commitment appears at all five steps. The distribution is not arbitrary. It reflects the specific philosophical work each commitment does and the specific moment in the act at which that work is required. The six commitments are not six descriptions of the same general Stoic orientation. They are six distinct philosophical instruments, each active where the act needs what it specifically provides.

The failure modes illuminate the system from the negative direction. Remove substance dualism, and the boundary between self and external dissolves: the control dichotomy loses its ontological ground, Recognition cannot occur, and the Pause has no principled subject to hold it. Remove libertarian free will, and the Pause is nominal and the Decision is predetermined: what presents itself as genuine agency is a determined process running its course. Remove ethical intuitionism, and Examination stalls: the rational faculty performs the procedure but lacks the epistemic authority to reach a verdict. Remove foundationalism, and correction is possible only case by case: the agent knows something is wrong but cannot trace it to its source, and the system loses its systematic character. Remove correspondence theory, and falsity loses its meaning: value impressions become psychologically inconvenient rather than factually incorrect, and the demand for correction loses its rational basis. Remove moral realism, and Theorem 10 becomes a preference: the claim that desiring externals involves false judgment collapses because there are no longer objective moral facts for the impression to fail to correspond to, and the entire normative structure of the framework loses its authority.

The act of correct engagement — Reception through Decision, with all six commitments operative at their proper moments, grounded in the propositional chain from Theorem 6 through Theorem 14 — is one continuous act with five distinguishable moments. When performed correctly and repeated with increasing reliability across a lifetime of practice, it is what Stoic character formation consists of.


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

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Wednesday, May 06, 2026

The Great Gatsby: A Stoic Audit

 

The Great Gatsby

A Stoic Audit

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


What This Is

Stoic philosophy has a tool for examining ideas. It asks: what does this idea actually believe about the self, about freedom, about what is genuinely good, and about truth? Then it checks those beliefs against what Stoicism holds to be actually the case. This is called a Classical Ideological Audit.

The Great Gatsby has a very specific set of beliefs running through it. Gatsby believes things about who he is, what he wants, and what will make him happy. Those beliefs are what we are auditing here — not the plot, not the writing, but the philosophy underneath. And there is something unusual about this novel: Fitzgerald presents Gatsby’s beliefs with genuine beauty and simultaneously shows us exactly why they fail. He holds both at once. That is what makes it a great novel.


What Gatsby Believes

Before we can check Gatsby’s beliefs against Stoicism, we need to state them clearly.

  • You can reinvent yourself completely through sheer will and imagination — who you were born as does not determine who you are.
  • You can recover the past if you want it badly enough and have enough resources.
  • Wealth and status are the legitimate vehicles of who you truly are — acquiring them is how you express your real self.
  • The thing you desire most — Daisy, the green light, the ideal — is genuinely and objectively worth organizing your entire life around.
  • The social world is corrupt and fake, but the pure ideal you hold is real and superior to it.
  • The real harm in life is when the external world refuses to be what you need it to be.
  • The person who holds their dream with perfect purity and intensity is morally better than those who have given up and compromised.

The Stoic Check

1. Who Is the Real Self?

What Gatsby believes: The real self is something you build — a project of imagination and will. James Gatz built Jay Gatsby from scratch. That constructed self is the real one.

What Stoicism says: The real self is not something you build. It is the rational faculty you already have — the part of you that thinks, judges, and chooses. That faculty was always there. It is not a project. It is you. Everything else — your wealth, your reputation, your constructed persona — is external to the real you.

The problem: Gatsby built his real self out of external materials — money, parties, shirts, a mansion, and above all, Daisy. When those externals collapsed, so did the self he had built from them. A self built from externals cannot be the genuine self, because externals are not you. The novel shows us exactly this: when Daisy does not come to the funeral, the constructed self has nothing left to stand on.

Finding: Gatsby has the right idea — the real self is not determined by where you were born or what class you came from. But he puts the real self in the wrong place. He builds it from things outside himself instead of finding it in the rational faculty he already had.


2. Are You Genuinely Free?

What Gatsby believes: Gatsby’s will is extraordinary. He spent five years constructing himself entirely for one purpose. That sustained act of will is presented as his greatness. He also believes the past can be recovered — “Can’t repeat the past? Why of course you can!”

What Stoicism says: Genuine freedom means you are the originating cause of your own condition — that your state of mind depends on your own judgments and choices, not on what external circumstances do. Your freedom is real. But it only works in the present moment, directed at things that are actually in your control.

The problem: Gatsby directs his enormous freedom entirely at recovering something external that is in the past — a moment five years ago that cannot be recovered because time moves in one direction. All his originating power is aimed at the impossible. Nick sees this clearly at the end: “So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.” That image is what happens when genuine freedom is aimed at time reversal.

Finding: Gatsby is genuinely free — his capacity for sustained originating will is real and remarkable. But that freedom is directed at recovering an external past moment, which is structurally impossible. The freedom is real. The direction is wrong.


3. How Do You Recognize What Truly Matters?

What Gatsby believes: Gatsby does not argue his way to the conclusion that Daisy is worth everything. He just knows it, directly and immediately. The green light across the bay is the symbol of what he knows without being told. This is a direct, non-inferential recognition of supreme value.

What Stoicism says: The Stoics believe the rational faculty can directly recognize moral truth — specifically the truth that only virtue is genuinely good. This direct recognition is real and important. But it must be aimed at actual moral facts, not at external objects of desire.

The problem: What Gatsby directly recognizes as supremely valuable is Daisy — an external person who turns out to be careless, who lets him take the blame for Myrtle’s death, and who does not come to his funeral. The direct recognition was real. The object it was aimed at was a false impression. The novel demonstrates this with devastating precision.

Finding: Gatsby has the right cognitive operation — direct recognition of what matters most. He has the wrong object. He aims it at an external instead of at genuine moral truth.


4. Does What You Believe Correspond to Reality?

What Gatsby believes: The ideal is real. Daisy really does embody the supreme value Gatsby attributes to her. His vision of what life could be corresponds to a genuine possibility the corrupt world has suppressed.

What Stoicism says: Only virtue is genuinely good. Everything else — people, wealth, status, beauty — is an indifferent. Externals can be preferred or dispreferred but they are not genuinely good or evil. The belief that an external person or object is supremely good does not correspond to how things actually are.

The problem: The novel is essentially a test of whether Gatsby’s central belief corresponds to reality. The answer it delivers is thorough and devastating — Daisy does not correspond to Gatsby’s vision of her at all. The green light is just a green light across the bay. But Fitzgerald does something remarkable: he makes the failed correspondence beautiful. The aspiration toward correspondence is rendered as genuinely moving even as the correspondence itself fails completely.

Finding: Gatsby’s belief that the ideal corresponds to genuine supreme value does not correspond to what is actually the case morally. The novel is the correspondence test, and the novel delivers the verdict.


5. What Is the Foundation?

What Gatsby believes: The ideal — Daisy, the green light — is the bedrock of his entire life. Everything he does flows from it. He does not derive it from prior reasoning. It simply is the foundation.

What Stoicism says: The foundation of a well-lived life must be a truth that cannot be taken away by external circumstances. It must be universal — true for all rational agents, not just for one person who happened to meet one person at one moment in the past.

The problem: A foundation built on a particular external attachment — one specific person, one specific past moment — is not a foundation. It is a contingency. When the contingency shifts, the structure built on it collapses. That is exactly what happens in the novel. The foundation was always a contingency mistaken for a necessity.

Finding: Gatsby has the foundationalist structure right — he builds everything from one bedrock commitment. The bedrock itself is wrong — a contingent external attachment instead of a universal necessary moral truth.


6. What Is Genuinely Good and Evil?

What Gatsby believes: The person who holds a dream with purity and intensity is morally better than those who have compromised. Nick says to Gatsby: “You’re worth the whole damn bunch put together.” This is presented as a genuine moral verdict, not just a compliment.

What Stoicism says: Only virtue is genuinely good — meaning only the prohairesis in correct operation, making correct judgments and correct choices. The intensity and purity of an attachment to an external does not make it virtuous. Gatsby holds a false value judgment (Daisy is supremely good) with great intensity and acts from it with great energy. The intensity of the false value judgment does not convert it to virtue.

The problem: Nick’s moral distinction between Gatsby and Tom is real within the novel — Tom is genuinely worse in many ways. But neither is virtuous in the Stoic sense. The moral distinction the novel draws is between different qualities of attachment to externals. Stoicism draws the moral distinction differently: between correct and incorrect operation of the rational faculty.

Finding: Gatsby’s moral superiority to Tom is real as the novel presents it. But the moral distinction tracks the wrong thing — purity of attachment to an external rather than virtue.


The Overall Finding

Every one of Gatsby’s beliefs has the right formal structure and the wrong content. He correctly understands that the real self is not determined by birth or class — but he builds the real self from externals instead of finding it in the rational faculty. He correctly understands that sustained originating will matters enormously — but he directs that will at recovering an external past moment that cannot be recovered. He correctly understands that some things are directly recognizable as supremely valuable — but he aims that recognition at an external object of desire instead of at virtue. He correctly understands that there is a genuine foundation to life — but he builds on a contingent personal attachment instead of a universal moral truth. He correctly understands that moral distinctions are real — but he draws them based on the quality of attachment to externals instead of on virtue.

In Stoic terms, this is called Structural Imitation — the right shape around the wrong content, at every single point.

And here is what makes Gatsby genuinely great as a novel: Fitzgerald understood all of this. He presents Gatsby’s beliefs with genuine beauty — the green light is one of the most powerful images in American literature — and simultaneously shows us exactly why those beliefs fail. He holds the beauty and the failure at once. That is what he meant when he said the test of first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposing ideas in mind at the same time.


The Stoic Corrective

The corpus does not tell Gatsby to stop reaching toward the green light. It tells him what the green light actually is.

Gatsby had everything the Stoics say a person needs: sustained will, intensity of aspiration, genuine originating power, the capacity to build his entire life around one organizing commitment. Every quality the Stoic framework requires was present in Gatsby. They were all aimed at the wrong object.

The genuine green light — the genuine object worthy of that quality of aspiration — is the rational faculty itself in correct operation. Virtue. The only genuine good. Not across the bay. Not in the past. Present, in every moment, in the part of you that has been reaching in the wrong direction.

Had Gatsby aimed the same aspiration at his own prohairesis in correct condition, nothing external could have stopped him. Not Tom. Not old money. Not time. The green light would have been his — because it would have been inside him rather than across the bay.


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

The Five Steps What They Are and Why They Matter

 

The Five Steps

What They Are and Why They Matter

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


Every day things happen that upset you. Someone says something mean. You fail a test. A friend lets you down. Your first reaction feels automatic — like anger or sadness just hits you and you had no choice about it. Stoic philosophy says that’s not quite right. There’s actually a gap between what happens and how you respond, and you can learn to use that gap. The Five Steps are how you do it.

Step One — Reception

Something happens and your mind receives it. An impression arrives. Maybe someone criticized you in front of your friends. You don’t do anything yet. You just notice that something has landed in your mind.

Step Two — Recognition

Now you notice that what arrived is a claim, not a fact. Your mind is telling you something — “that was humiliating, that was terrible, that means you’re a failure.” But that’s an interpretation, not reality. The event happened. The meaning your mind attached to it is a separate thing. You are the one receiving the claim. You are not the claim itself.

Step Three — Pause

This is the most important step. Before you react — before you fire back, break down, or shut down — you stop. You hold the gap open. This sounds simple but it takes real practice, because your brain wants to skip straight from the impression to the reaction. The pause is where your actual freedom lives.

Step Four — Examination

With the pause held, you look honestly at what your mind is telling you. Is it true? The Stoics had a specific test: is what happened actually bad — meaning bad for who you genuinely are — or is it just uncomfortable, embarrassing, or disappointing? Their answer was that nothing outside your own choices can be genuinely bad for you. What someone else said about you doesn’t change what you actually are. A failed test is not a verdict on your worth. You examine the claim your mind made and check whether it holds up.

Step Five — Decision

Now you respond — not react. You decide what to do based on what the examination revealed rather than on the raw force of the first impression. You act from your own judgment rather than from the automatic emotional response the impression triggered.


The whole thing can be compressed into two sentences. Something happened. Now what d

o you actually think about it?

The gap between those two sentences is where the Five Steps live. Most people never use it. The Stoics thought using it — getting better and better at using it — was the whole of what it means to live well.


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

Tuesday, May 05, 2026

Stoic Rational Agency: The Six Commitments, the Five Steps, and Propositions Th6–14

 

Stoic Rational Agency: The Six Commitments, the Five Steps, and Propositions Th6–14

Mind Map of Stoic Rational Agency

Core Stoicism

Dave Kelly — Framework: Grant C. Sterlin Eastern Illinois University. Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.



I. The Control Dichotomy (Th6–9)

The architecture of the Sterling/Kelly Stoic framework rests on a foundational division: some things are in our control, and everything else is not. Propositions Th6 through Th9 establish this division and draw its immediate practical consequence.

Theorem 6 states the boundary precisely: the only things in our control are our beliefs and will, and anything entailed by our beliefs and will. This is not a claim about influence or probability. It is a claim about the ontological structure of agency. The rational faculty — and only the rational faculty — is the domain of genuine control. Everything outside it, every external circumstance, physical outcome, other person, bodily state, and event in the world, lies beyond that boundary. This distinction is ontologically real, not merely a convenient organizing principle. It is the philosophical commitment called substance dualism (C1) that makes it real: the rational faculty is a distinct substance, not reducible to the body or to any configuration of physical causes. Without substance dualism, the boundary between self and external dissolves, and the control dichotomy loses its ground.

Theorem 7 extends the analysis inward: desires are caused by beliefs, that is, by judgments about good and evil. We desire what we judge to be good and desire to avoid what we judge to be evil. This is not a psychological hypothesis offered tentatively. It is a structural claim about the causal order of the rational life. Beliefs are prior to desires; desires are downstream entailments of beliefs. Because beliefs are in our control — they are acts of the will, specifically acts of assent — Theorem 8 follows: desires are in our control. The causal chain runs from belief to desire, and belief is ours to govern.

This is where libertarian free will (C2) performs its first essential work. Theorem 8 is only true if assent is genuine origination — if the agent is the real first cause of his own acts of judgment, not a determined output of prior physical causes. A compatibilist reading of “in our control” is insufficient. If assent flows inevitably from prior causes, then the agent who “controls his desires” was always going to do so, and the one who does not was equally determined not to. Libertarian free will is what makes “in our control” mean something stronger: the agent is the genuine originating cause.

Theorem 9 issues the first verdict: desiring things out of our control is irrational. The argument is tight. If desires can be governed through belief, and if desiring things out of our control exposes us to unhappiness whenever those things fail to materialize, and if complete uninterrupted happiness is the goal, then directing desire at what cannot be guaranteed is self-defeating. It is irrational not in a loose sense but in the strict sense: it involves false judgment about where value lies.


II. Value Theory (Th10–12)

Theorem 10 is the load-bearing center of the entire system: the only thing actually good is virtue, and the only thing actually evil is vice. From this single claim, the framework derives its normative structure, its account of unhappiness, and its prescription for eudaimonia.

The word “actually” in Theorem 10 is doing heavy philosophical work. The claim is not that virtue is the most important thing, or the highest-ranked preference, or the organizing principle of a well-lived life. The claim is that virtue is the only thing in the domain of genuine goodness — and that this is a fact about moral reality. This is the commitment called moral realism (C6): moral facts exist independently of what anyone believes, prefers, or constructs. Theorem 10 is not a useful fiction or a useful organizing principle. It is a truth about how things are. Without moral realism, Theorem 10 loses its normative force. If “only virtue is good” is merely a preference or a cultural stance, then the belief that money or reputation is genuinely good is not false — it is simply a different preference. The demand that false value beliefs be identified and corrected rests entirely on their being objectively, mind-independently false.

The rational faculty’s capacity to know that Theorem 10 is true depends on the commitment called ethical intuitionism (C3). Theorem 10 is not derived from prior premises by inference; it is not established by empirical observation. Sterling identifies the foundational theorems of Core Stoicism as unprovable fundamental postulates defensible only by appeal to intuition of their truth. The rational faculty apprehends Theorem 10 directly, as a self-evident necessary truth. Without ethical intuitionism, the agent has no secure epistemic access to the moral facts. He can suspect that virtue is the only good, but he cannot know it in the way the system requires.

Foundationalism (C4) organizes how Theorem 10 relates to what follows from it. The system’s propositions are not an undifferentiated collection of claims with equal standing. They are organized in a dependency structure: some are foundational, others derived. Theorem 10 is foundational. Theorem 12 — that externals are never genuinely good or evil — derives from it. Theorem 13 — that desiring things out of our control is irrational because it involves false judgment — derives from Theorem 12. This organization matters practically: when a specific false value impression is examined, the examination does not have to survey the whole field at once. It traces the impression to the foundational theorem it contradicts. Sterling warns explicitly about “Smorgasbord Stoicism” in Core Stoicism: the theorems interconnect in a foundational dependency structure, and denying one can collapse others. If Theorem 7 is denied — if desires are not caused by beliefs — then Theorems 8, 9, 13, 14, 28, and 29 all fall. Foundationalism is what makes the correction of a false impression systematic rather than isolated.

Theorem 11 draws the immediate consequence: since virtue and vice are types of acts of will, they are in our control. The good and the evil — the only genuine good and evil — are located precisely in the domain over which the agent has genuine governance. This is not an accident of the system. It is its central structural feature: the things that actually matter are the things that are genuinely ours.

Theorem 12 states the corollary: things not in our control — all externals — are never genuinely good or evil. Life, death, health, sickness, wealth, poverty, reputation, the actions of others, physical outcomes — none of these fall within the domain of genuine value. Some are preferred indifferents (life, health), some dispreferred, but none are genuine goods or evils in the sense Theorem 10 establishes. The category of preferred indifferent is real and practically important: the Stoic agent pursues appropriate objects of aim, including preferred indifferents, and the selection among them is the content of virtuous action. But the pursuit is conducted without desire in the full sense — without the false judgment that the preferred indifferent is a genuine good whose absence or loss would constitute genuine evil.


III. Reception (Step One)

The Five-Step Method is the operational sequence through which the Stoic practitioner engages with an impression from the moment of its arrival to the moment of decision. Each step activates specific philosophical commitments. The commitments are not background assumptions present throughout; each appears at the moment the act specifically requires what it provides.

Step One is Reception. An impression arrives. The rational faculty has not yet done anything. Something has been presented to it. The impression does not ask permission. It arrives and makes a claim.

Two commitments are already operative before the agent has acted at all. Moral realism (C6) is what makes the arriving impression a claim about something real. The impression presents a circumstance as genuinely good, genuinely evil, or indifferent. For that presentation to have a truth value — for it to be the kind of thing that can be correct or incorrect rather than merely useful or unhelpful — there must be a moral fact for it to correspond to or fail to correspond to. Moral realism is that fact. Theorem 10 exists as a pre-existing moral truth that the impression either matches or fails to match. The agent has not yet tested it. The truth value is already there, waiting. Without moral realism at Reception, the impression does not arrive as a claim about moral reality. It arrives as a stimulus with no fact of the matter attached to it.

Correspondence theory (C5) specifies the character of the impression as a truth-claim. The impression is not merely a psychological event, a feeling in the mind, or an emotional coloring of experience. It is a propositional claim: it asserts that something in the world has a certain value status. Correspondence theory makes that claim testable against an external standard. The impression’s truth value is determined by whether it corresponds to how things actually are — to the moral facts moral realism has established. Falsity, at this step, means mismatch with reality, not inconvenience, not unhelpfulness, not difficulty. A false value impression is one that makes a factually incorrect claim about the moral status of its object. This is what makes examination, when it comes, a test of truth rather than an exercise in preference adjustment.

Value components in arriving impressions are often embedded and concealed. The impression “I have been treated unjustly” does not announce itself as a value claim. But it contains one: it presents an external event — another person’s action — as something that bears on the agent’s genuine good or evil. The work of Reception, when practiced, includes noticing the value component before automatic assent has run.


IV. Recognition and Pause (Steps Two and Three)

Step Two is Recognition. Having received the impression, the agent now explicitly registers what has occurred. Two commitments are active at this step.

Substance dualism (C1) enables the agent to locate himself as categorically distinct from the arriving claim. The rational faculty is not the impression. It is not the body that the impression may be about. It is not the event being presented. It is the entity that receives the presentation — the subject pole, as the corpus terms it, in a three-way structure: agent, impression, and the reality the impression claims to represent. Substance dualism makes this separation real rather than nominal. If the rational faculty were simply a function of the body or an output of physical causes, there would be no principled separation between the one doing the receiving and what is being received. Recognition requires that separation to be genuine.

Correspondence theory (C5) continues its work at this step. The agent not only locates himself as distinct from the impression but registers the impression explicitly as a claim about reality — not as reality itself. This is the cognitive act the corpus calls the Three-Way Separation: the agent recognizes that the impression is making an assertion about something, and that the assertion and the thing it purports to describe are different. Failure at Recognition takes two forms. The first is the failure of substance dualism: the agent does not separate himself from the impression and is simply the impression, unable to examine it. The second is the failure of correspondence theory: the agent achieves separation but does not register the impression as a truth-claim, treating it instead as a psychological state to be managed rather than a proposition to be evaluated.

Step Three is the Pause. Having recognized the impression as a claim distinct from himself, the agent stops. He does not proceed immediately to act on what the impression presents. He holds the process open at the point where automatic assent would otherwise occur.

Libertarian free will (C2) is what makes the Pause real rather than nominal. If the agent’s response to an impression is fully determined by prior causes — his character, his conditioning, his neurological constitution — then what presents itself as a Pause is simply a longer processing delay. The outcome was fixed before the apparent stopping occurred. What looks like a held-open moment is the determined process running its course. Libertarian free will holds that the Pause is genuinely what it presents itself as: a moment at which the agent, as the originating cause of his next act, holds the process open. Both paths — assent and withholding — remain genuinely available until the will moves. Substance dualism (C1) does its work here as well: the rational faculty exercises a causal power that belongs to it and not to the physical order. The ability to interrupt the process is a power of the soul, not a function of the body.

The connection to Theorem 6 is direct and load-bearing. Beliefs are in our control only if assent is genuine origination. A determined assent dissolves the control dichotomy: if the agent was always going to assent to this impression in this way, then the belief that resulted is not genuinely in his control in any meaningful sense. The real Pause — the genuinely held-open moment — is the structural enactment of Theorem 6. Without it, the system’s foundational claim that beliefs are in our control becomes a description of a determined process, not a warrant for genuine agency.


V. Examination (Step Four)

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

Moral realism (C6) supplies the target of the examination. The impression is tested against moral facts that exist independently of what anyone believes. At Reception, moral realism made the impression a claim about something real. At Examination, moral realism is the something real against which the claim is tested. Theorem 10 and its derived propositions — that virtue is the only genuine good, that vice is the only genuine evil, that externals are therefore neither — are facts about moral reality. The impression either matches them or it does not. The examination reveals which. The agent examining the impression is finding something that was already there, not constructing a standard to test against. Without moral realism at Examination, there is nothing to discover — only a standard the agent has adopted, which is a different kind of thing entirely and one that lacks the normative authority to require correction.

Foundationalism (C4) organizes the target so that the examination can be conducted systematically. The moral facts that moral realism posits are organized in a dependency structure: some foundational, some derived. A false value impression typically fails at Theorem 12: it presents an external as genuinely good or evil, which contradicts the proposition that externals are indifferent. That proposition derives from Theorem 10. The examination traces the failure to its source in the foundational dependency structure. The verdict is not merely that “something seems off” but that a specific claim contradicts a specific foundational theorem, and the correction required is foundational rather than peripheral. Sterling’s warning in Core Stoicism applies here: denying any load-bearing theorem without attending to what depends on it produces incoherence downstream. Foundationalism is what makes the examination tell the agent not only that the impression is false but why it is false and what the correction must touch.

Ethical intuitionism (C3) provides epistemic access to the moral facts against which the impression is tested. The rational faculty apprehends directly that Theorem 10 is true. It does not infer it from prior premises or derive it from observation. It sees it as a self-evident necessary truth. Without ethical intuitionism, the examination stalls: there is no secure epistemic authority from which to call the impression false. The agent can perform the procedure, but the verdict lacks the epistemic grounding that makes it authoritative. Intuitionism is what makes the Examination a genuine test rather than an approximation.


VI. Decision (Step Five)

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

Libertarian free will (C2) makes the Decision a genuine act rather than a determined output. The examination has produced a verdict. The Pause has kept the outcome open. But neither the verdict nor the open moment automatically produces the Decision. The agent must close it. He must originate the act of withholding. What libertarian free will provides at the Decision is this: the act is genuinely his, he is its source, and what follows belongs to him in a way that a determined output does not belong to its mechanism. This matters practically because the Stoic account of moral formation depends on it. The agent who withholds assent from a false impression is doing something. He is not completing a process that was going to produce a refusal regardless. He is refusing. That act is his in the full sense: he originated it, he is responsible for it, and it is genuinely different from what would have occurred if the determined process had run without interruption.

Correspondence theory (C5) specifies what the Decision accomplishes. When the agent withholds assent from a false impression, he is not merely choosing a preferred cognitive stance. He is bringing his assent into correspondence with reality. The impression claimed that an external is a genuine evil. The moral fact — established by Theorem 12, derived from Theorem 10 — is that it is not. The Decision to withhold assent is the act by which the agent aligns his cognitive state with how things actually are. This is the specific location of correspondence theory at the Decision rather than at Examination: Examination tested the impression against reality and produced a verdict. Decision is the act by which the agent’s assent is brought into correspondence with the verdict. The test was at Examination. The alignment is at Decision. The two are distinct moments in the act, and correspondence theory operates differently at each.

Theorem 14 closes the chain: if we value only virtue, we will both judge truly and be immune to all unhappiness. The Decision, correctly performed, is the enactment of this theorem at the level of a single impression. The agent who consistently withholds assent from false value impressions — who, at every Decision, aligns his assent with what the Examination has revealed — is building the pattern that Theorem 14 describes. True judgment follows from correctly valuing only virtue. Immunity to unhappiness follows from true judgment, because unhappiness is caused by the false belief that an external has failed to deliver what it could not genuinely deliver. The pattern of correct Decisions, repeated across a lifetime of practice, is what Stoic character formation consists of.


VII. Systematic Integration

The seven sections above present the system’s components in the order in which they operate on a single impression. But the system also has a logical spine that can be read independently of that operational order — a chain of propositions in which each link depends on the ones before it and supports the ones after.

Theorem 6 establishes the control dichotomy: beliefs and will are in our control, everything else is not. Theorem 7 establishes that desires are caused by beliefs. Theorem 8 derives from Theorem 7: if beliefs are in our control, and desires are entailed by beliefs, then desires are in our control. Theorem 10 establishes that only virtue is genuinely good. Theorem 12 is derived from Theorem 10: since only virtue is good, externals are never genuinely good or evil. Theorem 13 applies Theorem 12 to the irrationality of misplaced desire: desiring externals is irrational because it involves false judgment about their value status. Theorem 14 closes the chain: valuing only virtue produces true judgment, and true judgment produces immunity to unhappiness. Each proposition is load-bearing. Remove Theorem 7, and Theorem 8 loses its ground, and with it the claim that desires are in our control. Remove Theorem 10, and Theorem 12 collapses, and with it the account of irrationality in Theorem 13, and with it the guarantee in Theorem 14. Sterling’s warning is precise: the interconnection is not decorative. It is structural.

The six philosophical commitments are distributed across the five steps of the method, each appearing where the act specifically requires what it provides. Substance dualism (C1) does its foundational work at Recognition, where the agent locates himself as distinct from the arriving claim, and at the Pause, where the causal independence of the rational faculty is what makes the interruption real. Libertarian free will (C2) is required at the Pause and the Decision — the two moments of genuine origination — where the outcome must be genuinely open and the act must genuinely belong to the agent. Ethical intuitionism (C3) is the operative commitment at Examination, where the rational faculty must apprehend directly whether the impression matches moral reality. Foundationalism (C4) organizes the target at Examination so that the test is systematic and the verdict traces to its foundational source. Correspondence theory (C5) threads through Reception, Recognition, and Decision: at Reception it makes the impression a testable truth-claim; at Recognition it makes the agent register the impression as a claim rather than as reality; at Decision it specifies the character of the act as truth-alignment rather than preference selection. Moral realism (C6) grounds the arriving claim at Reception and supplies the examination target at Examination.

No commitment appears at all five steps. The distribution is not arbitrary. It reflects the specific philosophical work each commitment does and the specific moment in the act at which that work is required. The six commitments are not six descriptions of the same general Stoic orientation. They are six distinct philosophical instruments, each active where the act needs what it specifically provides.

The failure modes illuminate the system from the negative direction. Remove substance dualism, and the boundary between self and external dissolves: the control dichotomy loses its ontological ground, Recognition cannot occur, and the Pause has no principled subject to hold it. Remove libertarian free will, and the Pause is nominal and the Decision is predetermined: what presents itself as genuine agency is a determined process running its course. Remove ethical intuitionism, and Examination stalls: the rational faculty performs the procedure but lacks the epistemic authority to reach a verdict. Remove foundationalism, and correction is possible only case by case: the agent knows something is wrong but cannot trace it to its source, and the system loses its systematic character. Remove correspondence theory, and falsity loses its meaning: value impressions become psychologically inconvenient rather than factually incorrect, and the demand for correction loses its rational basis. Remove moral realism, and Theorem 10 becomes a preference: the claim that desiring externals involves false judgment collapses because there are no longer objective moral facts for the impression to fail to correspond to, and the entire normative structure of the framework loses its authority.

The act of correct engagement — Reception through Decision, with all six commitments operative at their proper moments, grounded in the propositional chain from Theorem 6 through Theorem 14 — is one continuous act with five distinguishable moments. When performed correctly and repeated with increasing reliability across a lifetime of practice, it is what Stoic character formation consists of.


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