Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Monday, May 18, 2026

Classical Narrative Audit (CNA) — Version 1.0

 

Classical Narrative Audit (CNA) — Version 1.0

Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Test criteria derived from Sterling’s six philosophical commitments. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling’s corpus. Corpus in use: Core Stoicism, SLE v4.0, Nine Excerpts, Two and One-Half Ethical Systems, Stoicism Is Not Therapy But Training, Free Will and Causation, Stoicism Moral Facts and Ethical Intuitionism, Stoicism Foundationalism and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge, Stoicism Correspondence Theory of Truth and Objective Moral Facts, Stoicism Moral Realism and the Necessity of Objective Moral Facts, The Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism. Version 1.0, 2026.


I. Instrument Definition

The Classical Narrative Audit is a philosophical instrument designed to extract the presuppositions embedded in the narrative structure of a text and audit them against Sterling’s six philosophical commitments. The subject of analysis is the text’s narrative logic — what the story treats as genuine loss, genuine resolution, genuine agency, and genuine identity — not the author’s personal record, stated intentions, or biographical situation, and not a political ideology the text may embody or critique.

The CNA is distinct from the Classical Ideological Audit and the Classical Presupposition Audit. The CIA audits an ideology’s presuppositions against the six commitments. The CPA audits a named public figure’s argumentative presuppositions against the six commitments. The CNA audits a narrative text’s structural presuppositions against the six commitments. These are three different extraction problems. An ideology argues. A person argues. A narrative shows. The presuppositions of a narrative are not stated — they are enacted through the structural features of the text: what the story rewards, what it punishes, what it treats as the cause of the protagonist’s condition, and what it treats as the protagonist’s genuine identity.

The CNA applies primarily to narrative texts: novels, plays, films, stories, and literary works in which a protagonist’s arc is the primary vehicle for the text’s value architecture. It applies to argumentative texts with modifications noted at the relevant steps.

The instrument does not issue political verdicts. It does not evaluate the text as literature. It does not assess the author’s intentions. It issues philosophical findings about the presuppositions the text’s narrative structure must hold in order to present events as it does.


II. The Extraction Problem Specific to Narrative

Narrative texts embed presuppositions differently from ideologies and persons. The extraction method must read the text’s value architecture from its structural features rather than from explicit argumentative claims. Four structural features carry the presuppositions.

The Resolution Structure

What does the narrative treat as the terminus of the protagonist’s arc? Resolution toward an external — reunion, liberation, acquisition, recognition, survival — presupposes that the external constitutes genuine good. Resolution toward an internal condition — a settled rational disposition, correct assent, the disciplined prohairesis — presupposes something closer to the corpus. What the narrative treats as “the story being over” reveals what it treats as the condition worth reaching. The resolution structure is the single most diagnostically significant feature of the text’s value architecture.

The Loss Structure

What does the narrative treat as genuine loss? Death presented as tragedy presupposes the life lost is a genuine good. The loss of status, freedom, love, or identity presented as devastation presupposes those externals have genuine value. Public humiliation presented as ruin presupposes reputation is a genuine good. The corpus is explicit: only vice is a genuine loss, and only virtue is a genuine good. The narrative’s implicit loss account is one of its most revealing presupposition carriers, because it is where the narrative’s emotional architecture is most concentrated and where the false value judgment is most likely to have been installed without examination.

The Agency Structure

Who or what does the narrative treat as the genuine cause of the protagonist’s condition? If external forces — society, fate, other agents, historical circumstance, institutional power — are presented as constituting the protagonist’s condition, the narrative presupposes something close to structural determinism at the content level. If the protagonist’s own assents — his judgments, his choices, his refusals — are presented as the genuine cause of his condition, the narrative presupposes something closer to C2. The agency structure also governs what the narrative presents as the path of change: whether transformation comes from external liberation or from internal reorientation.

The Identity Structure

What does the narrative treat as the protagonist’s genuine self? A narrative that presents liberation of the felt self — the experienced desires, the social identity, the body, the repressed interior — as the protagonist’s authentic achievement locates identity in externals. A narrative that presents the rational faculty’s correct operation as the protagonist’s genuine condition locates identity in the prohairesis. The identity structure is particularly significant for C1 findings, and the named analytical principle governing C1 content findings applies here: an ideology or narrative that locates the genuine self in the experience of desire for externals mistakes the felt surface of the prohairesis’s operation for the prohairesis itself.


III. Verdict Architecture

The CNA issues findings at two levels: six commitment-level findings and one synthetic dissolution finding. The CIA v3.0’s five-category verdict system applies without modification.

Commitment-Level Findings (five categories)

Convergent — the text’s narrative structure aligns with this commitment in both structure and content. No residual divergence qualifies the finding.

Structural Imitation — structure Aligned, content Divergent. The text correctly apprehends the formal architecture of the relevant commitment but misidentifies its object. The narrative has the right frame filled with the wrong content. This is the dominant narrative failure mode of modernity, consistent with the CIA v3.0’s registered cultural diagnosis.

Divergent — the text’s narrative structure directly contradicts this commitment in both structure and content. The contradiction must be load-bearing for the narrative: a presupposition the story requires in order to present events as it does, not a peripheral feature the narrative could abandon without structural damage.

Partial Convergence — the structural/content distinction does not produce a clean binary on either dimension. The text aligns with the commitment on some structural or content dimension while diverging on others.

Orthogonal — both structure and content are absent from the text’s narrative domain. Orthogonal requires a positive showing on both dimensions. Orthogonal may not be used to avoid a Divergent or Structural Imitation finding the analysis requires.

Narrative Coherence Note

A text can carry internally inconsistent presuppositions. The resolution structure may presuppose one thing while the loss structure presupposes another. The agency structure may be inconsistent across the narrative’s phases. Where internal tension exists within a single text’s value architecture, it must be named explicitly as a Narrative Coherence Note rather than averaged into a single finding. This is distinct from the two-stage reading differential, which addresses variant interpretations. The Narrative Coherence Note addresses structural inconsistency within what any reading of the text must encounter.

The Dissolution Criterion — Seventh Finding (three categories)

The dissolution criterion is governed exclusively by the content findings on C1 and C2. Structural findings on C1 and C2 are stated but excluded from the dissolution calculation. The dissolution rule is mechanical.

Full Dissolution — content findings on both C1 and C2 are Divergent. The narrative structurally requires the agent who receives it to understand himself as constituted by external conditions and his behavior as determined by forces outside his genuine originating control.

Partial Dissolution — the content finding on one of C1 or C2 is Divergent. The narrative partially accommodates individual agency while structurally compromising it at one load-bearing point.

No Dissolution — content findings on both C1 and C2 are Aligned or Partial Convergence. The narrative does not structurally require the agent who receives it to dissolve himself into an external system.

The dissolution finding is not a literary verdict. A Full Dissolution finding is not a finding that the text is artistically deficient, culturally harmful, or to be avoided. It is a finding about the philosophical presuppositions the narrative structure installs in the agent who receives it.


IV. The Two-Stage Reading Procedure

Narrative texts support multiple defensible readings. A single-pass audit that selects one reading produces findings vulnerable to the objection that the finding applies only to the selected reading. The two-stage reading procedure closes this objection.

Stage One — Core Narrative Audit

Identify the presuppositions that any defensible reading of the text must encounter. These are the load-bearing features of the narrative structure shared across all readings: what the story’s arc, its resolution, its loss account, its agency account, and its identity account require regardless of interpretive emphasis. Audit these core presuppositions against all six commitments using the four structural extraction features. Issue commitment-level findings. Issue the dissolution finding. This is the text’s baseline audit.

Stage Two — Reading Differential

Identify significant defensible reading variants — interpretations of the text that are textually grounded and that emphasize different structural features or weight them differently. For each reading variant, determine whether its emphasis shifts any commitment-level finding from Stage One. A reading variant that brings a Divergent finding toward Partial Convergence is a finding of philosophical significance. A reading variant that makes a finding worse is equally significant.

The Reading Differential does not produce a separate verdict per reading. It produces a map of which interpretive emphases matter philosophically and why. The baseline audit governs. The differential shows the range of movement available within the text.

If no reading variant shifts any finding, state this explicitly. The absence of differential is itself a finding: it means the text’s presuppositions are structurally stable across its defensible readings.


V. The Six Test Criteria Applied to Narrative

Commitment 1 — Substance Dualism. Does the narrative treat the protagonist’s inner life — his rational faculty, his will, his judgments — as categorically distinct from and prior to all external material conditions? Or does the narrative present the protagonist as constituted by his social position, his cultural formation, his historical situation, his body, or his felt desires?

Structural finding: Does the narrative’s formal architecture treat inner life and external world as categorically distinct orders? Content finding: Does the narrative’s account of what the inner life is correspond to the corpus’s account of the prohairesis as the agent’s genuine identity?

Named analytical principle: a narrative that locates the protagonist’s genuine self in the experience of desire for externals mistakes the felt surface of the prohairesis’s operation for the prohairesis itself. The correct formulation in CNA findings of this type is “the experience of desire for externals,” not “desire.”

Sterling’s governing proposition (Nine Excerpts, Section 4): “I am my soul/prohairesis/inner self. Everything else, including my body, is an external.”


Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free Will. Does the narrative treat the protagonist’s choices as genuinely originating from his rational faculty, independent of prior determining causes? Or does the narrative present his behavior as the output of forces — social, historical, psychological, biological — that precede and determine him?

Structural finding: Does the narrative’s formal architecture preserve a genuine originating role for the protagonist’s own choices? Content finding: Does the narrative’s account of what the protagonist originates correspond to the corpus’s account of assent as the prohairesis’s genuine causal act?

The agency structure extraction is the primary instrument for this commitment: what does the narrative present as the genuine cause of the protagonist’s condition, and what does it present as the path of change?

Sterling’s governing proposition (Nine Excerpts, Section 7): “Choosing whether or not to assent to impressions is the only thing in our control — and yet, everything critical to leading the best possible life is contained in that one act.”


Commitment 3 — Ethical Intuitionism. Does the narrative treat moral truths as directly apprehensible by rational agents, independent of consequences or social consensus? Or does the narrative present moral claims as constructed, negotiated, or defined by outcomes?

Structural finding: Does the narrative’s formal architecture treat moral verdicts as having a ground independent of social ratification? Content finding: Does the narrative’s account of what is directly apprehensible correspond to the corpus’s account of moral facts — specifically, that only virtue is good and only vice is evil, and that evil is exclusively a condition of the malfunctioning prohairesis, not a perceptible external property of agents in the world?

The loss structure extraction is particularly relevant here: what does the narrative present as genuinely bad, and does that account correspond to the corpus’s account of the only genuine evil?

Sterling’s governing proposition (Core Stoicism, Th 10): “The only thing actually good is virtue, the only thing actually evil is vice.”


Commitment 4 — Foundationalism. Does the narrative rest on first principles it treats as non-negotiable — truths the story’s moral architecture depends on without deriving from consequences or consensus? Or does the narrative present its moral ground as provisional, revisable, or determined by outcomes?

Structural finding: Does the narrative’s formal architecture treat some moral claims as foundational and others as derived? Content finding: Does the narrative’s account of what the foundations are correspond to the corpus’s account of self-evident moral truths apprehended by rational intuition?

Sterling’s governing proposition (Stoicism, Foundationalism, and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge): “The fundamental truths of ethics are necessary, self-evident truths that any rational faculty can apprehend directly.”


Commitment 5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth. Does the narrative treat its moral and factual claims as either true or false independent of who holds them or what consensus ratifies them? Or does the narrative present truth as constructed, perspectival, or defined by outcomes?

Structural finding: Does the narrative’s formal architecture treat claims as having truth values independent of social ratification? Content finding: Does the narrative’s account of what the claims correspond to align with the corpus’s account of mind-independent moral and factual reality?

Sterling’s governing proposition (Nine Excerpts, Section 6): “This belief is factually false. Note that this is not a psychological claim — it is a value claim.”


Commitment 6 — Moral Realism. Does the narrative treat good and evil as objective properties that reason can discover independently of preference or agreement? Or does the narrative present moral claims as expressions of social consensus, cultural norms, collective will, or instrumental utility?

Structural finding: Does the narrative’s formal architecture treat moral claims as objective rather than constructed? Content finding: Does the narrative’s account of what the objective moral facts are correspond to the corpus’s account — that only virtue is good, only vice is evil, and all externals are neither good nor evil?

The resolution structure extraction is particularly relevant here: what does the narrative treat as the condition worth reaching, and does that condition correspond to the corpus’s account of the only genuine good?

Sterling’s governing proposition (Nine Excerpts, Section 3): “Only virtue is good and only vice is evil. All things not in our control are neither good nor evil.”


VI. The Mandatory Gap Declaration — With Positive Account

What the CNA Cannot Say

Sterling’s corpus addresses individual virtue and rational agency. It does not contain a theory of literary value, a doctrine of aesthetic merit, an account of narrative craft, a framework for evaluating cultural significance, or a position on what texts should be read or taught. The CNA findings are findings about philosophical presuppositions only.

A Divergent finding means a text’s narrative structure contradicts Sterling’s commitments at the level of its embedded presuppositions. It does not mean the text is artistically deficient, culturally harmful, morally corrupting, or to be avoided. A Full Dissolution finding means a text’s narrative structure requires the agent who receives it to understand himself as constituted by external conditions. It does not mean the text produces bad outcomes in those who read it, or that its artistic achievements are diminished. These are separate questions the CNA does not address and cannot address.

The CNA also cannot evaluate the empirical claims narratives make about social life — whether institutions work as depicted, whether historical conditions are accurately represented, whether psychological portraits are accurate. These are outside the corpus’s domain.

What the CNA Can Say — And Why It Matters

The CNA can determine what value architecture a narrative installs in an agent who receives it as a formative impression. This finding matters in a way that differs in kind from the CIA and CPA findings, and the difference is architecturally significant.

An agent who adopts an ideology does so through a process that engages his explicit assent. An agent who reads a figure’s framework adopts it at the level of deliberate uptake. But an agent who receives a narrative — reads it, watches it, inhabits it over time — does not adopt it as an ideology. He receives it as an impression. The narrative’s presuppositions enter through the impression before the discipline of assent is engaged. This is the mechanism by which dogmata are installed: false dogmata shape impressions before judgment rather than judging neutral impressions. Narrative is one of the primary cultural mechanisms by which dogmata are installed before the agent is in a position to examine them.

The CNA makes this installation process visible. An agent who has received a narrative whose resolution structure presupposes that reunion with a lost loved one constitutes genuine good has had that presupposition installed at the level of impression before he has had the opportunity to withhold assent from it. The CNA identifies what has been installed and audits it against the corpus. That identification is the first step in the discipline of assent at the cultural level: the agent cannot examine what he has not yet named.

The finding is practically significant regardless of whether the text is artistically accomplished, culturally canonical, or personally beloved. The corpus’s account of how false dogmata operate does not exempt beloved texts. The CNA makes the philosophical layer visible without issuing a verdict on the text as a whole.


VII. Operational Protocol

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

Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Before executing any CNA analysis, confirm:

The full corpus list is in view. The instrument is not proceeding from memory. Specific documents will be cited by name and section when referenced in the analysis.

The text under examination has been identified by title and author. The narrative arc has been stated in summary form sufficient to identify the four structural features. If the text has not been read in full by the instrument operator, that limitation is stated explicitly before proceeding.

The instrument is not proceeding from knowledge of the author’s biography, intentions, or stated views. The analysis is of the text’s narrative structure, not of the author’s mind.

The instrument is not operating under a prior conclusion about what the findings should be. The findings are produced by the analysis, not confirmed by it.

Step 1 — Text Statement and Reading Identification

Governing question: What is this narrative’s arc in propositional form, and what are its significant defensible reading variants?

State the narrative’s arc as a set of propositions identifying: the protagonist’s initial condition, the forces and events that act on him, the choices he makes and their consequences, and the terminus the narrative presents as resolution. This statement is not a plot summary for all purposes. It is the specification of the narrative features the CNA will extract presuppositions from.

Identify the major defensible reading variants — interpretations that are textually grounded and that weight the structural features differently — that will be examined in Stage Two.

Self-Audit — Step 1:

  • Have I stated the narrative arc in terms of the four structural features, or have I produced a plot summary that obscures the value architecture?
  • Have I introduced authorial intent or biographical information into the narrative statement?
  • Have I identified the reading variants that will be examined in Stage Two?
  • Have I stated any prior conclusion about what the findings will be?

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

Step 2 — Stage One Core Audit

Governing question: What does each structural feature of the narrative presuppose for each of the six commitments?

Apply each of the four structural extraction features — resolution, loss, agency, identity — to each commitment in turn. For each commitment, issue a structural finding and a content finding, then issue a single composite verdict from the five categories. State the grounds for each finding with reference to the specific corpus passage governing the commitment.

Where the four structural features produce inconsistent presuppositions for a single commitment, issue a Narrative Coherence Note identifying the tension before issuing the composite verdict. Do not average inconsistent structural findings into a false unity.

Self-Audit — Step 2:

  • Have I extracted presuppositions from all four structural features, or have I relied on only the most accessible?
  • Have I separated structural and content findings before issuing the composite verdict?
  • Have I issued a Narrative Coherence Note where the structural features produce inconsistent presuppositions?
  • Have I used Orthogonal to avoid a Divergent or Structural Imitation finding the analysis requires?
  • Have I imported authorial intent or biographical material into the presupposition extraction step (Failure Mode 11)?
  • Have I imported corpus-compatible content the narrative does not actually carry (Failure Mode 10)?
  • Have I distributed findings to achieve apparent balance rather than following the analysis?

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

Step 3 — Stage Two Reading Differential

Governing question: Do any defensible reading variants shift the commitment-level findings from Stage One?

For each reading variant identified in Step 1, examine whether its interpretive emphasis changes any finding from Step 2. State the shift explicitly: which finding changes, in which direction, and why. If no reading variant shifts any finding, state this explicitly.

Self-Audit — Step 3:

  • Are the reading variants genuinely textually grounded, or have I constructed them to soften the baseline finding?
  • Have I examined the presuppositions the reading variant requires, or merely its surface interpretive claims?
  • Have I found differentials where none exist to produce a more favorable overall finding?

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

Step 4 — Dissolution Finding

Governing question: Does the narrative’s structure require the agent who receives it to dissolve himself into an external system?

Apply the dissolution rule to the content findings from Step 2 on C1 and C2 only. Structural findings on C1 and C2 are stated for completeness but excluded from the dissolution calculation.

If content findings on both C1 and C2 are Divergent: issue Full Dissolution. State the specific narrative features that produce each content-Divergent finding and how together they close the space for a self-governing rational faculty in the agent who receives the narrative.

If the content finding on one of C1 or C2 is Divergent: issue Partial Dissolution. State which commitment produces the Divergent content finding and what the other commitment’s finding preserves.

If content findings on both C1 and C2 are Aligned or Partial Convergence: issue No Dissolution.

Apply the reading differential from Step 3 to the dissolution finding: does any reading variant shift the dissolution finding?

Self-Audit — Step 4:

  • Does the dissolution finding follow mechanically from the content findings on C1 and C2 only?
  • Have I allowed structural findings to enter the dissolution calculation (Failure Mode 8)?
  • Have I issued Full Dissolution on Partial Convergence rather than Divergent content findings (Failure Mode 2)?
  • Have I stated the dissolution finding as a philosophical finding, not as a literary verdict?

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

Step 5 — Summary Finding

Governing question: What is the overall pattern of findings, and what does it mean for an agent who receives this narrative as a formative impression?

Produce the summary in three parts:

Part A — Commitment Pattern. State the six commitment-level composite verdicts from Stage One. Identify the overall pattern: how many Convergent, Structural Imitation, Divergent, Partial Convergence, Orthogonal findings. Identify the deepest point of divergence and the strongest point of convergence (if any). If the overall pattern is predominantly Structural Imitation, register this explicitly as consistent with the named cultural diagnosis. Note any Narrative Coherence findings.

Part B — Dissolution Finding. State the dissolution finding and its grounds. Confirm that the finding is derived from content findings on C1 and C2 only. Note any reading variant that shifts the dissolution finding.

Part C — Agent-Level Implication. State what the findings mean for an agent who receives this narrative as a formative impression — what value architecture the narrative installs at the level of dogmata before the discipline of assent is brought to bear. This is the CNA’s most practically significant output. It is addressed to the agent who has received the narrative, not to the text. It draws on the Mandatory Gap Declaration’s account of narrative as a primary mechanism for the cultural installation of dogmata.

The agent-level implication of a CNA finding differs in kind from the CIA and CPA findings. The CIA asks what an agent who adopts an ideology implicitly accepts. The CPA asks what an agent who takes up a figure’s framework implicitly accepts. The CNA asks what an agent who has received a narrative as a formative impression has had installed at the level of impression before the discipline of assent was engaged. The implication is therefore not about deliberate uptake but about prior installation — and naming it is the first step in examining it.

The summary finding is not a literary verdict and must not be read as one.

Self-Audit — Step 5:

  • Does the summary follow from the preceding steps, or have I introduced new material at the synthesis stage?
  • Have I stated the agent-level implication in terms of prior installation rather than deliberate adoption?
  • Have I stated the dissolution finding as a philosophical finding, not a literary verdict?
  • Have I issued the corpus boundary declaration accurately?
  • Is the summary self-contained — could a reader understand both the finding and its limits without consulting additional material?

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


VIII. Named Failure Modes

Failure Mode 1 — Favorable Reading Selection. The instrument audits the most philosophically favorable reading of a text as though it were the only reading, producing findings that do not apply to what any reading of the text must encounter. The two-stage reading procedure exists to prevent this failure. The core audit must address the presuppositions shared across all defensible readings, not the presuppositions of the reading the instrument operator prefers.

Failure Mode 2 — Dissolution Inflation. The instrument issues a Full Dissolution finding when one or both content findings on C1 and C2 are Partial Convergence rather than Divergent. The dissolution rule is mechanical: it requires Divergent content findings, not Partial Convergence findings.

Failure Mode 3 — Literary Verdict Substitution. The instrument converts a philosophical finding into a literary evaluation — treating a Full Dissolution finding as a finding that the text is artistically deficient, culturally harmful, or to be avoided. A Full Dissolution finding is a finding about philosophical presuppositions embedded in the narrative structure. The instrument must hold this distinction throughout.

Failure Mode 4 — Orthogonal Evasion. The instrument issues an Orthogonal finding to avoid a Divergent or Structural Imitation finding the analysis requires. Orthogonal requires a positive showing on both structure and content dimensions.

Failure Mode 5 — Surface Claim Substitution. The instrument evaluates what the narrative explicitly states — through dialogue, narration, or commentary — rather than what the narrative’s structure presupposes. A narrative may explicitly condemn what its resolution structure rewards. The CNA evaluates what the story must hold in order to present events as it does, not what characters or narrators assert.

Failure Mode 6 — Symmetry Bias. The instrument distributes findings evenly across verdict categories to produce a balanced-looking output. The corpus makes determinate claims. A narrative that contradicts the corpus on all six commitments receives six Divergent findings.

Failure Mode 7 — Structural/Content Conflation. The instrument issues a composite verdict without separating the structural and content findings, obscuring a Structural Imitation finding. Every commitment-level finding must state the structural finding and the content finding separately before the composite verdict is issued.

Failure Mode 8 — Structural Dissolution. The instrument allows structural findings on C1 or C2 to enter the dissolution calculation. The dissolution criterion is governed exclusively by content findings on C1 and C2.

Failure Mode 9 — Structural Imitation Inflation. The instrument issues a Structural Imitation verdict when the narrative’s structure is not cleanly Aligned with the commitment’s structural form. Structural Imitation requires the structural finding to be Aligned and the content finding to be Divergent. If the structure itself is only partially present, the finding is Partial Convergence.

Failure Mode 10 — Charitable Extraction Contamination. The instrument imports corpus-compatible content into the presupposition extraction step that the narrative does not actually carry, producing artificially elevated alignment findings. Every presupposition attributed to the narrative must be traceable to what the text’s structural features require.

Failure Mode 11 — Authorial Intent Substitution. The instrument imports what is known about the author’s intentions, biography, stated views, or historical context into the presupposition extraction step, producing findings about the author rather than the text. The CNA audits the text’s narrative logic, not the author’s mind. What the author intended and what the narrative structure presupposes can diverge. These must be kept strictly separate throughout. Authorial material may not be introduced at any step of the instrument.


IX. Ratified Architectural Notes

Narrative as Dogmata Installation Mechanism

An agent who receives a narrative as a formative impression does not adopt its presuppositions through explicit assent. The narrative’s value architecture enters through the impression before the discipline of assent is engaged. This is the mechanism by which dogmata are installed: false dogmata shape impressions before judgment rather than judging neutral impressions. Narrative is one of the primary cultural mechanisms by which dogmata are installed before the agent is in a position to examine them. The CNA makes the installation process visible. Naming what has been installed is the first step in the discipline of assent at the cultural level.

Orexis/Propatheia Distinction

Desire as orexis is a function of the prohairesis — internal, not external. The experience of desire for externals is on the external side of Prop 4’s boundary. Narratives that locate the protagonist’s genuine self in the experience of desire for externals mistake the felt surface of the prohairesis’s operation for the prohairesis itself. This distinction governs all CNA runs where the identity structure locates the genuine self in felt desire. Ratified May 2026.

Structural Imitation as Cultural Diagnosis

Structural Imitation is the dominant ideological and narrative failure mode of modernity. The classical commitments are so deeply embedded in Western narrative architecture that texts diverging from the corpus at every content point cannot escape building on its formal structure. They have the right frame filled with the wrong content. The CNA’s structural/content distinction layer makes this pattern visible at the level of individual narrative texts. Registered May 2026.


Instrument: Classical Narrative Audit (CNA) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. 2026.

Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) — Version 3.0

 

Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) — Version 3.0

Supersedes: CIA v2.0 (formerly Sterling Ideological Audit / SIA v2.0, formerly SIA v1.0). Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Test criteria derived from Sterling’s six philosophical commitments. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling’s corpus. Corpus in use: Core Stoicism, Nine Excerpts, Egoism and Altruism, SLE v4.0, Two and One-Half Ethical Systems, Stoicism Is Not Therapy But Training, Free Will and Causation, Stoicism Moral Facts and Ethical Intuitionism, Stoicism Foundationalism and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge, Stoicism Correspondence Theory of Truth and Objective Moral Facts, Stoicism Moral Realism and the Necessity of Objective Moral Facts, The Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism. Upgraded May 2026.


I. Instrument Definition

The Classical Ideological Audit is a philosophical instrument designed to test any ideological position — as a system of ideas, not as a characterization of persons — for its degree of affinity with Sterling’s six philosophical commitments. The subject of analysis is propositional content: the embedded presuppositions an ideology must hold in order to argue as it does. The instrument does not issue political verdicts. It issues philosophical findings.

The CIA is distinct from the Sterling Logic Engine and from the Sterling Corpus Evaluator. The SLE audits an individual person’s assents against the 80 Unified Propositions. The SCE evaluates any idea against the full corpus. The CIA occupies the middle position: it audits an ideology’s presuppositions specifically against the six commitments, and additionally issues a synthetic finding on the dissolution criterion defined below. Because ideologies are not rational agents capable of assent, the SLE’s binary verdict (Correspondence Confirmed / Correspondence Failure Detected) does not apply. The CIA issues findings in the verdict architecture defined in Section II.

The v3.0 architectural addition over v2.0: the structural/content distinction layer. Each commitment-level finding now separates the structural finding (whether the ideology’s formal architecture aligns with the commitment) from the content finding (whether the specific claims placed on that structure align with the commitment). A single composite verdict is issued per commitment. This layer makes visible what a four-category verdict system could not: ideologies that correctly apprehend the form of a classical commitment while misidentifying its object. This is the Structural Imitation finding, and it is the dominant ideological failure mode of modernity.


II. Verdict Architecture

The CIA issues findings at two levels: six commitment-level findings and one synthetic dissolution finding.

Commitment-Level Findings (five categories)

Convergent — the ideology’s presuppositions align with this commitment in both structure and content. Structure and content are both Aligned. No residual divergence qualifies the finding.

Structural Imitation — structure Aligned, content Divergent. The ideology correctly apprehends the form of the relevant truth but misidentifies its object. The formal architecture of the commitment is present; the specific claims placed on that architecture diverge from the corpus at every load-bearing point of content. Structural Imitation is not a softened Divergent finding. It is a finding of genuine philosophical significance: the ideology has the right frame filled with the wrong content. It is the dominant ideological failure mode of modernity.

Divergent — the ideology’s presuppositions directly contradict this commitment in both structure and content. The contradiction must be load-bearing: it must be a presupposition the ideology requires in order to argue as it does, not a peripheral claim the ideology could abandon without structural damage.

Partial Convergence — the structural/content distinction does not produce a clean binary on either dimension. The ideology aligns with the commitment on some structural or content dimension while diverging on others. A residual divergence prevents Convergent; a genuine point of alignment prevents Divergent. Partial Convergence is not a softened Divergent — it is a genuine finding that requires specifying both the point of alignment and the residual divergence that limits it.

Orthogonal — both structure and content are absent from the ideology’s domain. Orthogonal requires a positive showing on both dimensions: the instrument must demonstrate that the commitment’s structural form and its content domain are genuinely absent from the ideology, not merely that the ideology has not explicitly addressed them. Orthogonal may not be used to avoid a Divergent or Structural Imitation finding the analysis requires. Orthogonal requires both structure and content absent — not merely one.

The Dissolution Criterion — Seventh Finding (three categories)

The dissolution criterion addresses a question the six commitment-level findings do not individually answer but collectively make determinable: does the ideology’s architecture as a whole require the individual rational agent to subordinate his prohairesis — his self-governing rational faculty — to something external to it?

An agent who adopts an ideology may simultaneously accept a self-description that the corpus identifies as the structural root of unhappiness: the identification of the self with something external to the rational faculty, or the attribution of the agent’s condition to forces outside his genuine originating control. The dissolution criterion makes this finding explicit and systematic.

The dissolution finding is governed exclusively by the content findings on Commitment 1 (Substance Dualism) and Commitment 2 (Libertarian Free Will). Structural findings on C1 and C2 are stated but excluded from the dissolution calculation. The dissolution rule is mechanical and follows from content findings only.

Full Dissolution — content findings on both C1 and C2 are Divergent. The ideology structurally requires the agent to understand himself as constituted by external conditions and his behavior as determined by forces outside his genuine originating control. No space remains within the ideology’s architecture for the self-governing rational faculty the corpus identifies as the agent’s true identity.

Partial Dissolution — the content finding on one of C1 or C2 is Divergent. The ideology partially accommodates individual agency while structurally compromising it at one load-bearing point. The agent who adopts this ideology retains a partial self-description compatible with the corpus but accepts at least one embedded presupposition that undermines it.

No Dissolution — content findings on both C1 and C2 are Aligned or Partial Convergence. The ideology does not structurally require the agent to dissolve himself into an external system. This finding does not mean the ideology is philosophically compatible with the framework overall — it means specifically that it does not deny the agent’s ontological priority over external conditions or his genuine causal power over his own assents.

The dissolution finding is not a political verdict. An ideology that produces a Full Dissolution finding is not thereby condemned as strategically wrong, historically failed, or institutionally unjust. The finding is narrower: it identifies a philosophical incompatibility at the level of the agent’s self-description. An agent who adopts that ideology is implicitly accepting a self-description that the corpus identifies as the root cause of pathos.


III. The Two-Stage Variant Procedure

Major political ideologies are internally differentiated. Nationalism has ethnic, civic, and cultural variants. Libertarianism has anarcho-capitalist and minarchist wings. Conservatism ranges from Burkean traditionalism to classical liberalism to confessional conservatism. Progressivism has market-compatible and socialist variants. Communitarianism has religious and secular forms. Anarchism has individualist and collectivist schools.

A single-pass audit that selects one representative version of an ideology produces findings that are vulnerable to the objection that the finding applies only to the selected version. The two-stage variant procedure closes this objection.

Stage One — Core Presupposition Audit

Identify the presuppositions that any version of the ideology must hold in order to argue as it does. These are the load-bearing claims shared across all variants: the claims an advocate of any form of the ideology cannot abandon without ceasing to hold the ideology at all. Audit these core presuppositions against all six commitments. Issue commitment-level findings. Issue the dissolution finding. This is the ideology’s baseline audit.

Stage Two — Variant Differential Analysis

Identify the presuppositions that distinguish major variants from one another. For each variant-specific presupposition, determine whether it shifts any commitment-level finding from Stage One. A variant-specific presupposition that brings a Divergent finding toward Partial Convergence, or a Partial Convergence finding toward Convergent, is a finding of philosophical significance: it shows that adopting this particular variant rather than another has genuine philosophical consequences. A variant-specific presupposition that makes a finding worse is equally significant.

The Variant Differential Analysis does not produce a separate overall verdict per variant. It produces a map of which internal variations matter philosophically and why. The baseline audit governs. The differential shows the range of movement available within the ideology.

Variant Procedure Self-Audit

Before proceeding from Stage One to Stage Two:

  • Have the core presuppositions been correctly identified as those shared across all variants, not those characteristic of the most philosophically favorable variant?
  • Are the variant-specific presuppositions genuinely load-bearing for the variants that hold them, or are they peripheral claims that could be abandoned without structural damage?
  • Has the selection of variants for Stage Two been determined by philosophical significance rather than by political salience or the instrument operator’s prior sympathies?

IV. The Six Test Criteria

Commitment 1 — Substance Dualism. Does the ideology treat the inner life of the individual — his rational faculty, his will, his judgments — as categorically distinct from and prior to all external material conditions? Or does it reduce persons to products of economic, social, institutional, cultural, or structural forces?

The test question: On this ideology’s account, can an individual’s inner life be fully explained by reference to conditions external to it — his class position, his cultural formation, his institutional role, his historical situation — or does the ideology require a residue of interiority that those conditions do not fully constitute?

Structural finding: Does the ideology’s formal architecture treat the inner life and the external world as categorically distinct orders? Content finding: Does the ideology’s account of what the inner life is correspond to the corpus’s account of the prohairesis as the agent’s genuine identity?

Named analytical principle governing C1 content findings where the misidentified genuine self involves desire: desire as orexis is a function of the prohairesis — internal, not external. The experience of desire for externals is on the external side of Prop 4’s boundary. An ideology that locates the genuine self in the experience of desire for externals mistakes the felt surface of the prohairesis’s operation for the prohairesis itself. The correct formulation in CIA runs of this type is “the experience of desire for externals,” not “desire.” Ratified May 2026.

Sterling’s governing proposition (Nine Excerpts, Section 4): “I am my soul/prohairesis/inner self. Everything else, including my body, is an external.”

Supporting corpus: A Brief Reply Re: Dualism (Sterling, ISF January 20, 2012): certainty of qualitative mental experience; science cannot account for the feeling of pain or modus ponens; dualism developed against modern scientific physics. Stoic Dualism and Nature (Sterling, ISF February 28, 2013): morality is not and cannot ever be empirical; rational intuition is required to adjudicate moral questions.


Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free Will. Does the ideology ground its moral claims in the genuine causal power of individual rational agents to choose — to originate their own assents independently of prior determining causes? Or does it explain human behavior primarily through systemic, structural, material, historical, or institutional determinism?

The test question: On this ideology’s account, is the individual agent the genuine first cause of his own judgments and choices, or is he a sophisticated output of forces that precede and determine him?

Structural finding: Does the ideology’s formal architecture preserve a genuine originating role for the individual agent? Content finding: Does the ideology’s account of what the agent originates correspond to the corpus’s account of assent as the prohairesis’s genuine causal act?

Sterling’s governing proposition (Nine Excerpts, Section 7): “Choosing whether or not to assent to impressions is the only thing in our control — and yet, everything critical to leading the best possible life is contained in that one act.”

Supporting corpus: Free Will and Causation (Sterling, ISF): the genuine act of assent as origination, not determined output; libertarian free will as load-bearing commitment, not philosophical decoration.


Commitment 3 — Ethical Intuitionism. Does the ideology appeal to moral truths grasped directly by rational apprehension, independent of consequences, utility, historical processes, or social consensus? Or does it derive its moral claims entirely from outcomes, calculations, or agreements?

The test question: Does this ideology hold that there are moral facts that rational agents can know non-empirically and non-inferentially, prior to any calculation of consequences or consultation of consensus? Or must every moral claim be grounded in something that produces or achieves or represents an external good?

Structural finding: Does the ideology’s formal architecture treat moral truths as directly apprehensible rather than derived? Content finding: Does the ideology’s account of what is directly apprehended correspond to the corpus’s account of moral facts — specifically, that only virtue is good and only vice is evil, and that evil is exclusively a condition of the malfunctioning prohairesis, not a perceptible external property of agents in the world?

Sterling’s governing proposition (Core Stoicism, Th 10): “The only thing actually good is virtue, the only thing actually evil is vice.”

Supporting corpus: Stoicism, Moral Facts, and Ethical Intuitionism (Sterling, ISF February 24 and March 13, 2020): alternatives are intuitionism or nihilism, no third option; moral terms cannot be heard, smelt, tasted, seen, or felt; same rational faculty that gives knowledge of mathematical truths gives knowledge of moral truths. Two and One-Half Ethical Systems (Sterling, ISF August 18, 2011): deontological intuitionism as the natural fit for Stoic virtue ethics.


Commitment 4 — Foundationalism. Does the ideology rest on first principles it treats as non-negotiable — necessary, self-evident truths not derived from empirical observation or pragmatic adjustment? Or is it explicitly anti-foundationalist, treating its moral and factual claims as provisional, revisable, or defined by their consequences?

The test question: Does this ideology have a stopping point — a set of claims it holds as foundational and from which its other claims derive? Or does it treat all its principles as revisable in light of changing circumstances, empirical findings, or evolving consensus?

Structural finding: Does the ideology’s formal architecture treat some claims as foundational and others as derived? Content finding: Does the ideology’s account of what the foundations are correspond to the corpus’s account of self-evident moral truths apprehended by rational intuition?

Sterling’s governing proposition (Stoicism, Foundationalism, and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge, January 19, 2015): “I think the fundamental truths of ethics are necessary, self-evident truths. They are necessary, self-evident truths that any rational faculty can apprehend directly.”

Supporting corpus: Stoicism, Foundationalism, and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge (Sterling): four sources of knowledge; category (c) rational perception of self-evidence as foundationalism’s epistemological home; moral properties cannot be sensed; the is/ought gap cannot be bridged by empirical premises alone.


Commitment 5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth. Does the ideology treat its moral and factual claims as either true or false independent of who holds them, what consequences follow, or what consensus ratifies them? Or does it treat truth as constructed, perspectival, negotiated, or defined by outcomes?

The test question: On this ideology’s account, is there a fact of the matter about its core moral claims that holds independently of whether anyone believes it, whether believing it produces good outcomes, and whether any institution has endorsed it?

Structural finding: Does the ideology’s formal architecture treat claims as having truth values independent of social ratification? Content finding: Does the ideology’s account of what the claims correspond to align with the corpus’s account of mind-independent moral and factual reality?

Sterling’s governing proposition (Nine Excerpts, Section 6): “This belief is factually false. Note that this is not a psychological claim — it is a value claim.”

Supporting corpus: Stoicism, Correspondence Theory of Truth, and Objective Moral Facts (Sterling): only criterion of truth is correspondence with the facts; the Stoics were pure realists; without objective facts, no basis for calling value impressions false rather than culturally contingent.


Commitment 6 — Moral Realism. Does the ideology treat good and evil as objective properties — real features of the world that reason can discover independently of preference, calculation, or agreement? Or does it treat moral claims as expressions of social consensus, cultural norms, collective will, or instrumental utility?

The test question: Does this ideology hold that its central moral claims are objectively true — true in the way that 2+2=4 is true, independently of anyone’s preferences or cultural formation — or are they expressions of what a group, a tradition, a historical moment, or a calculation has ratified?

Structural finding: Does the ideology’s formal architecture treat moral claims as objective rather than constructed? Content finding: Does the ideology’s account of what the objective moral facts are correspond to the corpus’s account — that only virtue is good, only vice is evil, and all externals are neither good nor evil?

Sterling’s governing proposition (Nine Excerpts, Section 3): “Only virtue is good and only vice is evil. All things not in our control are neither good nor evil.”

Supporting corpus: Stoicism, Moral Realism, and the Necessity of Objective Moral Facts (Sterling): moral facts have no source, just as 2+2=4 has no source; fundamental, necessary, and unalterable facts about the universe; if no objective moral facts, the Stoic project fails utterly. Stoicism, Moral Facts, and Ethical Intuitionism (Sterling): Stoicism is incoherent without moral facts; externals being neither good nor evil is a fact about the universe, independent of how we want things to be.


V. The Mandatory Gap Declaration — With Positive Account

What the CIA Cannot Say

Sterling’s corpus addresses individual virtue and rational agency. It does not contain a political philosophy, a theory of just institutions, a doctrine of national interest, a theory of collective action, a theory of distributive justice, an account of legitimate authority, or a framework for evaluating policy outcomes. The CIA findings are findings about philosophical presuppositions only.

A Divergent finding means an ideology contradicts Sterling’s commitments at the level of its embedded presuppositions. It does not mean the ideology is politically wrong, strategically misguided, institutionally unjust, or historically failed. A Full Dissolution finding means an ideology structurally denies the ontological priority and genuine causal power of the individual rational faculty. It does not mean that adopting the ideology produces bad political outcomes or that its policy prescriptions are incorrect. These are separate questions the CIA does not address and cannot address.

The CIA also cannot evaluate the empirical claims ideologies make about how the world works — whether markets tend toward efficiency, whether redistribution reduces poverty, whether strong states prevent conflict, whether decentralized order is stable. These are outside the corpus’s domain.

What the CIA Can Say — And Why It Matters

The CIA can determine what an agent is philosophically committed to at the level of presupposition when he adopts an ideological position. This finding matters because ideological presuppositions are not merely theoretical — they shape the agent’s implicit self-description, his account of his own agency, his understanding of the source of his condition, and his relationship to the external systems he inhabits.

An agent who adopts an ideology whose presuppositions require Full Dissolution has not merely chosen a political position. He has accepted, at the level of embedded assumption, a self-description that the corpus identifies as structurally incompatible with eudaimonia. The ideology tells him, implicitly, that he is constituted by forces external to his rational faculty and that his behavior is determined by conditions he did not originate. On Sterling’s framework, this self-description is the root of pathos: it is false, and the false assent to it is the mechanism by which the agent places his wellbeing in the hands of what he cannot control.

An agent who adopts an ideology whose presuppositions produce Structural Imitation findings across multiple commitments has not merely chosen a position with wrong content. He has accepted a framework that mimics the classical form at every structural point while filling it with a misidentified object — locating genuine selfhood in the experience of desire for externals, locating genuine agency in liberation from external constraints, locating genuine moral apprehension in the intuition of collective identity rather than of virtue. The classical commitments are so deeply embedded in Western narrative and ideological architecture that ideologies diverging from the corpus at every content point cannot escape building on its formal structure. They have the right frame filled with the wrong content. The CIA’s structural/content distinction layer makes this pattern visible in a way no prior instrument could.

An agent who adopts an ideology whose presuppositions require him to treat externals as genuine goods — national prosperity, collective liberation, traditional order, maximum liberty — has accepted, at the level of embedded assumption, the precise error Sterling’s Theorem 10 identifies as the cause of all unhappiness: the false judgment that something other than virtue is genuinely good. The ideology may be tactically correct, institutionally defensible, and historically vindicated. It is still built on a false value judgment. The CIA makes that finding explicit.

The philosophical compatibility finding is meaningful independently of the political correctness finding. An agent can hold a politically correct position on philosophically incoherent grounds, or a philosophically compatible position on empirically mistaken grounds. The CIA addresses only the philosophical layer. It is the instrument for making that layer visible to the agent before he deliberates — not after.


VI. Operational Protocol

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

Step 0 — Protocol Activation

Before executing any CIA analysis, confirm:

The full corpus list is in view. The instrument is not proceeding from memory. Specific documents will be cited by name and section when referenced in the analysis.

The ideology under examination has been stated in propositional form. If the ideology is presented as a named position (nationalism, libertarianism, etc.), the instrument must state explicitly what presuppositions it is attributing to the position before beginning the audit. The instrument does not audit a label. It audits a set of identified presuppositions.

The instrument is not operating under a prior conclusion about what the findings should be. The findings are produced by the analysis, not confirmed by it.

Step 1 — Ideology Statement and Variant Identification

Governing question: What is this ideology, in propositional form, and what are its significant internal variants?

State the ideology’s core claims as a set of propositions. Identify what any version of the ideology must assert in order to count as that ideology. Then identify the major variants and what distinguishes their presuppositions from one another.

The ideology statement is not a definition of the ideology for all purposes. It is the specification of the presuppositions the CIA will audit. It must be stable enough that an advocate of the ideology would recognize it as a fair characterization of the position’s load-bearing claims, even if he would contest the CIA’s subsequent findings about what those claims entail.

Self-Audit — Step 1:

  • Have I stated the ideology’s presuppositions or merely its surface claims and slogans?
  • Have I identified the core presuppositions shared across variants, or have I selected the presuppositions of the most philosophically favorable variant?
  • Have I identified the variants that will be examined in Stage Two of the variant procedure?
  • Have I stated any prior conclusion about what the findings will be?

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

Step 2 — Stage One Core Audit

Governing question: What does each core presupposition entail for each of the six commitments, structurally and by content?

Apply each core presupposition to each commitment in turn. For each commitment, issue a structural finding (whether the ideology’s formal architecture aligns with the commitment) and a content finding (whether the specific claims placed on that structure align with the commitment). Then issue a single composite verdict from the five verdict categories: Convergent, Structural Imitation, Divergent, Partial Convergence, or Orthogonal.

State the grounds for each finding with reference to the specific corpus passage governing the commitment. When a finding is Orthogonal, state the positive showing on both structure and content dimensions. When a finding is Divergent or Structural Imitation, identify whether the contradiction is load-bearing.

Self-Audit — Step 2:

  • Have I audited all core presuppositions, or have I selectively addressed the easier ones?
  • Have I separated structural and content findings before issuing the composite verdict?
  • Have I used Orthogonal to avoid a Divergent or Structural Imitation finding the analysis requires?
  • Have I used Structural Imitation where the structure is not cleanly Aligned (Failure Mode 9)?
  • Have I imported corpus-compatible content the ideology does not actually carry (Failure Mode 10)?
  • Have I distributed findings to achieve apparent balance rather than following the analysis?
  • Have I issued findings on questions outside the corpus’s domain?
  • Would I issue the same findings for an ideology I find politically sympathetic as for one I find unsympathetic, given identical presuppositions?

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

Step 3 — Stage Two Variant Differential

Governing question: Do any variant-specific presuppositions shift the commitment-level findings from Stage One?

For each major variant identified in Step 1, examine whether its distinguishing presuppositions change any finding from Step 2. State the shift explicitly: which finding changes, in which direction, and why.

If no variant-specific presupposition shifts any finding, state this explicitly. The absence of differential is itself a finding: it means the ideology’s internal variation is philosophically insignificant at the level of these commitments.

Self-Audit — Step 3:

  • Have I examined the variant-specific presuppositions or merely the variant’s surface differences from other variants?
  • Have I identified philosophically significant differentials, or have I found differentials where none exist to soften the baseline finding?
  • Have I stated clearly which variant-specific presuppositions are load-bearing for the variant?

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

Step 4 — Dissolution Finding

Governing question: Does the ideology’s architecture require the agent to dissolve himself into an external system?

Apply the dissolution rule to the content findings from Step 2 on C1 and C2 only. Structural findings on C1 and C2 are stated for completeness but excluded from the dissolution calculation.

If content findings on both C1 and C2 are Divergent: issue Full Dissolution. State the specific presuppositions that produce each content-Divergent finding and how together they close the space for a self-governing rational faculty.

If the content finding on one of C1 or C2 is Divergent: issue Partial Dissolution. State which commitment produces the Divergent content finding and what the other commitment’s finding preserves.

If content findings on both C1 and C2 are Aligned or Partial Convergence: issue No Dissolution. State what the ideology preserves in terms of individual agency even if it fails on other commitments.

Then apply the variant differential from Step 3 to the dissolution finding: does any variant shift the dissolution finding? A variant that moves the ideology from Full to Partial Dissolution by strengthening its account of individual agency is a philosophically significant variant. State this explicitly.

Self-Audit — Step 4:

  • Does the dissolution finding follow mechanically from the content findings on C1 and C2 only, or have I allowed structural findings to enter the calculation (Failure Mode 8)?
  • Have I issued Full Dissolution on Partial Convergence rather than Divergent content findings (Failure Mode 2)?
  • Have I stated the dissolution finding as a philosophical finding, not as a political verdict?
  • Have I applied the variant differential correctly to the dissolution finding?

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

Step 5 — Summary Finding

Governing question: What is the overall pattern of findings, and what does it mean for an agent who holds this ideology?

Produce the summary in three parts:

Part A — Commitment Pattern. State the six commitment-level composite verdicts from Stage One in tabular form. Identify the overall pattern: how many Convergent, Structural Imitation, Divergent, Partial Convergence, Orthogonal findings. Identify the deepest point of divergence and the strongest point of convergence (if any). If the overall pattern is predominantly Structural Imitation, register this explicitly as consistent with the named cultural diagnosis.

Part B — Dissolution Finding. State the dissolution finding and its grounds. Confirm that the finding is derived from content findings on C1 and C2 only. If any variant shifts the dissolution finding, note this.

Part C — Agent-Level Implication. State what the findings mean for an agent who holds this ideology: what he is implicitly committed to believing about himself, his agency, and the nature of value, when he adopts this position. This is the CIA’s most practically significant output. It is addressed to the agent, not to the ideology. It draws on the Mandatory Gap Declaration’s positive account of why philosophical compatibility findings matter.

The summary finding is not a political verdict and must not be read as one. It is a finding about the philosophical presuppositions an agent accepts when he adopts an ideological position, and what those presuppositions entail for his self-description as a rational agent.

Self-Audit — Step 5:

  • Does the summary follow from the preceding steps, or have I introduced new material at the synthesis stage?
  • Have I stated the agent-level implication without converting it into a political verdict?
  • Have I issued the corpus boundary declaration accurately?
  • Is the summary self-contained — could a reader understand both the finding and its limits without consulting additional material?

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


VII. Named Failure Modes

Failure Mode 1 — Favorable Variant Selection. The instrument audits the most philosophically favorable variant of an ideology as though it represented the ideology as a whole, producing findings that do not apply to the position’s core or to its less favorable variants. The two-stage procedure exists to prevent this failure. The core audit must address the presuppositions shared across all variants, not the presuppositions of the variant the instrument operator prefers.

Failure Mode 2 — Dissolution Inflation. The instrument issues a Full Dissolution finding on insufficient grounds — when one or both content findings on C1 and C2 are Partial Convergence rather than Divergent. The dissolution rule is mechanical: it requires Divergent content findings, not Partial Convergence findings. Conflating the two to produce a stronger-sounding dissolution finding is a named failure.

Failure Mode 3 — Political Verdict Substitution. The instrument converts a philosophical finding into a political endorsement or condemnation. A Full Dissolution finding is not a finding that an ideology is wrong, dangerous, or to be rejected. It is a finding about philosophical presuppositions. The instrument must hold this distinction throughout and must not allow the agent-level implication in Step 5 Part C to slide into a political recommendation.

Failure Mode 4 — Orthogonal Evasion. The instrument issues an Orthogonal finding to avoid a Divergent or Structural Imitation finding the analysis requires. Orthogonal requires a positive showing on both structure and content dimensions. An ideology that operates in the commitment’s domain but contradicts its claims is Divergent, not Orthogonal. An ideology that has the structural form but misidentifies the content object is Structural Imitation, not Orthogonal.

Failure Mode 5 — Presupposition Substitution. The instrument evaluates the ideology’s explicit claims rather than its embedded presuppositions. An ideology may assert that it values individual freedom while presupposing structural determinism. An ideology may assert that it respects objective truth while presupposing that moral claims are expressions of collective will. The CIA evaluates what the ideology must hold in order to argue as it does, not what it explicitly claims to hold.

Failure Mode 6 — Symmetry Bias. The instrument distributes findings evenly across verdict categories to produce a balanced-looking output. The corpus makes determinate claims. An ideology that contradicts the corpus on all six commitments receives six Divergent findings. An instrument that softens those findings to achieve apparent balance has failed.

Failure Mode 7 — Structural/Content Conflation. The instrument issues a composite verdict without separating the structural and content findings, obscuring a Structural Imitation finding. Every commitment-level finding must state the structural finding and the content finding separately before the composite verdict is issued. Collapsing this into a single judgment without separating the two dimensions is a named failure that makes the instrument blind to the dominant ideological failure mode of modernity.

Failure Mode 8 — Structural Dissolution. The instrument allows structural findings on C1 or C2 to enter the dissolution calculation. The dissolution criterion is governed exclusively by content findings on C1 and C2. A structural finding of Aligned on C1 or C2 — where the content finding is Divergent — produces a Structural Imitation composite verdict on that commitment. That structural alignment does not preserve space for genuine agency in the corpus’s sense. Only content findings govern dissolution.

Failure Mode 9 — Structural Imitation Inflation. The instrument issues a Structural Imitation verdict when the ideology’s structure is not cleanly Aligned with the commitment’s structural form. Structural Imitation requires the structural finding to be Aligned and the content finding to be Divergent. If the structure itself is only partially present, or partially divergent, the finding is Partial Convergence, not Structural Imitation. Inflating a Partial Convergence to Structural Imitation to invoke the cultural diagnosis is a named failure.

Failure Mode 10 — Charitable Extraction Contamination. The instrument imports corpus-compatible content into the presupposition extraction step that the subject does not actually carry, producing artificially elevated alignment findings. Every presupposition attributed to the ideology must be traceable to what the ideology’s own argumentative moves require. Importing what the corpus holds into the presupposition profile because it seems consistent with the ideology’s surface claims produces findings about what the instrument operator wished the ideology presupposed, not about what it actually requires.


VIII. Ratified Architectural Notes

Orexis/Propatheia Distinction

Desire as orexis is a function of the prohairesis — internal, not external. The experience of desire for externals is on the external side of Prop 4’s boundary. The propatheia — involuntary bodily responses — is not in our control and is correctly classified as external. The orexis — the mind’s assent to the impression as good — is in our control. Ideologies that locate the genuine self in the experience of desire for externals mistake the felt surface of the prohairesis’s operation for the prohairesis itself. This distinction governs all CIA runs where the misidentified genuine self involves desire. Ratified May 2026.

Structural Imitation as Cultural Diagnosis

The CIA v3.0 series has produced a finding that warrants corpus-level registration: Structural Imitation is the dominant ideological failure mode of modernity. Across seven completed CIA v3.0 runs, the pattern is consistent — the classical commitments are so deeply embedded in Western narrative and ideological architecture that ideologies and literary works that diverge from the corpus at every content point cannot escape building on its formal structure. The correct form is present throughout. The prohairesis is nowhere. The CIA v3.0’s structural/content distinction layer makes this pattern visible in a way no prior instrument could. Registered May 2026.


Instrument: Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v3.0. Supersedes CIA v2.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. 2026.

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Sterling, Aristotle, and the Best Form of Government

 

Sterling, Aristotle, and the Best Form of Government

Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude.


The Question

Sterling favored monarchy as a form of government. Explain.


Response

A clarification is needed before proceeding, and it matters for accuracy.

The corpus does not record Sterling favoring monarchy specifically. What Sterling favored was the Aristotelian virtue-state — a government that affirms a clear conception of virtue and uses the power of the state to guide citizens toward it. The corpus notes that monarchism is a candidate for the potential book project, and Sterling’s Aristotelian political preference is recorded, but Sterling’s own ISF posts do not name monarchy as his preferred form. He names the Aristotelian virtue-state and leaves its institutional form unspecified.

That said, the connection between the two is philosophically substantive and worth tracing carefully.


What Sterling Said

Sterling holds that for a country of non-Sages — which is to say any real society — the form of government matters philosophically. Some systems encourage virtue; others discourage it; and some structurally conflict with Stoicism’s most fundamental presuppositions.

His positive political preference is the Aristotelian virtue-state: a government that affirms a clear conception of virtue and uses the power of the state to guide people toward it. He frames this explicitly as following Aristotle’s own question: given that eudaimonia is attained by individual virtue, what social systems will encourage and aid the citizen in seeking it, and what systems will lead the citizen away from it?


The Eliminations

Sterling eliminates the major alternatives by presupposition. Marxism requires identifying with the collective; fascism requires treating the individual as an organ of the State; Islamist theocracy requires grounding individual worth in submission to a deity. These are incompatible because they require dissolution of the individual rational agent into something external to it.

Libertarianism is also rejected. If freedom is understood as doing whatever one feels like at the moment, such a system actually encourages people to accept and act on their entrenched desires and urges, and this may lead him away from virtue faster than even the totalitarianisms considered above.

Democracy fares no better. Sterling directs readers to Plato’s Republic on democracy — the diagnosis there being that democratic preference-satisfaction produces a society organized around entrenched desires rather than virtue.

No political party Sterling knew of advocates the Aristotelian virtue-state — indeed, he doubted any party could ever secure an elective victory on such a platform. Probably most people would find it appalling. But that is what he thinks best fits with Stoicism.


Why Monarchy Follows

The monarchy connection follows from the logic of elimination. If democracy is structurally vicious — it institutionalizes popular preferences over virtue — and if no elective system could plausibly win a mandate for a virtue-state, then the only institutional form capable of implementing one without depending on popular consent is a non-elective one. That points toward monarchy or aristocracy in the classical sense. Aristotle himself regarded monarchy (rule by the one best man) and aristocracy (rule by the few best men) as the correct forms, with democracy as a corruption. Sterling’s adoption of the Aristotelian framework carries this implication, even if he did not press it to that conclusion explicitly in the archived posts.

Sterling’s self-description as “the fascist anarchist” is ironic and precise: he resists all ideologies that subordinate individual rational agency to collective systems, while holding that the best available government uses state authority to promote virtue. The liberal-democratic consensus finds both positions threatening — which is Sterling’s joke.


The Accurate Statement

Sterling favored the Aristotelian virtue-state, which is structurally incompatible with democracy and libertarianism, and which — by the logic of the Aristotelian framework he explicitly endorses — implies something in the range of classical monarchy or aristocracy as its most natural institutional expression. Whether Sterling himself took that final step is not recorded in the corpus.

Core Stoicism: Sections Three, Four, and the Centrality of Judgment

 

Core Stoicism: Sections Three, Four, and the Centrality of Judgment


The Philosophical Foundation of Sterling’s Stoicism: A Dialogue


Grant C. Sterling — ISF, September 19, 2005. Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.


I. What Section Two Leaves Unfinished

Section Two of Core Stoicism establishes the negative case: all unhappiness traces to false judgment about value, and since judgment is in our control, vulnerability to unhappiness is something the agent can eliminate. Sterling calls this “negative happiness” — the removal of a structural liability. But a life free of unhappiness is not yet shown to be a life of positive flourishing. Section One had asserted, without proof, that complete and uninterrupted happiness is possible (Proposition 2*). Sections Three and Four are where that proof is delivered.

The thread that runs through all four sections, and holds them together as a system, is judgment. Section Two establishes that false judgment is the root of unhappiness. Sections Three and Four show that correct judgment is the root of virtue and the source of appropriate positive feeling. The closing synthesis statement of Core Stoicism — that someone who judges truly will never be unhappy, will experience continual appropriate positive feelings, and will always act virtuously — is not a summary appended after the argument. It is the point toward which the entire structure has been moving from the first theorem.


II. Section Three: Three Sources of Positive Feeling

Section Three opens from the conclusion of Section Two. Theorem 10 established that virtue is the only genuine good and vice the only genuine evil. From this, Theorem 15 follows: if we correctly judge that virtue is the only genuine good, we will desire it. And from Theorem 16 — that achieving what one desires produces a positive feeling — Proposition 17 derives: correct judgment and correct willing produce appropriate positive feelings as their natural consequence. The first source of positive feeling is therefore the Stoic’s own virtuous activity, experienced not as self-congratulation but as the affect that accompanies the achievement of what one genuinely values.

The second source is more subtle. Theorem 18 identifies positive feelings that do not arise from desire at all — the taste of a good meal, the sight of a beautiful sunset, the immediate pleasure of a sensory encounter. These are not irrational. No value judgment has been made; no assent to the proposition that the object is a genuine good has occurred. The feeling simply arrives. Proposition 19 clarifies the boundary: such feelings become irrational only if the agent desires to achieve them or desires for them to continue beyond the present moment, because that desire would involve the false judgment that the object is genuinely good. The pleasure of the meal is permitted; the craving for the meal is not. The distinction tracks precisely back to the causal role of judgment established in Theorem 7.

The third source is the appreciation of the world as it is. Theorems 20 through 22 introduce the optional theological framing: the universe is governed by Nature, Providence, or God, and what is natural is exactly as it should be. Sterling marks this as optional framing — he notes that strict determinism creates problems for the view, and in his mature work the control dichotomy carries the entire practical weight without theological support. But Theorem 22 stands on its own as a psychological observation: if one regards any aspect of the world as being exactly as it should be, one receives appropriate positive feeling. Proposition 23 draws the consequence: the Stoic can experience this continually, at every waking moment, because at every moment something can be perceived as what it is, and hence as what it should be.

The proof of Proposition 2* is now complete. Complete, uninterrupted happiness is not merely possible in principle; it is available now, from three distinct and always-accessible sources, none of which depends on any uncontrolled outcome.


III. Section Four: Virtue as Rational Aiming

Section Four takes up the question that the virtue-and-happiness connection requires: if the only genuine good is virtue, and virtue is an act of will, what is the will actually directed at when one acts virtuously? Theorem 24 answers that an act of will must have content — it must aim at something. The content is the result at which one aims. Theorem 25 introduces the distinction that does the work: some things are appropriate objects at which to aim, even though they are not genuinely good. Theorem 26 gives the list: life (one’s own and others’), health, pleasure, knowledge, justice, truth-telling.

These are the preferred indifferents. They are not genuine goods. No external is a genuine good, as Proposition 12 established. But they are rational objects of aim — things a rational agent, correctly understanding the structure of value, would direct his activity toward. The action of aiming at them is not irrational. What would be irrational is desiring that one achieve them, because desire involves the false judgment that the outcome is a genuine good.

Theorem 27 then defines virtue and vice directly: virtue consists of rational acts of will; vice of irrational acts of will. Proposition 28 follows: any act that aims at an external object of desire is not virtuous, since all desires for externals are irrational. Proposition 29 is the positive formulation: virtue consists of pursuing appropriate objects of aim — not pursuing the external objects of desire. Such virtuous acts produce appropriate positive feelings (via Proposition 17), and since the agent has no desire regarding the actual outcome, they will never produce unhappiness.

The reserve clause is implicit throughout: aim at the appropriate object, act with full rational engagement, and release the outcome as an indifferent. The moral work is complete at the moment of the act, regardless of what follows.


IV. Judgment as the Structural Center

Sterling’s synthesis statement, placed after Section Four, names judgment explicitly as the load-bearing element: “Someone who judges truly will never be unhappy, will in fact experience continual uninterrupted appropriate positive feelings, and will always act virtuously. Anyone would agree that someone who led a life like that was happy. Judgment is in our control. Hence, not only is perfect continual happiness possible, it is actually in our control.”

The centrality of judgment is not incidental to this structure. It is what makes the structure coherent as a single system rather than a collection of doctrines.

Theorem 7 established the causal claim: desires are caused by judgments about good and evil. One desires what one judges to be good; one seeks to avoid what one judges to be evil. No desire arises without a prior evaluative judgment. This means that the entire emotional economy of a human life — every desire, every aversion, every passion — is downstream of judgment. And since judgment is a belief, and beliefs are in our control (Theorem 6), the entire emotional economy is, in principle, within the agent’s power to correct.

Section Two showed the negative consequence: false judgment about externals produces irrational desire, which produces vulnerability to unhappiness whenever the world fails to conform to desire. Section Three showed the positive consequence: correct judgment produces desire only for what is genuinely in one’s control, achieves it, and generates appropriate positive feeling. Section Four showed the virtue consequence: the rationality of an act of will is entirely determined by whether the judgment underlying it is correct. Virtue is not a disposition separate from judgment. It is correct judgment expressed in action.

This is why Sterling’s closing warning against Smorgasbord Stoicism has the force it does. One can deny Theorems 20 and 21 — the Providence framing — without serious damage to the system. The control dichotomy is sufficient to carry the practical argument, and Sterling himself decouples the framework from theology by design. But one cannot deny Theorem 7 without catastrophic structural collapse. Propositions 8, 9, 13, 14, 28, and 29 all depend on it. To deny that desires are caused by judgments is to deny that desires are in our control, which is to deny that happiness is in our control, which is to deny that desiring external things is irrational, which collapses both the virtue argument and the happiness argument simultaneously. The house of cards, as Sterling puts it, crumbles into dust.


V. The Six Commitments Presupposed

The argument of Core Stoicism presupposes, without argument, the six philosophical commitments that Sterling identifies elsewhere as the foundations of his Stoicism. Substance Dualism (C1) is required for Theorem 6: the rational faculty must be genuinely distinct from the body for beliefs and will to constitute a separate and controllable domain. Libertarian Free Will (C2) is required for the control claim to have genuine force: if judgment were determined by prior causes outside the agent, the instruction to judge correctly would be empty. Ethical Intuitionism (C3) grounds Theorem 10 — that virtue is the only genuine good — which cannot be derived from prior premises but must be apprehended directly. Foundationalism (C4) accounts for the status of the theorems themselves as foundational postulates defensible by appeal to intuition rather than proof. Correspondence Theory of Truth (C5) is what makes false judgment genuinely false: a judgment that an external is good fails to correspond to the actual structure of value. And Moral Realism (C6) provides the objective value structure that Theorem 10 and the preferred indifferents of Theorems 25 and 26 presuppose — the distinction between genuine goods and appropriate objects of aim is not a subjective preference but a claim about how value is actually structured.

The six commitments are not ornamental. They are what prevents the theorems from being mere assertions and what gives the control dichotomy its philosophical weight. A Stoicism that accepts the practical conclusions while rejecting the metaphysical foundations does not have Sterling’s Stoicism. It has, at best, a set of useful heuristics whose justification has been quietly removed.


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

Saturday, May 16, 2026

Stoic Marriage — The Male Partner

 

Stoic Marriage — The Male Partner

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


I. The Question the Framework Requires

Marriage, on any ordinary account, is among the most significant sources of happiness or unhappiness available to a man. He wants his wife to love him, to be faithful to him, to be well, to thrive. He wants the household to be stable, the children to be raised correctly, the domestic life to flow without catastrophe. And when these things fail — when the wife is faithless, the household is disordered, the children are poorly raised — he regards himself as genuinely harmed. He says so. He feels it. The ordinary account would validate all of this.

Sterling’s framework does not. And the first thing required of a man who takes the framework seriously is to understand precisely why, and what follows from that understanding for how he is to act.

The governing claim is Theorem 10 of Core Stoicism: the only thing actually good is virtue, the only thing actually evil is vice. Theorem 12 follows directly: things not in our control — externals — are never good or evil. This is not a qualified claim. It does not say that virtue is the highest good, or that externals are good in a lesser sense, or that marital harmony is good as long as one does not become too attached to it. It says that externals are neither good nor evil at all. The wife’s fidelity is an external. The household’s stability is an external. The wife’s health is an external. None of them are, in the technical sense, good. None of their failures are, in the technical sense, evil.

This is the harshness Sterling identified in Epictetus from the first sentence of the Enchiridion. The beauty, he argued, is inseparable from it. The man who softens the claim — who says “yes, but surely marital happiness is a kind of good” — has not made a minor modification. He has reinstalled the entire structure of false value judgment that the framework exists to correct.


II. The Role the Actual Relationship Generates

What does the framework place in the position vacated by false value? The answer is role-duty.

Proposition 64 of the Sterling Logic Engine states that every agent occupies multiple social roles simultaneously, and that each role generates role-duties: specific preferred indifferents it is appropriate to aim at, and a specific manner of action the role requires. Proposition 65 specifies how roles are identified: by the actual social relationships the agent stands in, not by the relationships he desires, believes he ought to have, or would prefer. Proposition 65 adds the corollary that an agent who rejects a role does not thereby cease to occupy it. He merely fails to discharge its duties.

This is the architecturally critical point for marriage. The husband role is not something the man adopts when he feels like it, or discharges when the marriage is going well, or suspends when his wife fails him. The role is generated by the actual social relationship of marriage. It persists regardless of the man’s emotional state, regardless of his wife’s conduct, regardless of how the marriage is going. Epictetus states this with characteristic bluntness in section 30 of the Enchiridion: “Our duties are in general measured by our social relationships.” He applies it to the case of a bad father — one is still called upon to care for him, to give way to him. The principle extends without modification to the case of a bad wife. Nature has brought the man into relationship not with a good wife but simply with a wife. The role-duties follow from that relationship, not from his assessment of her character.

What duties does the husband role generate? Provision and protection of the household are appropriate objects of aim. Fidelity is the role-correct manner of action in this particular relationship — faithfulness belongs not to sentiment but to the proper performance of the role as reason requires it. Honest speech within the relationship is a role-duty. Leadership of the household — rational direction of its affairs — is an appropriate aim, constrained in its manner by what the role requires rather than by personal preference. These duties are real constraints on action even though every object they point toward is an external and therefore an indifferent.

The man operating correctly within the framework discharges these duties not because he desires the outcomes they aim at, but because the role requires them of him and virtue consists in discharging what the role requires. Proposition 66 states the governing principle: when the situation makes a role operative, that role’s duties take precedence over the agent’s personal preferences for how to act. Role identification precedes everything else.


III. What Is Inside the Marriage, Correctly Classified

The framework requires the man to sort every element of his marital life into its correct value category. The wife’s health and welfare, household stability, the raising of children, marital harmony — these are preferred indifferents. They are appropriate objects of aim. The man should pursue them. What he must not do is desire them in the technical sense, which means judging them to be genuine goods. Proposition 60 of the Logic Engine names the essential distinction: a rational goal is a preferred indifferent held as an appropriate object of aim. It is not a desired outcome held as a genuine good. The same external object can be held either way, and the distinction is entirely internal to the agent — invisible from outside, but constitutive of whether the man is acting rationally or not.

The dispreferred indifferents inside marriage are the mirror image: the wife’s infidelity, marital breakdown, financial hardship, the death of a spouse. These are appropriate to avoid, rational to direct effort against, worth taking seriously as objects of rational concern. They are not genuine evils. The man who treats his wife’s infidelity as a genuine evil — as something that has genuinely harmed him in the foundational sense — has made a false value judgment. Sterling states the propositional form directly in the Nine Excerpts: “My wife’s actions are not in my control. They are neither good nor evil. My happiness is in my control, not enslaved to the actions of others.” This is not a philosophical position to be adopted after reflection. It is the correct description of how things actually are, to be formulated consciously, assented to, and in time internalized as the governing structure of perception.

The reserve clause governs every pursuit within marriage. Proposition 62 states it: the agent aims at the goal if the control dichotomy allows — not unconditionally. The man who pursues marital harmony correctly pursues it with the constitutive framing that its achievement is not in his control and is not the source of his contentment. The moment he begins to require the outcome — to stake his equanimity on the wife’s response, on the household’s stability, on any external — he has converted a preferred indifferent into an object of desire, and the false value judgment has re-entered through the back door.


IV. The Discipline of Assent in Daily Married Life

The ordinary domestic life of a married man is a continuous stream of impressions, most of which carry embedded false value claims. The impression “my wife’s approval of this decision is important” carries the false claim that her approval is a genuine good. The impression “this disagreement is damaging us” carries the false claim that marital conflict is a genuine evil. The impression “I need her to be well” carries the false claim that her health is his good. None of these claims survive examination. All of them, if assented to, produce pathos — passion, in the technical Stoic sense: an excessive impulse occasioned by assenting to a false judgment about what is genuinely good or evil.

The specific pathos risk points in marriage are worth naming. Jealousy is the passion produced by false assent to the impression that the wife’s fidelity is a genuine good whose threatened loss is a genuine evil. Anger at the wife’s conduct is the passion produced by false assent to the impression that her wrong action has genuinely harmed the man. Marital elation — the feeling that life is going well because the marriage is going well — is the passion produced by false assent to the impression that marital harmony is a genuine good. All three are false. The man who has stripped the false value from each of these impressions, who has correctly classified what was at stake, does not experience these passions. He may experience what Seddon’s Glossary identifies as propatheia — pre-passions, the initial movements that precede assent — but these are not within his control and are not themselves failures. What is within his control is the assent.

Sterling’s instruction in the Nine Excerpts is practical: formulate true propositions regarding the lack of value of external things. Do this in advance where possible. When the impression arrives that the wife has done something wrong, or failed in some way, or created disorder in the household, the man who has prepared the correct propositions can meet the impression with the truth already in hand. He does not have to construct the correct response under the pressure of pathos already forming. He arrives at the impression with the correct value framework already in place.


V. When the Wife Fails

The hardest application of the framework is to the cases in which the wife has genuinely done something wrong: infidelity, deception, sustained failure in her own role-duties, conduct that has materially damaged the household. The ordinary man regards these cases as the ones that justify pathos — that license anger, grief, despair, withdrawal. The framework does not.

Epictetus’s instruction in the Enchiridion is the governing principle: do not consider what she is doing, but what you will have to do if your moral purpose is to be in harmony with nature. Her assents are outside the man’s purview entirely. They were always outside his purview. The marriage did not give him access to her prohairesis, and its failure does not create a special case in which her actions become his good or evil. “No one will harm you without your consent; you will have been harmed only when you think you are harmed.” The harm the man experiences when the wife fails him is real as a psychological event. Its source is not her action but his assent to the impression that her action is a genuine evil.

This is not a denial that her conduct has produced dispreferred indifferents. It has. Marital breakdown is dispreferred. Infidelity damages what was a preferred state of affairs. The man is correct to classify these as dispreferred, to work rationally within his role-duties toward their correction or resolution, and to take the situation seriously as a practical matter. What he must not do is add to the already-present dispreferred indifferents the further damage of false value judgment. Proposition 63 applies here with particular force: the appropriateness of his action is determined entirely at the moment of choice. Her conduct does not retroactively alter what appropriate action requires of him. His role-duty remains operative regardless of her failures.

A further point from Seddon’s Glossary (§40) governs the case of pathos already present. If the man has already assented to the false impression — if the anger or grief is already installed — he cannot simply extirpate it by an act of will. The passion already present cannot be directly dissolved any more than one can prevent sugar from tasting sweet once the slice of cake is in one’s mouth. What remains within his purview is the prospective refusal of continued assent: formulating the correct propositions, returning to the true account of what has and has not happened, and over time allowing the character corrections that sustained correct assent produces. The work going forward is the work of askēsis — training.

There is also a manner constraint that the framework imposes in these cases. The man who responds to his wife’s failures without performing anger, and without performing philosophical composure, is discharging his role correctly. Both performances are directed at externals. Anger performed for its own sake, or as a demonstration of how seriously the failure has been taken, is directed at the external of her conduct — it presupposes that a genuine evil has occurred. Composure performed as a display of Stoic attainment is directed at the external of reputation. What the correct response looks like is honest presence and role-correct action: doing what the actual situation requires of the man in his actual role, without desire that any particular outcome result.


VI. Self-Interest and Marital Duty: The Collapse

One of the most important clarifications Sterling offers — in his ISF post on Egoism and Altruism — bears directly on how the Stoic husband should understand the relationship between his own interest and his duty toward his wife.

On the ordinary view, there is a tension between these. The man who is faithful to his wife when he could gain pleasure by being unfaithful is sacrificing something. The man who invests heavily in the household, the children, the wife’s welfare, at cost to himself, is performing something altruistic — something above the call of mere self-interest. The ordinary account carves out a category of morally admirable but not required action precisely because it assumes that genuine goods for the self sometimes conflict with appropriate action toward others, and that freely subordinating one’s own genuine goods to another’s is praiseworthy.

On Sterling’s account, the entire structure collapses. On the Stoic view, only virtue is good. A role-duty faithfully discharged is an act of virtue. Vice toward the wife — infidelity, deception, failure of provision, failure of protection — is an act of vice, and is therefore genuinely bad for the man. Not bad as a consequence of its external effects. Bad in itself, constitutively, because it is vice and only virtue is good. There is no sacrifice involved in faithful discharge of the husband role. There is no conflict between what is good for the man and what the role requires of him toward his wife. The Stoic is always seeking his own interest, Sterling notes; it is just that his interest is virtue, and virtue requires discharging the role-duties generated by his actual social relationships. Infidelity, on this account, harms not the wife alone but the man primarily — it is an act by which he degrades the only thing he actually has.

This also collapses the category of supererogation — acts beyond the call of duty. That category requires there to be genuine goods so valuable that sacrificing them cannot be required of the average man. There are no such goods on the Stoic account. What the role requires is what virtue requires, and virtue is never beyond the call of duty. It is the only thing that is called for.


VII. Marriage as the Arena of Training

The final element of the framework’s application to marriage is the training trajectory. Sterling’s framework is explicitly a training instrument, not merely a decision procedure. The goal is not to apply the framework to each marital situation as a technical exercise but to build, through repeated correct engagement, a character that no longer generates the false impressions in the first place.

The entry point for this training in marriage is the urge to act — the phenomenal output of a false assent, the impulse toward anger, or withdrawal, or jealousy, or despair, that arises when the impression carrying a false value claim has already been assented to. At this level, the man can at least catch the urge before it produces action, formulate the correct propositions in place of the false ones, and redirect his action toward what the role actually requires. This is the earliest and most accessible level of the training, and the texture of daily married life provides abundant material for it.

Over time, with sustained practice, the correction migrates upstream. The man who has spent years catching the urge and reformulating the judgment begins to catch the judgment itself before it hardens into passion. Further still, the man who has deeply internalized the correct value account begins to receive the impressions themselves in a corrected form — not as claims that a genuine good has been achieved or a genuine evil suffered, but as information about the state of preferred and dispreferred indifferents that rational role-action can be directed toward. This is what Sterling means by eudaimonia: not the elimination of marital difficulty, but the correct feelings combined with virtuous action — the character state in which the false value impressions no longer form in the way they once did.

Marriage, understood in this way, is not a source of eudaimonia. It is the arena in which eudaimonia is practiced and built. The wife’s welfare is never the man’s genuine good. It is, at every moment, a preferred indifferent he aims at with reservation, an appropriate object of role-correct action, the vehicle through which virtue — which is the only genuine good — finds its expression in this particular sphere of his life. Theorem 29 of Core Stoicism states the governing principle: virtue consists of the pursuit of appropriate objects of aim, not the pursuit of the objects of our desires. Such virtuous acts will give the man appropriate positive feelings. Since he holds no desires regarding the actual outcome, they will never produce unhappiness for him.

That is the Stoic husband. Not cold, not indifferent to the wife’s welfare, not performing detachment. Steadily present. Discharging what the role requires. Aiming at what reason identifies as appropriate. Never staking his contentment on what lies outside his purview.


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