Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Thursday, April 09, 2026

Does Stoic Ethics Need Substance Dualism?

 

What mistake are Stoics making who deny the philosophical commitment of substance dualism because it is connected to Chistianity and comtradicts the scientism of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy?


ChatGPT:

The mistake is not merely historical or rhetorical—it is structural. It consists in confusing genealogy with justification, and in doing so, undermining the very mechanism Stoic ethics depends on.

What follows is the precise diagnosis.


1. The Genetic Fallacy: Rejecting a Position Because of Its Associations

To reject substance dualism because it is “associated with Christianity” is a textbook genetic fallacy.

  • The truth of a metaphysical claim is independent of its historical usage.
  • Christianity did not invent dualism; it inherited and transformed strands already present in Plato and later philosophical traditions.
  • A proposition stands or falls on its explanatory adequacy, not on who else has held it.

By this logic, one would also have to reject:

  • Natural law (because of medieval theology)
  • Objective morality (because of religious ethics)
  • Even logic itself (because it was developed in pre-modern metaphysical systems)

This is not philosophy; it is contamination thinking.


2. Category Error: Treating Scientific Models as Metaphysical Refutations

The appeal to CBT and “science” introduces a second mistake: a category confusion.

CBT is:

  • A psychological model
  • Empirical, pragmatic, and therapeutic in orientation

Substance dualism is:

  • A metaphysical thesis
  • Concerned with the ontological status of mind vs. matter

No amount of:

  • brain imaging
  • behavioral data
  • therapeutic outcomes

can, even in principle, settle whether:

the subject of judgment (prohairesis) is reducible to physical processes

At most, CBT can show correlations between:

  • thoughts and brain states
  • beliefs and behavior

It cannot establish identity.

To treat CBT as disconfirming dualism is to confuse:

methodological naturalism (how science operates)
with
metaphysical naturalism (what ultimately exists)


3. Collapse of the Stoic Agent Without Dualism

This is the decisive point.

Stoic ethics requires a real distinction between:

  • the agent (the judging faculty)
  • externals (body, events, impressions as appearances)

Without that distinction, the entire structure collapses.

Why?

Because the discipline of assent presupposes:

  1. An impression appears
  2. A subject evaluates it
  3. Assent is either given or withheld

If the subject is nothing more than:

  • a brain state
  • determined by prior causes

then:

  • There is no genuine “pause”
  • No real alternative possibilities
  • No responsibility in assent

The result is determinism disguised as therapy.

At that point:

  • “You should not assent to false impressions” becomes meaningless
  • because there is no independent faculty capable of doing otherwise

You are left with:

behavioral conditioning, not ethical agency


4. Incompatibility with Stoic Moral Responsibility

Classical Stoicism—especially in Epictetus—is uncompromising:

  • You are responsible for your judgments
  • Your judgments are up to you
  • Error is a failure of assent

This framework presupposes:

  • A center of control not identical with external causation
  • A faculty that can stand apart from impressions

Deny that, and you must either:

  • abandon Stoic responsibility entirely, or
  • smuggle it back in inconsistently

Most modern reinterpretations do the latter.

They:

  • deny dualism explicitly
  • but continue to speak as if a rational agent can override impressions

That is a contradiction.


5. Reduction of Stoicism to CBT

Once dualism is rejected, Stoicism is no longer a philosophical ethics—it becomes:

  • a coping strategy
  • a cognitive reframing technique
  • a subset of CBT with classical branding

Key consequences:

  • “Virtue is the only good” becomes a therapeutic preference
  • “Externs are indifferent” becomes a stress-reduction heuristic
  • Truth is replaced by usefulness

This is not Stoicism. It is instrumental psychology.


6. The Real Issue: Ontological Courage

The underlying motive is not philosophical rigor but conformity to intellectual fashion:

  • Avoid metaphysics
  • Avoid anything that sounds “religious”
  • Align with scientific culture

But Stoicism is not sustainable on that basis.

It makes truth claims:

  • about value
  • about control
  • about the nature of the self

Those claims require:

  • metaphysical grounding
  • epistemological justification

Remove those, and the system loses its authority.


Final Diagnosis

The mistake consists of three compounding errors:

  1. Genetic fallacy — rejecting dualism because of Christian association
  2. Category error — treating CBT/science as metaphysical adjudicators
  3. Structural incoherence — retaining Stoic ethical language after removing the ontological conditions that make it possible

The result is a hybrid that:

  • sounds Stoic
  • functions therapeutically
  • but is philosophically hollow

A Stoicism without a real, irreducible faculty of assent is not Stoicism at all.

Stoicism, Moral Facts, and Ethical Intuitionism

Stoicism, Moral Facts, and Ethical Intuitionism

Five posts by Grant C. Sterling. International Stoic Forum, February 13, 2020 (two messages, 1:01 pm and 1:11 pm); February 24, 2020 (two messages, 10:41 am and 3:57 pm); March 13, 2020 (one message, 3:53 pm). Thread: “Re: What is a fact?” Preserved by Dave Kelly, 2026. Layer: Theoretical Core — Philosophical Commitments. Attribution: Sterling.

Note on System Map dates: The System Map (v2.4, Document 16 entry) records two messages dated February 24 and March 13, 2020. The actual thread contains five messages across three dates: February 13 (two messages), February 24 (two messages), and March 13 (one message). The System Map entry requires correction.


Editorial Note — Dave Kelly

This thread is Sterling’s most sustained and systematic treatment of the correspondence theory of truth, the concept of fact, the structure of knowledge, and the necessity of moral facts for Stoicism. Across five messages Sterling establishes the following: facts are the way the universe actually is, independent of any mind; truth is correspondence of belief with fact; Stoicism is incoherent without moral facts because every central Stoic claim — that externals are neither good nor evil, that role-duties exist, that courage is a virtue — is a claim about objective states of the universe; knowledge in the strict sense requires rational certainty, which is available only for necessary truths grasped directly by the intellect; and the alternatives for moral epistemology are intuitionism or nihilism, with no third option. The thread moves from the definition of fact (February 13) through the architecture of correspondence theory and its necessity for Stoicism (February 24, 10:41 am), through the epistemology of knowledge and justified belief (February 24, 3:57 pm), to the closing argument that moral truths are necessary truths known by Reason in the same way mathematical and logical truths are known (March 13). The five messages together constitute the most complete primary source statement of Sterling’s C4 (correspondence theory) and C5 (ethical intuitionism) commitments available in the corpus.


Message One: Two Errors in Scruton

Grant C. Sterling to the International Stoic Forum, February 13, 2020, 1:01 pm. Thread: “Re: What is a fact?” Responding to a challenge based on Scruton’s claim that the concept of fact cannot be defined and that the correspondence theory moves in a circle.


1) My definition of ‘moral facts’ was actually an illustration of the word “Moral”. So having ‘facts’ on both sides of the equal sign is not a problem here.

2) Scruton is usually a good philosopher, but he makes two very serious errors in this passage.

a) His discussion of facts and propositions is muddled. He says “there are as many facts as true propositions…” and then says “Why speak of truths and facts…?” But he ignores the critical (and, I would have thought, obvious) point that there are also false propositions. Facts are necessary to explain why some propositions are true and others false. They ground truth.

b) He makes another surprising mistake when he confuses the existence of facts with our ability to describe them. Of course we can only describe facts by using language. That’s what language is for — to allow people to communicate their thoughts to other people. Scruton somehow turns this into a pseudo-mystery, a ‘circle’ of thought to thought. But that’s the whole point of the correspondence theory of truth. Language is the tool we use to describe our thoughts. “I believe that my car is black.” What makes that belief true? The actual color of my car — the fact to which my belief corresponds. But now if you ask me to describe that fact, then of course I have to use language to do that. The road from thoughts to facts is not a circle… only the road from thoughts to descriptions of facts is a circle, but a benign one.

I own a black car (a Toyota Corolla). That sentence was written using language. Now imagine what my car looks like. You know full well what color to imagine. You’re not imagining the word “black”, you’re imagining the color itself. You’re not thinking of the word “car”, you’re thinking of a car. Now if there really is, out there in the world, something that looks like what I described, then my sentence is true… if not, then my sentence is false. The fact that my car is black is neither superfluous nor mysterious.

Part of the problem here is that some words can be defined by breaking them down into more fundamental elements. But sometimes you get down to the fundamental elements, and when someone demands a definition you have nothing left but synonyms. There is no helpful definition of ‘fact’, because there is nothing more fundamental than ‘fact’. A fact is “a way the universe is”, but I doubt if that actually informs anyone. If you deny that there are facts, then you deny that reality exists. No Stoic would ever dream of doing that.

Regards, GCS


Message Two: Fact More Basic Than Truth

Grant C. Sterling to the International Stoic Forum, February 13, 2020, 1:11 pm. Thread: “Re: What is a fact?” Responding to a description of his view and his use of words.


All:

1) Yes, your description of my view, and my use of words, is accurate. I try to avoid using ‘truth’ to define ‘fact’, but that’s only because I think that ‘fact’ is more basic than ‘truth’ — if there could be a universe without thinking beings in it (possible, unless God necessarily exists in all universes), then that universe would contain facts but no truths (since there would be no thoughts to be true). But that’s a picky quibble, which I would only worry about if talking to someone like Scruton who would pounce on that technicality. Facts are the way things really are.

2) Philosophers almost always use ‘fact’ in this way — it is facts that make our thoughts true (or false). Non-philosophers often use ‘fact’ to refer not to the world but to a class of our thoughts. Steve is making this sort of distinction here. Other people contrast ‘facts’, which are basically ideas that are so well-verified that they are commonly known and accepted, from ‘opinions’ which are less-well-supported ideas.

I have no problem with Steve (or anyone else) using ‘fact’ in one of these ways, if they’re clear. The reason that philosophers do it their way is that we have to have a word to mean ‘the way the world really is, independently of how we think that it is’, and ‘fact’ is the closest English word we have to that notion.

Regards, GCS


Message Three: Correspondence, Facts, and the Incoherence of Stoicism Without Moral Facts

Grant C. Sterling to the International Stoic Forum, February 24, 2020, 10:41 am. Thread: “Re: What is a fact?”


All:

OK, I have been busy, and I was hoping that this thread had run its course. But I see now that I should have made time to send this message sooner… (By the way, I am using ‘the universe’ to mean ‘all of reality’, ‘Being’, ‘everything that really is’, etc. If you believe in multiple universes, they are all still part of ‘the universe’ as I am using the phrase.)

Let’s start with a (relatively!) simple case. I believe that it is raining outside. That belief is internal to me. It has content, it is ‘about’ something — namely, rain outside. But some beliefs are false — sometimes I believe that it is raining outside, but it isn’t. So beliefs are about the world, and when they match the way the world really is, they’re true… when they don’t they’re false. “Truth” is correspondence of a belief with reality… that’s the ‘correspondence theory of truth’, and it’s the theory of truth that would have been embraced by the ancient Stoics if anyone had asked them, which they didn’t because basically 100% of people throughout most of human history have not only embraced it but thought it was so obvious that there wasn’t even a name for it.

So we have something on the side of the mind — let’s stick with “belief” for a moment. We have something on the side of the universe. And we have the correspondence between them, which is “truth”. Now we need a name for ‘the way the universe actually is’. And the word that philosophers have pretty much unanimously chosen is “fact”. So “facts”, as philosophers use the word, are not things in our minds** — they’re things in the world.##

Belief (in the mind) → Fact (how the universe is) = Truth
Belief —///— Fact = Falsehood

Now the story above works with other mental attitudes as well. For example, I perceive that there is a Pepsi can on the desk in front of me. If, in fact, there is a Pepsi can in front of me, then my perception is accurate. (You can call this match “truth” as well, if you like… it’s certainly a close cousin to ‘truth’ as applied to beliefs.) But the perception is still in the mind, and the facts about what I am perceiving are still in reality, outside the mind (ordinarily**). Or, in a different case, we say “her wish came true” when her wish, in her mind, matched up with the facts of the universe. I can desire something, and I will receive positive feelings when the world in fact fits my desire, and negative feelings when it doesn’t (which is why I need to change my desires in the way the Stoics recommend). There are many sorts of mental attitudes that are ‘about’ the universe, and sometimes the universe fits those attitudes, and sometimes it doesn’t.%%

So cataleptic impressions, if they exist, are not the same thing as ‘facts’. An impression is a way of seeing the world… but some impressions are false, they don’t match up with the way the universe really is. That’s the heart and soul of Stoicism — most of our impressions about good and evil do not match up with the way good and evil really are in the universe. Cataleptic impressions are a special class of impressions, because they always match up with the facts. But CIs are still inside our minds, and if there were no facts outside the mind, our CIs could never be true… that is, they could never be cataleptic! So CIs in my mind need facts outside my mind in order for them to be true.

So Stoicism is incoherent without moral facts. Unless the universe really contains good and evil, right and wrong, virtue and vice, and contains them in definite states that are independent of how we want them to be, the whole view would make no sense. Externals are neither good nor evil — the Stoics think this is a fact about the universe. If there are no facts, then the Stoic view of what is good, evil, or indifferent is no more valid than the ordinary view. The Stoics think that we have role-duties. This is a (putative) fact. If there are no such facts, then we have no duties, and psychopaths are closer to the truth about morality than we are. Courage, the Stoics think, is a Virtue. If there are no moral facts, then there are no virtues. The Stoics consistently believe that there are objective “right answers” about these things, and their view requires this.

As I said before, if you have an irrational fixation against the word “fact” that matches Gich’s irrational fixation against “moral”, by all means use some other word or phrase. But make sure not to pick a word or phrase that ordinarily refers to something on the left side of the truth-correspondence arrow. Don’t use ‘impression’ (cataleptic or otherwise), ‘belief’, ‘opinion’, or even ‘truth’. Some philosophers like ‘state of affairs’. Whatever. But I hope that I am sufficiently clear now:

Mental attitudes point out towards the universe. Sometimes they match up with the way the universe actually is. (Sometimes, they don’t.) I am using, always have used, and intend to continue to use the word “fact” to refer to the way the universe actually is.

This is quite long enough for now. I’ll have another post about things like “knowledge” and “certainty” and “skepticism” and “pragmatism” at a future time.

Regards, GCS

**  Of course, there are facts about things in our minds, too. When I say “I believe that Abimelech is deliberately lying” I am making a claim about what’s going on in Abi’s mind — namely, that his thoughts don’t match with his words. There must be a fact about what Abi is actually thinking, just as there are facts about what I am thinking.

##  Another picky point of clarification. There are many facts out there that have no corresponding human mental attitude. There is an undiscovered planet out there in another galaxy, that has a certain total volume. But no human has ever formed a belief about what that volume is. So there is a fact “planet P has volume v”, but no-one has any beliefs about planet P.

%%  There are also assertions (statements, sentences, etc.), which represent mental attitudes, and which can also correspond (or fail to correspond) with the facts.


Message Four: Knowledge, Justification, and the Four Combinations

Grant C. Sterling to the International Stoic Forum, February 24, 2020, 3:57 pm. Thread: “Re: What is a fact?”


All:

So, again, however anyone else wishes to use their words, I will always mean by “fact” the objective reality, the state of the universe (essentially, what Steve and Kant call “noumena/-on”).

Let us return to where I started, with a belief. I believe that it is raining outside. If that belief corresponds to the facts, if it actually is raining outside, then the belief is true.

But let’s for a moment stop thinking about whether our beliefs correspond to the facts, and think about the beliefs themselves. Some beliefs are reasonable, rational, or justified, while some are not. My belief that it is raining outside is based on the fact that I heard today’s weather forecast and it predicted continual rain, plus the fact that I was outside a while ago and perceived rain, as well as solid dark clouds in every direction, suggesting that the rain would not be stopping soon. Those two things together give me good reason, I think, to believe that it is raining outside. Of course, I could easily imagine having stronger evidence. The office that I’m writing from has no windows, and I cannot hear rain on the roof, either. If I could see or hear rain right now, that would make my evidence even stronger. Or, of course, I could actually be outside, perceiving the rain. Evidence, ‘justification’, comes in degrees. Some of our beliefs are well justified, some poorly justified (and some clearly unjustified).

I am using ‘evidence’ in the widest possible sense. So, for example, suppose that I consider the proposition “modus ponens is deductively valid”. (M.p. is the argument structure: ‘If p, then q; p; therefore, q’. ‘Deductively valid’ means that it is impossible for the premises to both be true while the conclusion is false.) I can “see”, mentally, that mp is valid. That is, when I contemplate the propositions involved, it is obvious to my intellect that there is no way those premises could be true and the conclusion false, regardless of what you wish to plug in for ‘p’ and ‘q’. I would say that I have extremely strong evidence for the truth of that proposition, that my belief that it is true is overwhelmingly justified.

In fact, I would say that in this case I have certainty. Not just psychological certainty (“I’m really, really, sure that it’s true”), although I do have that, but rational certainty — it is impossible (I assert) for this belief to be false.

When I use the word “knowledge” in the strict sense (that is, the careful, philosophical sense, not like ordinary conversation where people casually say “I know that…” promiscuously for a wide range of their beliefs), I will mean that I have rational certainty that my belief is true — it is impossible for me to be wrong.

This is the traditional sense of the word “knowledge”. It’s what Plato and Aristotle meant by the word, as well as most of their opponents. It’s what the Stoics mean. It’s not a popular view today among philosophers, because of course we know very little according to this definition. But I think that this is one area where ancient philosophers were wiser than contemporary philosophers. Anyway, wise or not, that’s how I’m going to use the word.

In fact, people like Plato were so concerned to mark off the difference between knowledge and belief/opinion that they even refused to call what we know a “belief” at all. That is, where I characterized “knowledge” as a rationally certain belief, Plato insisted on using the word “belief” in such a way that it meant by definition “something that falls short of knowledge”. For him, if I “believe that p”, then by definition I do not “know that p”. Although I am in fundamental agreement with him about what knowledge is, I think it’s easier to use modern language, where ‘knowledge’ is one species of belief — namely, certain belief.

Now keep in mind that I think that beliefs can be rational, justified, without being known. I do not know that it is raining outside. (In fact, the longer I spend typing this message, the weaker my justification gets.) But I think that my belief is justified. (Note that justification comes in degrees, but knowledge does not — you either know, or you don’t.)

OK, what kinds of beliefs could be “known”, and what kinds cannot?

Well, on my view, contingent facts are tremendously difficult, if not impossible, to “know”. Because if the fact is not logically necessary, then that almost always raises the possibility that it isn’t a fact at all. There is no logically necessary reason why it must be raining outside right now, and so I can certainly imagine the opposite state of affairs — I can easily imagine it not raining right now. Since from a logical point of view both states are possible, it becomes very difficult to try to claim that I know either one with certainty. I would have to have some infallible method of grasping these contingent facts, and that leads us to our next problem…

By the same token, it is impossible to have knowledge of something if the means of gathering evidence is/are fallible. So, for example, my senses work indirectly, through a long causal chain, and every link in the chain introduces the possibility of error. So while I think that I am strongly justified in believing that there is a Pepsi can on my desk right now, because I clearly see it right in front of me, I must admit the possibility (however slight) that my senses are misleading me (or, as St. Augustine and Descartes note, the possibility that I am not perceiving but am actually dreaming). So I do not know that there’s a Pepsi can in front of me.

So there are four combinations:

1) contingent facts discovered by fallible means
2) contingent facts discovered by infallible means
3) necessary facts discovered by fallible means
4) necessary facts discovered by infallible means

1) Some very, very large percentage of our beliefs are beliefs about contingent truths based on fallible evidence, and hence do not constitute knowledge. The majority of our beliefs are based on our senses, or on the testimony of other people. Both of those methods are fallible, and so no knowledge whatsoever can ever come from them. But that’s fine — we seldom have to have knowledge… justified beliefs are fine. And this is also the realm of Science. Science builds strongly justified beliefs by putting together the sensory evidence of different people, coordinating it, testing it, etc. This will never reach certainty, scientifically-based beliefs are always subject to possible error and therefore should always be held in such a way that they can be revised if necessary. But, again, that’s just fine — it would be idiotic to throw out Science just because it doesn’t reach absolute certainty, and it would be idiotic to do the same with my many ordinary sensory beliefs. When I’m done today I will walk to the parking lot where I remember having parked my car, and I will expect it to be there. Yes, maybe I dreamed it. And maybe it has been stolen, or annihilated by an alien ray gun, or whatever. But the small possibility of error does not mean that I should reject the belief.** ##

2) Now there is one area, and on my view only one area, where we have infallible knowledge of contingent facts… and that is our introspective knowledge of the contents of our own minds. I cannot be certain that it is raining outside, but I can be certain that I believe that it is raining. (You can’t be certain, because I might be lying to you. But my knowledge is direct and unmediated.) I believe that I hit my knuckle in a door earlier today… but I am certain that I feel mild pain right now. Knowledge is only possible in this case because, as I said, my awareness of my own mental states is direct and unmediated — there are no causal steps that can go wrong in this case.

3) Fallible awareness of necessary facts commonly occurs in the case of believing things on the basis of testimony of others, even though one cannot “see” (directly grasp) the truth oneself. My mathematician friends often tell me that certain things in higher math have been proven, where I cannot grasp the proof. When I was a child, I believed that 6x0=0 because my teacher told me that it was true. This is not knowledge — the person speaking to you could be lying, or they could be mistaken, or you might be misunderstanding what they’re saying. Again, your belief-based-on-testimony might be justified, even very strongly justified. I think that I was very strongly justified in believing that 6x0=0 simply because my teacher and the math textbook both agreed that it was true.

4) Finally, we come to infallible awareness of necessary facts. On my view, this comes when my mind directly and clearly grasps the fact which I claim to know. At some point, I saw that 6x0 had to equal 0. I apprehended its necessity, I grasped the fact directly with my mind. At some point in my life I knew that modus ponens was valid. I didn’t believe it because the book said that it was valid, or because I could plug in a few values for ‘p’ and ‘q’ and end up with conclusions that I was sure were true — at some point I grasped it directly with my Intellect. I cannot be wrong about this — it is rationally certain. I know it.

I’m out of time for today. (Do I hear cheering?) I will apply all of this to moral beliefs tomorrow.

Regards, GCS

**  Stoic “Logic”, that is epistemology, is sometimes difficult to interpret, and it is not obvious that the Stoics all held exactly the same theories in this area. It may be that some of the Stoics at least insisted on holding only absolutely certain beliefs, but preserved something like our ordinary beliefs about the world by transforming them into beliefs about our inner states of perception. So, for example, rather than believe “there is a Pepsi can on the desk in front of me” (which might be false), I should believe only “it appears to me that there is a Pepsi can on the desk in front of me”, which can be known infallibly. I have no fixation on infallibility, and so I am willing to go on holding justified-but-possibly-mistaken beliefs rather than undergo this psychological transformation. But if you prefer the other strategy, I think that’s a valid option. This would square with the way that the Stoics sometimes seem to treat the Sage as infallible in belief.

##  In ordinary speech, when someone says “It’s a fact that…” or variations thereof, they are basically saying “I’m really sure that my assertion conforms with reality”. So using the word “fact” to refer to “strongly justified scientific beliefs” is not really a problem, just as long as we keep clear that there is a metaphysical difference between anything we believe and the way the universe actually is, even if there is a correspondence between the one and the other.


Message Five: Intuitionism or Nihilism — There Is No Third Alternative

Grant C. Sterling to the International Stoic Forum, March 13, 2020, 3:53 pm. Thread: “Re: What is a fact?” Responding to Steve Marquis on whether moral facts can be grounded empirically through the assumption that existence is good.


I totally agree that IF one makes the unspoken assumption that existence is good and non-existence is not good, you may then proceed by empirical (or quasi-empirical) steps to conclusions about ethics. But my entire point was that the assumption itself is non-empirical. One can assume that pleasure is better than pain, and reach conclusions about ethics from that. Or the assumption that Courage is better than cowardice, or that truth-telling is better than lying, or any number of other things. Give me a non-empirical assumption to use as a crowbar, and no door will stand against me.

But I deny you that assumption. Some ethicists try to cheat, and engage in a bit of linguistic sleight-of-hand. (I do not accuse you of this.) They say that they will use ‘good’ as an empirical term, meaning something like ‘in accord with evolutionary fitness’ or something like that. Then before you know it they’re telling you that you ought to do this or that. But of course that is deceitful. If you wish to distort the word ‘good’ in this way, I cannot stop you, but I can deny you the right to make the derivations that one can make with the word in its ordinary meaning. (I.e., from ‘this action would cause the most good’ many people accept ‘this action is right — I ought to do it’. But from ‘this action would cause the most evolutionary fitness’ we cannot immediately derive anything about what we ought to do.) Furthermore, they cheat — evolutionary fitness is a notion that applies to a particular entity. I am evolutionarily fit if I am well-suited to have my genes preserved in posterity. From this you might get conclusions about how I should best preserve my own life and health, or that of my close relatives, but you can never get to conclusions about sacrificing myself for people in distant countries, etc.

If, on the other hand, I grant you one non-empirical assumption, then how can you deny me the right to introduce a second assumption? Or a third? If intuition, or Reason, or whatever you wish to call it justifies your assumption that existence or life is better than non-existence or death, then I can argue that it justifies other things. So my claim that our alternatives are intuitionism on the one hand or nihilism (or total skepticism, which is identical for practical uses) on the other hand has nothing to do with certainty — either we can see into the moral realm (however dimly), or else we are blind. Prefer a fallible intuitionism aiming at contingent truths if you’d like, but I still don’t see any third alternative.

‘Good’, ‘bad’, ‘right’, ‘wrong’, ‘virtuous’, ‘vicious’… none of these things can be heard, smelt, tasted, seen, or felt. If there are moral facts that we can know (or even have the most faintly justified beliefs about), then we have to have a non-empirical way of knowing them. Since I don’t believe in a moral sense, and since I think the truths are necessary and not contingent, and since I already believe in the power of Reason to give us (certain) knowledge of mathematical and logical truths… my ethical position falls out of that.

And, for what it’s worth, I don’t see any better way of understanding the position of the ancient Stoics, either. I acknowledge that this is a debatable point (maybe they did believe in a sixth, moral, sense).

And none of this has anything to do with the existence of moral facts.

Regards, GCS


Corpus Note — Dave Kelly

These five messages together establish the six most important claims Sterling makes across the C4 (correspondence theory) and C5 (ethical intuitionism) commitments.

First, from Messages One and Two: facts are the way the universe actually is, independent of any mind. ‘Fact’ is more fundamental than ‘truth’ — a universe without thinking beings would contain facts but no truths. Facts ground the truth/falsity distinction: they are necessary to explain why some propositions are true and others false. The objector who demands a definition of ‘fact’ in terms of something more fundamental has simply reached the foundational category at which the regress must stop.

Second, from Message Three: truth is correspondence of belief with reality. This is not a technical philosophical position Sterling introduces from outside Stoicism — it is what the ancient Stoics already assumed, so obvious they had no name for it. The heart and soul of Stoicism is that most impressions about good and evil do not match up with the way good and evil really are in the universe. That statement requires correspondence theory to give the word “match” its content.

Third, from Message Three: Stoicism is incoherent without moral facts. The claims that externals are neither good nor evil, that role-duties exist, that courage is a virtue — all are claims about objective states of the universe. Remove moral facts and there are no objective right answers, no virtues, and no basis for calling the ordinary view wrong rather than merely different.

Fourth, from Message Four: knowledge in the strict sense requires rational certainty, available only for necessary truths grasped directly by the intellect. Contingent facts discovered by fallible means — the vast majority of our beliefs, including all scientific knowledge — do not constitute knowledge in this sense, though they may be strongly justified. The fourth combination — necessary facts grasped directly by the intellect — is the only domain of genuine knowledge. This is the epistemological framework within which moral knowledge must be located.

Fifth, from Message Five: moral terms — good, bad, right, wrong, virtuous, vicious — cannot be heard, smelt, tasted, seen, or felt. If there are moral facts we can know, we must have a non-empirical way of knowing them. The alternatives are intuitionism or nihilism. There is no third option. Any empirical grounding of ethics requires a non-empirical starting assumption, and once one such assumption is granted, the intuitionist’s position follows.

Sixth, from Message Five: moral truths are necessary, not contingent, and are known by Reason in the same way mathematical and logical truths are known. This is the intuitionist epistemology in its simplest and most direct form, connecting C5 directly to C4: the same rational faculty that grasps necessary logical and mathematical truths grasps necessary moral truths, and the correspondence theory specifies what it means for those truths to be truths — they correspond to objective features of reality.

Sources: International Stoic Forum, thread “Re: What is a fact?”: February 13, 2020, 1:01 pm; February 13, 2020, 1:11 pm; February 24, 2020, 10:41 am; February 24, 2020, 3:57 pm; March 13, 2020, 3:53 pm. Author: Grant C. Sterling. Preserved by Dave Kelly, 2026.

Stoicism, Moral Realism, and the Necessity of Objective Moral Facts

 

Stoicism, Moral Realism, and the Necessity of Objective Moral Facts

Two posts by Grant C. Sterling. First: Stoics Yahoo Group, January 13, 2015, thread “Three (Types of) Moral Rules.” Second: International Stoic Forum, May 26, 2021, thread “Re: Do You Need God to be a Stoic?” Preserved by Dave Kelly, 2026. Layer: Theoretical Core — Philosophical Commitments. Attribution: Sterling.


Editorial Note — Dave Kelly

These two messages together constitute Sterling’s most concentrated and direct defense of moral realism as a load-bearing commitment of Stoicism. The January 2015 message establishes the structural necessity: if there are no objective moral facts — facts that hold independently of any agent’s contingent desires — then the Stoic project fails utterly. The project requires that harming one’s parents is a reason not to act, whether or not the agent cares about them. That kind of reason cannot be grounded in contingent desire or empirical observation. It must be a moral fact that exists independently. The message also closes the loop to ethical intuitionism: moral facts cannot be sensed, so we require non-empirical access to know them. The May 2021 message adds the modal claim: moral facts are necessary truths, not contingent ones. They have no “source” in the way empirical facts do, just as 2+2=4 has no source. We know them by Reason, in the same way we know mathematical and logical truths. The mathematical analogy is the most accessible formulation Sterling gives of non-empirical necessary moral knowledge, and it connects moral realism directly to ethical intuitionism through the same rational faculty that grounds both.


Message One: If There Are No Objective Moral Facts, the Stoic Project Fails Utterly

Grant C. Sterling to the Stoics Yahoo Group, January 13, 2015. Thread: “Three (Types of) Moral Rules.” Responding to Steve Marquis on whether objective moral rules are necessary for Stoic practice.


Imagine that deciding what to do, morally, is like putting weights on a balance. Reasons to do something go in one pan, reasons against doing it go in the other, and whichever side is weightier is what you ought to do. I do not think that this is exactly what moral reasoning should be like, but it is close enough for the purposes of this thread.

There are at least three very different ways of understanding a moral rule like “Don’t break your promises”, and confusion results when someone enunciates the rule and you understand it differently than they do.

A) Moral rules as describing inherent moral considerations. (What W.D. Ross called prima facie duties.) On this understanding, a moral rule tells you that a moral consideration is present which must be included in your weighing. The fact that an action counts as breaking a promise is, in itself, a reason not to do it. It means that at least one weight will be placed in the “against” pan. It does not mean that the “against” side will necessarily outweigh the “for” side, because there may be any number of other weights being placed in the two pans. But it means that the “against” side is definitely not empty. This is what I mean whenever I assert any fundamental moral rule.

B) Moral rules as exceptionless commands. On this understanding, a moral rule tells you what to do, period — the against pan will always be heavier no matter what. I think there are no true rules of this form, apart from the utterly tautologous ones. Breaking promises is rarely right, but there are exceptions.

C) Moral rules as rules of thumb. On this understanding, a moral rule tells you what usually is right, so that if you need to make a decision quickly you can accept the default. These are partly empirical, since they are based on observations of past weighings of actions of a certain type.

The problem is that Type C rules can only function if you already have Type A rules in place. I can only know whether the “for” or “against” side of the scale won out in the past if I know what things count as weights. Is the fact that something is an act of breaking a promise a reason not to do it? Is the fact that others will be harmed by my action a reason not to do it? I can only build up rules of thumb by already knowing what counts as an intrinsic moral reason. Type C presupposes Type A.

The moral axioms cannot be established by any kind of reasoning at all — or else they would not be axioms.

I care about my daughter. So if some action would benefit me in some way but hurt her, I can see a reason not to do it. But let us say I do not care about what happens to Wanda. So the fact that some action would hurt her does not give me any desire-based reason not to do it. If I can satisfy my desires by exploiting her, why should I not?

There must be some kind of reasons that are utterly independent of my contingent desires. The Stoics think that the fact that I would be harming my parents is a reason not to do something whether I care about them or not. On the other hand, the fact that I have a strong desire to be promoted to second assistant Vice President does not give me a reason to do anything at all.

If there are no objective moral facts of this sort, then the Stoic project fails utterly. If there are objective moral facts of this sort, then we must have some means of knowing them. They cannot be sensed. How do we know them?

Unless we think that there are such truths and that we can access them, we have no reason to try to make progress towards them. We only have reason to satisfy our contingent urges. Unless I have reason to believe that there is such a thing as good health, and that going to the gym will help me towards it, I have no reason to go to the gym in the first place (unless I like the gym itself). The same applies to virtue: unless virtue is objectively good and I can access that fact, I have no reason to pursue it except as a means to desire-satisfaction — which is precisely not what the Stoics claim.

Regards, Grant


Message Two: Moral Facts Are Necessary Truths — We Know Them by Reason

Grant C. Sterling to the International Stoic Forum, May 26, 2021. Thread: “Re: Do You Need God to be a Stoic?” Responding to questions: what is right, what is the source of that, and how do we know it?


I have answered these questions many times.

1) While there is, in each situation, a single action which is right (barring rare ties), there is not a single type of thing that is right. It is not like Benthamite Utilitarianism, where you simply add up quantities of pleasure and the highest total wins. There are multiple roles that generate role-duties, plus the need to take into account maximizing preferred over dispreferred indifferents.

2) This has no “source”, just as “2+2=4” has no source. It is a fundamental, necessary, and unalterable fact about the universe that, all other things being equal, one should maximize preferred indifferents. If you do not see that, or doubt it, then you do not really understand what preferred indifferents are. All other things equal, we should keep our promises — if you do not think so, you do not really understand what a “promise” is. 2+2 could not possibly have been anything other than 4. There is no need for a God to “decree” these things, or for a human society to adopt them, though of course there is nothing wrong with God pointing these truths out to us, and human societies can certainly incentivize right action.

3) We know it by using our Reason, in the same way that we know that 2+2=4 and that from “If p, then q” and “p” we can deduce “q”. This is complicated by the fact that we have developed bad habits since childhood of believing that things that seem to benefit us are “good”, and so we tend to try to deny obvious moral truths when they are inconvenient. But even here — the same man who does not repay a debt and pretends that he has no obligation to do so gets furious when someone else does not repay a debt to him.

Regards, GCS


Corpus Note — Dave Kelly

These two messages together establish the four most important claims Sterling makes about moral realism as a philosophical commitment.

First, from the 2015 message: moral reasons must exist independently of any agent’s contingent desires. The Stoic claim that harming one’s parents is a reason not to act, whether or not the agent cares about his parents, requires that this reason be a moral fact — not a desire-based consideration, not a social norm, not a contingent preference. If no such facts exist, the Stoic project fails utterly.

Second, from the 2015 message: Type C moral rules (rules of thumb) presuppose Type A moral rules (inherent moral considerations). The empirical component of ethics — learning from experience what usually works — cannot get started without prior access to what counts as a moral consideration. This makes moral realism foundational: the empirical dimension of practical wisdom cannot operate without the non-empirical moral facts that give it its standard.

Third, from the 2021 message: moral facts are necessary truths, not contingent ones. They have no source in the sense that empirical facts have sources. Just as 2+2=4 does not depend on anyone’s decree or convention, the fact that one should maximize preferred indifferents does not depend on God’s command or social agreement. It is a fundamental, necessary, and unalterable fact about the universe.

Fourth, from the 2021 message: we know these facts by Reason, in the same way we know mathematical and logical truths — not by experience, not by revelation, not by social consensus. The mathematical analogy is Sterling’s clearest and most accessible statement of how the same rational faculty that gives necessary knowledge in mathematics gives necessary knowledge in ethics. This is the intuitionist epistemology stated in its simplest form, and it connects moral realism directly to ethical intuitionism: both are grounded in the same rational access to necessary truths.

Sources: Stoics Yahoo Group, “Three (Types of) Moral Rules,” January 13, 2015; International Stoic Forum, “Re: Do You Need God to be a Stoic?” May 26, 2021. Author: Grant C. Sterling. Preserved by Dave Kelly, 2026.

Stoicism, Correspondence Theory of Truth, and Objective Moral Facts

 

Stoicism, Correspondence Theory of Truth, and Objective Moral Facts

Two posts by Grant C. Sterling. First: Stoics Yahoo Group, August 20, 2015, thread “Re: Regarding Criterion of Truth / Cognitive Impressions.” Second: International Stoic Forum, January 10, 2022, thread “Re: What is Truth?” Preserved by Dave Kelly, 2026. Layer: Theoretical Core — Philosophical Commitments. Attribution: Sterling.


Editorial Note — Dave Kelly

These two messages together constitute Sterling’s most direct statement of the correspondence theory of truth as the only defensible criterion and his argument that Stoicism cannot stand without it. The August 2015 message establishes the core claim: correspondence with reality is the only criterion of truth; the Stoics were pure realists in this regard; and the entire revisionary project of Stoicism — the claim that value impressions are false — depends on there being objective facts for impressions to correspond to or fail to correspond to. Remove the correspondence criterion and there is no basis for calling value impressions false rather than merely culturally contingent or personally inconvenient. The January 2022 message adds the epistemological clarification that Scruton’s objection to correspondence theory fails because it demands a definition of “fact” when “fact” is already the fundamental ontological category — at some point something must be accepted as foundational. This is where correspondence theory and foundationalism meet: both require that some categories be accepted as primitive rather than defined in terms of something more fundamental.


Message One: Correspondence Is the Only Criterion of Truth

Grant C. Sterling to the Stoics Yahoo Group, August 20, 2015. Thread: “Re: Regarding Criterion of Truth / Cognitive Impressions.” Responding to a challenge to the objectivity of the criterion of truth and the concept of cognitive impressions.


A) I am, in this thing like almost all others, a philosophical dinosaur.

The only “criterion of truth” that I recognize is correspondence with the facts — correspondence with reality. I reject utterly any notion of “truth” wherein something can be “true” and yet not match reality. And I am an authentic Stoic in this regard — the Stoics were pure realists in this regard.

You say that you are not prepared to accept the idea of an objective “what is”. But this threatens the very basis of Stoicism. Because the foundation of Stoicism is the notion that things that are not in our control are neither good nor evil — that Virtue is the only good and Vice the only evil. These are taken to be objective facts.

Pain and death and defeat and unemployment and rejection (etc.) all seem to be bad things. “Common sense” says they are bad things. Our pre-existing notions say that they are bad things. Stoicism says that nevertheless they are not — all these impressions are false, and we must radically revise the way we see the world to embrace the truth. If we undermine the claim that there are objective facts, it is hard to see what justifies us in radically revising our beliefs.

B) The Stoics do not hold that the Cognitive Impression is the criterion of truth — they hold that it is the basis of knowledge. Those are utterly different, although related, ideas.

Consider: “The number of molecules of O(2) in this Pepsi can is even” and “The number of molecules is odd.” Either the first or the second is true, and the other is false. It is absolutely impossible for any human being to know which is which. Having a cataleptic impression guarantees truth, because a cataleptic impression by definition always corresponds to the facts. But billions of sentences are true for which no one has a cataleptic impression.

C) For a sentence to be known to be true, one must have a clear understanding of the terms in the sentence. So in order to know the truth of “I see a chair,” you must have a clear understanding of chairs. An impression held by someone who lacks that clear understanding cannot be cataleptic with respect to that category — but this does not undermine the existence of cataleptic impressions as such. Many things we believe are things that we cannot or do not know, because we do not have a cataleptic impression of them. I believe that Barack Obama is President of the U.S., but I do not have a cataleptic impression that this is true, so I do not “know” it. I nevertheless believe that it is objectively true — I assent to the (non-cataleptic) impression that it is the case.

Regards, Grant


Message Two: Correspondence Theory and the Fundamental Ontological Category

Grant C. Sterling to the International Stoic Forum, January 10, 2022. Thread: “Re: What is Truth?” Responding to the claim, based on Scruton, that trying to decide what is true is futile because the concept of fact cannot itself be defined.


In order to define some term informatively, there need to be other, more fundamental notions that you can appeal to.

Scruton’s fallacy is his failure to see that at some point this process must stop. He has answered the question “What is Truth?” completely — truth is correspondence of a statement with the facts. Then he demands a definition of “fact”, and is frustrated that none is forthcoming. But that is because he demands too much — he has made “facts” into the fundamental ontological notion, and is then frustrated when he finds that he cannot define it in terms of more fundamental notions. But that is not because “truth” cannot be defined — it is because he cannot see that at some point something must be accepted as fundamental.

(The Stoics never used the cataleptic impression as a criterion of truth — they used it as a criterion of knowledge. That is very different. And interpretations of Stoicism exist that are immune to the standard objections, although some of the Stoics may not have seen the problems. But, again, this only connects to knowledge, not truth.)

Regards, GCS


Corpus Note — Dave Kelly

These two messages together establish the three most important claims Sterling makes about correspondence theory as a philosophical commitment.

First, from the 2015 message: correspondence with reality is the only criterion of truth, and this is the authentic Stoic position. The Stoics were pure realists. Any theory of truth that permits something to be true without matching reality is rejected without qualification. This is Sterling’s foundational epistemological stance, and it is not tentative or hedged.

Second, from the 2015 message: the entire revisionary project of Stoicism depends on correspondence theory. The claim that value impressions are false — that pain, death, defeat, and rejection are not genuine evils despite appearing to be so — requires that there be objective facts for impressions to correspond to or fail to correspond to. If there are no objective facts, Stoicism cannot call these impressions false. It can only say they are inconvenient, or culturally contingent, or personally unhelpful. The normative force of the Stoic revision is entirely carried by the claim that the impressions are factually wrong, not merely psychologically uncomfortable. Remove correspondence theory and that claim has no ground.

Third, from the 2022 message: the demand that “fact” itself be defined is a regress demand that misunderstands foundational categories. Correspondence theory defines truth in terms of facts. Facts are the fundamental ontological category. At some point something must be accepted as fundamental and not further defined. This is the junction between correspondence theory and foundationalism: both commitments require accepting certain categories as primitive rather than derived. The objector who demands a definition of “fact” is making the same error as the objector who demands a justification for Theorem 10 from something more fundamental — both fail to see that foundational categories terminate the regress rather than extending it.

Sources: Stoics Yahoo Group, “Re: Regarding Criterion of Truth / Cognitive Impressions,” August 20, 2015; International Stoic Forum, “Re: What is Truth?”, January 10, 2022. Author: Grant C. Sterling. Preserved by Dave Kelly, 2026.

Wednesday, April 08, 2026

The Hearing

 

The Hearing


The courthouse was on Madison and they took the bus. Carla had ironed her black dress the night before and it hung straight. Their mother wore her good coat, the charcoal one she wore to funerals and to Easter. Danny wore his father's tie.

They did not talk on the bus.

The bailiff told them where to sit and they sat. The benches were oak and dark from years of people sitting on them. The American flag stood in the corner. A crucifix hung on the wall behind the judge's bench, which surprised nobody.


Marcus Webb was brought in from a side door. He was twenty-two. He had grown up on the same block as Danny and Carla and their brother Paulie. He wore a gray suit that was too large in the shoulders. His mother sat in the first row and did not look at anyone.

The prosecutor read the charge. He read it slowly and in the room there was no sound except his voice and the charge.

When he finished the judge looked at the defense table.

Not guilty, the lawyer said.

Danny's jaw moved. Carla put her hand on his arm and he was still.


Father Maguire met them in the hallway during the recess. He had come on the bus from Saint Brendan's. He was a heavyset man with red hands and he had been their pastor since before Carla was born.

He shook Danny's hand and held it a moment. He kissed their mother on the cheek.

How are you holding, Margaret, he said.

I'm holding, Father, she said.

He nodded. He stood with them by the window that looked out on Madison Street. Below, a man was shoveling the walk in front of the five-and-dime. A woman pushed a pram through the slush.

Father, Danny said. He's going to say he didn't know what he was doing.

Father Maguire looked at the street.

That may be what he says, he said.

He knew, Danny said. He stood there and he knew exactly.

The priest did not answer right away. A trolley went past on the street below and the window trembled slightly in its frame.

A man knows, Father Maguire said. Whatever else is true, a man knows.


They ate at Kowalski's after the afternoon session. It was the kind of place with a counter and six booths and a pie case with three kinds of pie under glass. The waitress knew their mother and brought coffee without being asked.

Father Maguire ordered the pot roast. Danny ordered coffee. Their mother and Carla ordered nothing and then the priest said they should eat something and they ordered soup.

The priest cut his meat carefully.

Danny, he said. What is it you're carrying.

Danny turned his coffee cup on the saucer.

I keep thinking it doesn't matter what they decide in there, Danny said. I keep thinking Paulie's gone and the verdict's just words.

Father Maguire chewed and swallowed.

It matters, he said.

Why does it matter.

Because what was done was wrong, the priest said. Not wrong to us. Wrong. Full stop. The verdict ought to say what is true.

Danny looked at his cup.

Some fellows would say that's just how we see it, Danny said. Some fellows would say who decides what's wrong.

Father Maguire set his fork down. He was not a man who wasted words and he did not waste them now.

Your brother is dead, he said. He was twenty years old and he was killed in the street. That is not how we see it. That is what happened.

The soup came. Their mother looked at it and did not pick up her spoon.

He used to serve the six-thirty Mass, she said. He was never late once. Three years and he was never late once.

I remember, Father Maguire said.

He was an altar boy until he was sixteen, she said. And then he kept going to the six-thirty even after. He liked the quiet of it, he said. He liked the church when it was just a few people.

She picked up her spoon and put it down.

That was Paulie, she said. That was really him.


Outside it had gotten colder and their breath showed. Father Maguire said goodnight and walked to the rectory car. Danny stood on the sidewalk with his mother while Carla went for a cab.

The street was quiet. Across the way the lights were on in Grabowski's Pharmacy. A man came out with a small bag and turned up his collar against the cold.

Danny, his mother said.

Yeah, Ma.

I've been thinking about forgiving him, she said. Sister Agatha says we are required to forgive. She says it's not optional.

You don't have to settle that tonight, Danny said.

No, she said. But I've been thinking about it. And here is what I keep coming back to.

She pulled her coat closed at the collar.

He chose it, she said. He stood there and he chose it. And because he chose it, there is something there that can be forgiven. You can't forgive a stone for falling. You can't forgive the weather. But a man who chose — that man you can forgive. Someday.

She looked up the street for the cab.

Not tonight, she said. But someday.

The cab came and they got in. The city went past the windows, the parish streets, the lit windows of the houses, the dark front of Saint Brendan's with the statue of the Virgin in the niche above the door.

Their mother fell asleep against the door before they reached home.

Carla drove and Danny looked out at the streets.

He was still in there, Danny said quietly. At the end. He was still in there and he knew what he was doing.

Carla kept her eyes on the street ahead.

Yes, she said.

Danny watched the dark front of a hardware store go past, then a tavern with a neon Pabst sign in the window, then a vacant lot.

That's the whole thing, he said.

His mother breathed slowly against the door. The cab turned onto their street. The porch light was on at their house the way it was always on.


Story: Claude, 2026. Commissioned by Dave Kelly. Theoretical framework underlying the thematic structure: Grant C. Sterling.

The Hearing — Interpretation in Terms of the Six Commitments

 

The Hearing — Interpretation in Terms of the Six Commitments


C1 — Substance Dualism

The mother carries this commitment. She never argues for it. She does not need to. It is the ground she stands on throughout the story.

At Kowalski's she cannot pick up her spoon. She is not grieving a biological system. She is grieving a person. And she locates that person with precision: the boy who served the six-thirty Mass for three years without being late once, who kept going after he aged out of altar service because he liked the quiet, who liked the church when it was just a few people. That was Paulie. That was really him.

The phrase does two things simultaneously. It identifies the true self as something other than the body that was killed in the street. And it implicitly distinguishes that self from what happened at the end — the circumstances of the death, the event that brought them all to this courthouse. What happened at the end was not what Paulie was. The person she is mourning is the one who chose the six-thirty. That person is distinct from the body and distinct from the circumstances. This is substance dualism spoken in a mother's grief, not in a philosophy lecture.

The commitment recurs in Danny's closing line. He was still in there. At the end. He was still in there and he knew what he was doing. Danny is asserting that Marcus Webb was present as a person — as an inner self — at the moment he chose. The body was there. But the person was there too, which is what makes the act what it is. Without the person inside, there is no crime. Danny knows this without having been taught it.


C2 — Libertarian Free Will

This is the load-bearing commitment of the story. It appears four times, in four different registers, and the story turns on it each time.

First in Danny's accusation in the hallway: He knew. He stood there and he knew exactly. Danny is not making a psychological claim. He is making a claim about origination. Webb was not a mechanism producing an output. He was a person who stood at a choice and made it.

Second in Father Maguire's answer: A man knows. Whatever else is true, a man knows. The priest does not argue. He states it as a foundational fact about persons. Whatever the defense psychologist will say, whatever the diminished capacity argument will claim, this prior truth stands. A man knows. The knowing is inseparable from being a man. This is libertarian free will stated as Catholic anthropology — as a claim about what human beings are.

Third in the mother's forgiveness speech, which is the most philosophically precise moment in the story. She arrives at the commitment from a different direction entirely — not from anger like Danny, not from pastoral authority like Father Maguire, but from the obligation to forgive. Sister Agatha has told her forgiveness is required. She is working through what that requirement means. And she discovers that it only makes sense on one condition: You can't forgive a stone for falling. You can't forgive the weather. But a man who chose — that man you can forgive.

This is the philosophical argument from forgiveness to free will, made by a grieving woman on a cold sidewalk outside a pharmacy, without a word of philosophy. Forgiveness presupposes a genuine agent. A genuine agent is one who could have chosen otherwise. The mother does not derive this from premises. She sees it directly, because it is self-evident to anyone who takes the obligation to forgive seriously.

Fourth in Danny's closing line, which restates the first but with the weight of the whole day behind it. He was still in there and he knew what he was doing. That's the whole thing. The whole thing is not the legal outcome. The whole thing is that Webb was present as a choosing agent. That fact is what makes everything else matter — the trial, the verdict, the question of forgiveness, the distinction between a crime and a weather event.


C3 — Ethical Intuitionism

Father Maguire carries this commitment at Kowalski's, and he carries it with complete economy.

Danny raises the relativist challenge directly: Some fellows would say that's just how we see it. Some fellows would say who decides what's wrong. This is the standard modern move — not a philosophical argument but a social gesture toward the possibility that moral claims are perspectival. Danny does not endorse it. He floats it, testing.

The priest's response refuses it without argument: Your brother is dead. He was twenty years old and he was killed in the street. That is not how we see it. That is what happened.

The structure of this reply is intuitionist. Father Maguire does not engage the challenge on its own terms. He does not construct an argument against relativism. He points at the moral fact and states it. The killing of a twenty-year-old in the street is wrong, and the wrongness is not located in how we see it. It is located in what happened. The relativist framing is simply refused as inadequate to the reality in front of them.

This is how ethical intuitionism functions in ordinary life. The moral fact is apprehended directly and stated. The challenge to it is not refuted by counter-argument — it is dismissed by re-pointing at what is plainly the case. No decent person, confronted with what happened to Paulie, reaches first for a theory of moral epistemology. They see it.


C4 — Foundationalism

Foundationalism is structural in the story. It does not appear in dialogue the way the other commitments do. It appears in the architecture of the priest's moral reasoning and in the relationship between the courthouse and the crucifix.

Father Maguire's key statement — Not wrong to us. Wrong. Full stop. The verdict ought to say what is true — has a foundationalist grammar. The wrongness of the act is prior. The verdict is downstream of it. The trial is not a process that determines whether a wrong occurred. It is a process that is supposed to correspond to a wrong that has already occurred independently of what the trial decides. The foundational moral fact is not produced by the proceeding. The proceeding is measured against it.

The crucifix behind the judge's bench, which surprised nobody, makes the same point in architectural form. The moral law is prior to the positive law. The courtroom acknowledges this not as a theological statement but as a settled cultural assumption. The cross is there because everyone in that room already knows that what the law is trying to get right is something the law did not invent. The law derives from something foundational. This is not argued. It is displayed.


C5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth

The entire legal proceeding is a correspondence instrument. Every element of the trial — the charge read slowly, the oath, the eyewitness, the cross-examination that does not change the account — is aimed at one question: does the claim correspond to what actually happened?

Father Maguire states it explicitly in the diner: The verdict ought to say what is true. Truth here means correspondence to the fact. The verdict is not a social construction. It is not a negotiated outcome. It is supposed to be a true statement about what Marcus Webb did. If it fails to correspond, it is a false verdict, not merely an unpopular one.

Danny's despair at the start of the diner scene — the verdict's just words — is the failure mode of correspondence theory: the worry that the institutional process will produce a statement that fails to match reality, and that the mismatch will be given official standing. Father Maguire does not resolve this worry by reassuring Danny that the system will work. He resolves it by separating the verdict from the truth. The verdict ought to correspond. Whether it does is a further question. But the truth of what happened is not subject to the verdict. That is what happened. The correspondence standard exists independently of whether the institution honors it.


C6 — Moral Realism

Moral realism is the commitment that makes the rest of the story possible. It is assumed by every character in every scene without any character naming it or defending it.

The prosecutor reads the charge slowly, and in the room there is no sound except his voice and the charge. This sentence is doing moral realist work. The silence is not theatrical. It is the silence of a room in which everyone present — family, lawyers, judge, bailiff, Webb's own mother who does not look at anyone — understands that a real wrong is being named. The charge is not an expression of community preference. It is a formal statement of a moral fact.

Father Maguire's refusal of Danny's relativist probe is the clearest statement: Not wrong to us. Wrong. Full stop. Wrong is predicated of the act without qualification, without audience, without perspective. This is moral realism in five words.

The mother's forgiveness speech is moral realism from underneath. She does not argue that what Webb did was objectively wrong. She assumes it. Her entire struggle is about what the objective wrongness — the genuine culpability of a genuine agent — now requires of her. Sister Agatha says forgiveness is required. The mother takes that seriously because she takes seriously that there is something real to forgive. A wrong occurred. A person committed it. These are not opinions. The question is what follows from them.

Danny's last words state the realist position at its most compressed. That's the whole thing. The whole thing is not that the family is suffering. The whole thing is not that they see it a certain way. The whole thing is that Webb was present as a choosing agent when he did what he did, and that what he did was wrong independently of what anyone decides or feels or rules. The moral fact is the whole thing. Everything else — the trial, the verdict, the question of forgiveness, the long ride home through the parish streets — is organized around it.


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

Monday, April 06, 2026

Analogues of the Six Commitments — Thinkers and Traditions

 

Analogues of the Six Commitments — Thinkers and Traditions

Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Mind map architecture: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude.


ANALOGUES OF THE SIX COMMITMENTS
│
├─ 1. SUBSTANCE-DUALISM (C1)
│   ├─ Ancient-Analogues
│   │   ├─ Plato — soul-body-distinction (Phaedo, Republic)
│   │   ├─ Plato — soul-as-true-self, body-as-instrument
│   │   └─ Augustine — soul-as-image-of-God, distinct-from-matter
│   ├─ Early-Modern-Analogues
│   │   ├─ Descartes — res-cogitans-vs-res-extensa (Meditations II, VI)
│   │   ├─ Descartes — thinking-thing-as-better-known-than-body
│   │   ├─ Malebranche — mind-as-non-extended-substance
│   │   └─ Leibniz — monads-as-immaterial-centers-of-perception
│   ├─ Kantian-Analogue
│   │   ├─ Kant — noumenal-self-vs-phenomenal-self
│   │   ├─ Kant — rational-subject-not-reducible-to-nature
│   │   └─ Kant — person-as-end-in-himself, not-mere-mechanism
│   └─ Contemporary-Analogues
│       ├─ Chalmers — property-dualism, hard-problem-of-consciousness
│       ├─ Swinburne — substance-dualism-defended (The Evolution of the Soul)
│       └─ Foster — immaterialist-account-of-mind
│
├─ 2. LIBERTARIAN-FREE-WILL (C2)
│   ├─ Ancient-and-Medieval-Analogues
│   │   ├─ Aristotle — voluntary-action-and-deliberation (NE III)
│   │   ├─ Augustine — will-as-free-origination (On Free Choice of the Will)
│   │   └─ Aquinas — will-as-self-moved-rational-appetite
│   ├─ Early-Modern-Analogues
│   │   ├─ Descartes — freedom-of-will-as-clearest-human-faculty
│   │   ├─ Reid — common-sense-agent-causation
│   │   └─ Reid — agent-as-genuine-first-cause-of-action
│   ├─ Kantian-Analogue
│   │   ├─ Kant — transcendental-freedom (Critique of Pure Reason)
│   │   ├─ Kant — autonomy-as-self-legislation-of-rational-will
│   │   └─ Kant — moral-law-presupposes-freedom
│   └─ Contemporary-Analogues
│       ├─ Robert-Kane — agent-causation-and-ultimate-origination
│       ├─ Timothy-OConnor — irreducible-agent-causation
│       └─ William-James — pragmatic-case-for-indeterminist-freedom
│
├─ 3. ETHICAL-INTUITIONISM (C3)
│   ├─ Rationalist-Precursors
│   │   ├─ Ralph-Cudworth — eternal-moral-truths-grasped-by-reason
│   │   ├─ Samuel-Clarke — fitness-of-things-as-self-evident
│   │   └─ Richard-Price — moral-truth-as-direct-rational-perception
│   ├─ Classical-Intuitionist-Tradition
│   │   ├─ G.E.-Moore — Principia-Ethica (good-as-indefinable-simple-property)
│   │   ├─ W.D.-Ross — prima-facie-duties-as-directly-apprehended (The Right and the Good)
│   │   ├─ Ross — no-single-supreme-principle, duties-grasped-contextually
│   │   └─ Sidgwick — moral-axioms-as-self-evident-rational-deliverances
│   ├─ Sterling-Specific-Fit
│   │   ├─ Ross — named-by-Sterling-as-natural-fit-for-Stoic-kathêkon
│   │   ├─ Ross — prima-facie-duties-parallel-contextual-kathekon
│   │   └─ Sterling — same-rational-faculty-for-math-logic-and-moral-truth
│   └─ Contemporary-Analogues
│       ├─ Audi — intuitionism-without-dogmatism
│       └─ Huemer — phenomenal-conservatism-as-epistemic-base
│
├─ 4. FOUNDATIONALISM (C4)
│   ├─ Ancient-Foundationalists
│   │   ├─ Aristotle — first-principles-in-Posterior-Analytics
│   │   ├─ Aristotle — no-infinite-regress-of-justification
│   │   └─ Euclid — axiomatic-structure-as-model-for-knowledge
│   ├─ Early-Modern-Foundationalists
│   │   ├─ Descartes — cogito-as-indubitable-foundation (Meditations)
│   │   ├─ Descartes — clear-and-distinct-perception-as-epistemic-base
│   │   └─ Locke — simple-ideas-as-foundational-atomic-units
│   ├─ Contemporary-Foundationalists
│   │   ├─ Chisholm — epistemic-priority-of-directly-evident-beliefs
│   │   ├─ Plantinga — properly-basic-beliefs-in-reformed-epistemology
│   │   └─ BonJour — strong-foundationalism-defended
│   └─ Sterling-Specific-Formulation
│       ├─ Th-10-as-foundational-all-others-derived
│       ├─ Theorem-dependence — Th-12-derives-from-Th-10
│       └─ Smorgasbord-warning — denying-one-collapses-others
│
├─ 5. CORRESPONDENCE-THEORY (C5)
│   ├─ Classical-Sources
│   │   ├─ Aristotle — Metaphysics-1011b — to-say-of-what-is-that-it-is
│   │   ├─ Plato — Sophist — false-belief-as-saying-the-non-existent
│   │   └─ Aquinas — adequatio-intellectus-et-rei
│   ├─ Modern-Defenders
│   │   ├─ Russell — logical-atomism-and-truth-as-fact-correspondence
│   │   ├─ Wittgenstein — Tractatus-picture-theory-of-meaning
│   │   └─ Tarski — semantic-theory-of-truth (snow-is-white-iff-snow-is-white)
│   ├─ Contemporary-Defenders
│   │   ├─ Armstrong — truthmakers-as-facts-in-the-world
│   │   └─ David — correspondence-as-structural-isomorphism
│   └─ Sterling-Specific-Application
│       ├─ moral-impressions-as-claims-about-moral-reality
│       ├─ false-dogma-fails-correspondence-test
│       └─ examination-as-test-of-correspondence-not-utility
│
└─ 6. MORAL-REALISM (C6)
    ├─ Ancient-Realists
    │   ├─ Plato — Forms-as-objective-moral-standards (Republic, Phaedo)
    │   ├─ Plato — Good-as-highest-Form, mind-independent
    │   └─ Aristotle — eudaimonia-as-objective-end-for-human-nature
    ├─ 17th-18th-Century-Realists
    │   ├─ Cudworth — eternal-immutable-morality-independent-of-will
    │   ├─ Clarke — moral-relations-as-necessary-objective-truths
    │   └─ Price — moral-properties-as-real-and-mind-independent
    ├─ Modern-Realists
    │   ├─ G.E.-Moore — good-as-non-natural-indefinable-objective-property
    │   ├─ Sidgwick — rational-intuitionism-presupposes-objective-moral-facts
    │   └─ W.D.-Ross — prima-facie-duties-as-objective-moral-facts
    └─ Contemporary-Realists
        ├─ Russ-Shafer-Landau — Moral Realism: A Defence
        ├─ Derek-Parfit — On What Matters, Part Three (convergence-of-theories)
        └─ Sterling — moral-facts-like-2+2=4, fundamental-and-unalterable

Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Mind map architecture and thinker selection: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.

The Six Commitments in Common Belief — Where Ordinary People Already Hold Them

 

The Six Commitments in Common Belief — Where Ordinary People Already Hold Them

Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Mind map architecture: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude.


SIX-COMMITMENTS-IN-COMMON-BELIEF
│
├─ 1. SUBSTANCE-DUALISM (C1)
│   ├─ Religious-Traditions
│   │   ├─ Christianity — immortal-soul-distinct-from-body (near-universal)
│   │   ├─ Islam — ruh-as-immaterial-self-surviving-death
│   │   ├─ Judaism — neshama-as-distinct-spiritual-substance
│   │   ├─ Hinduism — atman-as-true-self-not-identical-to-body
│   │   └─ Buddhism — contested-but-stream-of-consciousness-not-reducible
│   ├─ Folk-Psychology
│   │   ├─ I-am-not-my-body — universal-ordinary-self-description
│   │   ├─ grief-as-loss-of-person-not-merely-biological-system
│   │   ├─ identity-persists-through-physical-change (Ship-of-Theseus-intuition)
│   │   └─ near-death-experience-language — soul-leaving-body
│   ├─ Legal-and-Social-Practice
│   │   ├─ murder-as-killing-a-person-not-a-body — person-is-more-than-matter
│   │   ├─ persistent-vegetative-state-debates — where-is-the-person
│   │   └─ criminal-responsibility-presupposes-mental-distinct-from-physical
│   └─ Common-Speech
│       ├─ my-body — implies-owner-distinct-from-owned
│       ├─ losing-my-mind — not-losing-my-brain
│       └─ heart-vs-head — inner-life-as-categorically-distinct-domain
│
├─ 2. LIBERTARIAN-FREE-WILL (C2)
│   ├─ Universal-Moral-Practice
│   │   ├─ praise-and-blame — assume-agent-could-have-done-otherwise
│   │   ├─ moral-indignation — presupposes-genuine-choice
│   │   ├─ gratitude — only-makes-sense-if-giver-chose-freely
│   │   └─ forgiveness — assumes-agent-was-responsible-originator
│   ├─ Legal-Systems-Worldwide
│   │   ├─ criminal-law — mens-rea-requires-genuine-choice
│   │   ├─ insanity-defense — diminished-control-diminishes-guilt
│   │   ├─ duress-as-mitigating — coercion-reduces-but-does-not-eliminate-responsibility
│   │   └─ sentencing — treats-choice-as-real-not-illusory
│   ├─ Religious-Teaching
│   │   ├─ Christianity — repentance-requires-genuine-turning-of-will
│   │   ├─ Islam — human-accountability-before-God-presupposes-free-will
│   │   ├─ Judaism — teshuvah-as-genuine-return-of-free-agent
│   │   └─ Hinduism — karma-requires-agent-as-real-cause-of-action
│   └─ Ordinary-Resistance-to-Determinism
│       ├─ you-chose-that — near-universal-ordinary-accusation
│       ├─ I-could-not-help-it — treated-as-excuse-requiring-justification
│       └─ he-had-a-choice — bedrock-common-moral-judgment
│
├─ 3. ETHICAL-INTUITIONISM (C3)
│   ├─ Universal-Moral-Reactions
│   │   ├─ torture-of-innocents-is-wrong — immediate-no-argument-needed
│   │   ├─ child-abuse — recognized-as-wrong-before-any-theory-applied
│   │   ├─ gratuitous-cruelty — condemned-without-calculation
│   │   └─ moral-shock — reaction-precedes-reasoning-in-all-cultures
│   ├─ Common-Moral-Speech
│   │   ├─ just-wrong — conversation-stopper-not-premise-in-argument
│   │   ├─ obviously-right — appeals-to-direct-moral-perception
│   │   ├─ no-decent-person-would — invokes-shared-direct-apprehension
│   │   └─ self-evident — explicitly-intuitionist-in-ordinary-use
│   ├─ Cross-Cultural-Convergence
│   │   ├─ prohibition-on-murder — no-culture-endorses-arbitrary-killing
│   │   ├─ care-for-children — universal-without-derivation-from-theory
│   │   ├─ reciprocity-norms — golden-rule-in-every-major-tradition
│   │   └─ betrayal-as-wrong — recognized-independently-of-consequences
│   └─ Religious-Moral-Teaching
│       ├─ conscience — inner-voice-giving-direct-moral-knowledge
│       ├─ natural-law — Aquinas-popularized-but-folk-version-is-universal
│       └─ image-of-God — humans-as-moral-knowers-by-nature
│
├─ 4. FOUNDATIONALISM (C4)
│   ├─ Ordinary-Epistemic-Practice
│   │   ├─ some-things-just-are-true — refusal-of-infinite-regress
│   │   ├─ you-have-to-start-somewhere — universal-folk-epistemology
│   │   ├─ that-speaks-for-itself — claim-to-self-evidence
│   │   └─ basics-are-basics — hierarchical-knowledge-as-assumed
│   ├─ Religious-Frameworks
│   │   ├─ Ten-Commandments — foundational-from-which-other-duties-derive
│   │   ├─ Sharia-foundational-principles — from-which-specific-rulings-derived
│   │   ├─ scripture-as-foundation — all-derived-from-revealed-base
│   │   └─ creed — foundational-propositions-from-which-theology-builds
│   ├─ Legal-Systems
│   │   ├─ constitutional-law — foundational-from-which-statute-derives
│   │   ├─ natural-rights — foundational-not-derived-from-positive-law
│   │   └─ rule-of-law-itself — non-negotiable-base-not-subject-to-revision
│   └─ Ordinary-Moral-Argument
│       ├─ first-principles — commonly-invoked-without-philosophical-training
│       ├─ that-is-non-negotiable — marks-a-foundational-commitment
│       └─ bedrock-conviction — folk-term-for-basic-belief
│
├─ 5. CORRESPONDENCE-THEORY (C5)
│   ├─ Universal-Folk-Epistemology
│   │   ├─ that-is-just-not-true — assumes-mind-independent-standard
│   │   ├─ face-the-facts — reality-as-external-judge-of-belief
│   │   ├─ wishful-thinking — error-named-as-belief-failing-correspondence
│   │   └─ see-things-as-they-are — correspondence-as-epistemic-ideal
│   ├─ Legal-Practice
│   │   ├─ perjury-law — false-statement-as-failure-to-correspond-to-fact
│   │   ├─ evidence — material-presented-to-test-whether-claim-matches-reality
│   │   ├─ verdict — corresponds-to-what-actually-happened
│   │   └─ oath-to-tell-truth — truth-as-correspondence-assumed-throughout
│   ├─ Journalism-and-History
│   │   ├─ fact-checking — tests-claim-against-what-actually-occurred
│   │   ├─ eyewitness-testimony — value-rests-on-correspondence-assumption
│   │   └─ historical-record — what-actually-happened-as-standard
│   └─ Religious-Truth-Claims
│       ├─ God-exists — treated-as-correspondence-claim-not-preference
│       ├─ scripture-as-true — truth-understood-as-correspondence-not-utility
│       └─ heresy — false-correspondence-to-revealed-truth
│
└─ 6. MORAL-REALISM (C6)
    ├─ Universal-Moral-Practice
    │   ├─ that-was-wrong-regardless-of-what-anyone-thinks — core-folk-realism
    │   ├─ moral-progress-language — assumes-objective-standard-we-approach
    │   ├─ moral-outrage-at-past — slavery-was-wrong-even-when-accepted
    │   └─ moral-monsters — Hitler-Pol-Pot-wrong-not-just-unpopular
    ├─ Human-Rights-Tradition
    │   ├─ universal-declaration-1948 — rights-held-regardless-of-law-or-culture
    │   ├─ crimes-against-humanity — wrong-independent-of-any-jurisdiction
    │   ├─ Nuremberg — following-orders-no-defense — objective-moral-law-above-positive-law
    │   └─ genocide-as-crime — not-merely-culturally-disapproved
    ├─ Religious-Teaching
    │   ├─ divine-command — God-commands-because-good, not-good-because-commanded
    │   ├─ natural-moral-law — Catholic-tradition-explicitly-realist
    │   ├─ moral-sin — objective-wrongness-independent-of-subjective-attitude
    │   └─ judgment — actions-assessed-against-objective-moral-standard
    └─ Ordinary-Resistance-to-Relativism
        ├─ that-is-wrong-not-just-different — universal-folk-realist-judgment
        ├─ you-cannot-justify-that — appeal-to-objective-standard
        ├─ some-things-are-just-wrong — conversation-ending-realist-claim
        └─ moral-relativism-self-refuting — ordinary-people-notice-this

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


The Six Commitments in Common Belief — Commentary


The six commitments are not minority positions that ordinary people are being asked to adopt. They are the default assumptions that ordinary people hold before philosophy arrives. The modern philosophical alternatives — eliminativism, hard determinism, relativism, anti-foundationalism, pragmatist theories of truth, moral constructivism — are the positions that require intellectual training and deliberate argument to reach. Common belief starts with substance dualism, free will, moral realism, and correspondence to fact. It takes sustained academic effort to talk people out of those.

This means Sterling's framework is not making a heterodox demand on ordinary people. It is articulating and defending what they already assume. The philosophical work is to show those assumptions are defensible — which is exactly what the six commitments do.

The sharpest instance is C6 — Moral Realism. The Nuremberg precedent is decisive: the entire legal framework of crimes against humanity, genocide prosecution, and universal human rights rests on the claim that some actions are wrong independent of what any culture, state, or majority believes. That is folk moral realism stated at the level of international law. Sterling's framework simply names and defends what that framework already requires.


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

C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth (Truth as Alignment with Reality)

 

C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth (Truth as Alignment with Reality)

Within Sterling’s Stoicism, the correspondence theory of truth is the account that makes “false” mean what the framework requires it to mean. Stoicism is built on the claim that most human impressions about good and evil are false. Not unhelpful. Not unconventional. Not culturally contingent. False. That single word carries the entire normative weight of the corrective project: the demand to correct rather than merely adjust, to examine rather than merely manage, to refuse assent rather than merely redirect attention. The corpus-governed dimensions of C4 are derived from what Sterling’s own formulations require truth to be — not from the epistemology literature’s standard account of correspondence but from the specific claims Sterling makes in Documents 16 and 18 about what Stoicism requires of truth and why.


Match

The most basic dimension of correspondence theory in Sterling’s corpus is the simplest: truth is a matter of match. A belief either matches how the world actually is or it does not. Sterling uses this formulation in the February 2020 message: beliefs are about the world, and when they match the way the world really is they are true, and when they do not they are false. The match formulation is deliberately ordinary — Sterling notes that correspondence theory is what basically 100% of people throughout most of human history have embraced, and thought so obvious that it did not even need a name. The philosophical work is not to defend match as the criterion of truth but to make explicit what that ordinary criterion requires: a world with determinate features that beliefs either track or fail to track.

The Word “False” as Load-Bearing

The word “false” appears throughout the framework as a term of assessment: false impressions, false value judgments, false beliefs about externals. This word is doing specific philosophical work that requires correspondence theory to carry it. If truth were defined by coherence within a belief system, then “false” would mean “inconsistent with the rest of the system.” If truth were defined by pragmatic success, “false” would mean “unhelpful in practice.” Correspondence theory fixes the meaning as Sterling requires it: “false” means failing to match how things actually are. The belief that a loss is a genuine evil is false because it does not match the actual evaluative structure of reality — in which loss, as an external, is genuinely neither good nor evil. Without correspondence theory, the word “false” loses the precision the framework depends on.

Heart and Soul Formulation

Sterling’s most emphatic statement of correspondence theory’s role in the framework appears in the February 2020 message: the heart and soul of Stoicism is that most of our impressions about good and evil do not match up with the way good and evil really are in the universe. This is not a secondary point about epistemology. It is Sterling’s identification of what Stoicism most fundamentally is: a systematic recognition that human beings characteristically misrepresent the evaluative structure of reality, and a practice aimed at correcting that misrepresentation. The heart-and-soul formulation places correspondence theory at the centre of the framework — not as an epistemological option the Stoics happen to endorse but as the precise claim that gives Stoicism its corrective character. Remove correspondence theory and the heart and soul disappears: there is nothing left for impressions to match or fail to match.

Pure Realism

Sterling states in the August 2015 message that the authentic Stoic position is that the Stoics were pure realists: the only criterion of truth is correspondence with the facts. Pure realism is not a qualified or hedged realism. It does not say that truth is partly a matter of correspondence and partly a matter of coherence or utility. It says that correspondence with the facts is the only criterion. This exclusivity is load-bearing: it closes the option of supplementing or replacing correspondence with coherentism or pragmatism. Sterling endorses pure realism not as a philosophical preference but because the Stoic revisionary project requires it: the project of correcting false impressions about good and evil requires a single determinate standard — how things actually are — and not a range of criteria that might give different verdicts on the same impression.

Utter Rejection of Truth-Without-Match

Sterling’s most emphatic discriminative formulation appears in Document 18 : he rejects utterly any notion of truth wherein something can be true and yet not match reality. The emphasis is Sterling’s own. This formulation goes beyond the positive claim that truth is correspondence to include a negative claim that brooks no compromise: any account of truth that allows a belief to be true without matching reality is simply wrong. This utter rejection is not philosophical aggression. It is the recognition that any weakening of the correspondence requirement undermines the corrective project: if something can be true without matching reality, then the framework cannot appeal to the way things actually are as an unconditional standard, and the verdicts it issues lose their authority.

Cataleptic Impression as Always-Matching

Sterling uses the Stoic technical concept of the cataleptic impression to ground correspondence theory within Stoic epistemology. Cataleptic impressions are a special class of impressions that always match the facts. They are inside the mind — they are still impressions — but they are characterised by their invariable correspondence to reality. Non-cataleptic impressions are false precisely because they fail to achieve this match. The cataleptic/non-cataleptic distinction presupposes correspondence theory: it presupposes that impressions have a property — matching or failing to match the facts — by which they are assessed as cataleptic or not. Without correspondence theory, the distinction has no content: if truth did not consist in matching the facts, there would be no criterion by which to identify which impressions are cataleptic.

Cataleptic Impressions Require Facts Outside the Mind

Sterling draws a precise consequence in the February 2020 message: cataleptic impressions need facts outside the mind in order for them to be true. Even the most reliable and certain impressions — the cataleptic ones — are inside the mind. They are representations. For them to be true representations — for them to achieve correspondence — there must be something outside the mind that they correspond to. The facts outside the mind are what the impressions either match or fail to match. This point is architecturally important: it establishes that correspondence theory requires a robust commitment to mind-independent reality. The facts are not constituted by the impressions, even the best impressions. They are what the impressions either track or miss.

Mental Attitude Pointing Outward

Sterling describes beliefs as internal states that are “about” something — about rain outside, about the Pepsi can on the desk, about the evaluative status of an external. This aboutness is the intentional structure that makes beliefs truth-evaluable. A belief points beyond itself toward the world, representing it as being a certain way. Sterling’s formulation: beliefs are about the world, and when they match the way the world really is they are true. The world-directedness of beliefs is what makes them candidates for assessment as true or false: a mental state with no world-direction has nothing to correspond or fail to correspond to. The mental attitude pointing outward is the structural feature of belief that correspondence theory requires and that the Stoic practice of examining impressions presupposes.

Objective Facts as the Standard

Sterling uses the word “fact” in a precise technical sense in the February 2020 message: facts, as philosophers use the word, are not things in our minds — they are things in the world. The objective facts are the way the universe actually is, independently of how anyone believes or wants it to be. They are the standard against which all impressions are assessed. When the SDF runs the Value Strip and asks whether the agent is treating an indifferent as a genuine good, the standard being applied is the objective fact about evaluative reality: externals are neither good nor evil — that is how things actually are. Without objective facts as the standard, the examination has no fixed point of reference, and the verdicts it issues are assessments of coherence rather than assessments of truth.

Without Objective Facts No Basis for Calling Value Impressions False

Sterling states in Document 18 that without objective facts there is no basis for calling value impressions false rather than culturally contingent. This is the sharpest formulation of what correspondence theory does for the framework. If there are no objective facts — no way the world actually is, evaluatively — then the impression that wealth is a genuine good is not false. It is culturally shaped, perhaps, or the product of bad habits, or inconsistent with Stoic theory. But it cannot be called false in the objectively loaded sense the framework requires. Calling it false requires that there be an objective fact it fails to match: the fact that virtue is the only genuine good. Without objective facts, the corrective project loses its most fundamental justification.

Stoicism Incoherent Without Moral Facts

Sterling states explicitly in the February 2020 message that Stoicism is incoherent without moral facts. The claim is comprehensive: externals are neither good nor evil — the Stoics think this is a fact about the universe. If there are no facts, then the Stoic view of what is good, evil, or indifferent is no more valid than the ordinary view. The Stoics think that we have role-duties: this is a putative fact. If there are no such facts, then we have no duties. Courage is a virtue: this is a fact. If there are no moral facts, there are no virtues. The incoherence-without-moral-facts formulation is Sterling’s strongest statement of the dependency: correspondence theory is not an optional addition to Stoicism. Remove it and the entire system becomes incoherent — its central claims lose their status as claims about how things are and become mere expressions of preference.

Externals Neither Good nor Evil as Fact About the Universe

Sterling states in the February 2020 message that the Stoics think externals being neither good nor evil is a fact about the universe. This formulation is precise and important. It is not a Stoic perspective, not a therapeutic reframing, not a culturally specific value orientation. It is a claim about how things actually are — a fact about the evaluative structure of reality. Correspondence theory is required for this claim to have the status it needs: it is true because it matches how the universe actually is, evaluatively. The agent who believes that a loss is a genuine evil holds a false belief — false because it fails to match this fact about the universe. The fact status of the foundational Stoic claims is what gives the framework its authority over the agent’s impressions.

Primitive Categories Accepted Without Further Definition

Sterling observes in the January 2022 message — responding to Scruton’s objection — that at some point something must be accepted as fundamental. This applies to correspondence theory itself: the notion of truth as match with reality is a primitive category that cannot be further defined without circularity. Any attempt to define truth in terms of something else — coherence, usefulness, agreement — either uses the concept of truth in the definition or replaces it with something weaker. Sterling’s response to the objection that correspondence theory presupposes the notion of reality it is trying to ground: yes, and this is unavoidable. Primitive categories are the stopping point of philosophical analysis. Correspondence theory identifies the right stopping point: truth as match with reality is the primitive evaluative concept that makes all further assessment possible.

Junction of Correspondence and Foundationalism

Sterling identifies a junction in the January 2022 message: both correspondence theory and foundationalism require primitive categories accepted without further definition. Correspondence theory requires the primitive category of reality as the standard; foundationalism requires the primitive category of self-evident necessary truth as the epistemic base. These two primitives support each other: the foundational moral truths are self-evident because they directly track objective moral reality, and objective moral reality is what the foundational truths correspond to. The junction of correspondence and foundationalism is the architectural point at which the epistemological and metaphysical dimensions of the framework connect: truth as match (C4) connects to the structured hierarchy of moral truths (C6) at the point where foundational truths are both self-evidently known and objectively real.

Scruton’s Objection Closed

Sterling’s engagement with Scruton’s objection in the January 2022 message establishes an important discriminative point. Scruton had pressed the question of how correspondence theory can be stated without presupposing the very notion of reality it is trying to ground. Sterling’s answer is that at some point something must be accepted as fundamental — and the notion of reality as the standard of truth is the right thing to accept as fundamental. The Scruton objection is closed not by answering it in its own terms but by recognising that the demand for a non-circular definition of all primitive concepts is itself an unreasonable demand. Every philosophical framework must accept some primitive categories, and correspondence theory identifies the correct ones.

Something Must Be Fundamental

The general principle behind Sterling’s response to Scruton — at some point something must be accepted as fundamental — applies across the entire framework. It applies to foundationalism (the moral axioms cannot be derived by reasoning — or else they would not be axioms). It applies to intuitionism (the foundational truths are self-evident, requiring no input). It applies to correspondence theory (truth as match with reality is the primitive criterion). The something-must-be-fundamental principle is the framework’s explicit acknowledgment of its own foundationalist structure: the demand for infinite further justification is incoherent, and the framework identifies its termination points honestly rather than concealing them.

Truth So Obvious It Had No Name

Sterling observes that correspondence theory is what basically 100% of people throughout most of human history have embraced — and thought so obvious that there was not even a name for it. This observation does the same work for correspondence theory that the anger test does for moral realism: it demonstrates that the position being defended is not a sophisticated philosophical theory requiring special defence but the ordinary pre-theoretical understanding of truth that every functioning person relies on. The philosophical alternatives — coherentism, pragmatism, deflationism — are departures from the ordinary understanding, not improvements on it. Sterling defends the ordinary understanding precisely because the Stoic framework requires exactly what the ordinary understanding provides: a clear distinction between matching reality and failing to match it.

Cultural Contingency Excluded

Sterling states in Document 18 that without objective facts there is no basis for calling value impressions false rather than culturally contingent. The cultural contingency exclusion is the negative consequence of correspondence theory for moral assessment: a belief that is merely culturally shaped is not thereby false in the required sense. It may be shaped by different cultural forces than a Stoic upbringing would produce, but it is not assessable as false unless there is a mind-independent standard it fails to meet. Correspondence theory provides that standard: objective evaluative facts. With it, the impression that wealth is a genuine good is false — not merely culturally shaped, not merely non-Stoic in orientation, but objectively false as a representation of how things evaluatively are.

Correction as Truth-Seeking Not Preference-Adjustment

The corrective project of the framework is fundamentally a truth-seeking procedure, not a preference-adjustment exercise. The agent examines his impressions not to align them with preferred orientations or cultural norms but to determine whether they correspond to reality. This character of the corrective project — truth-seeking rather than preference-adjusting — depends entirely on correspondence theory. If truth were defined by coherence within a preferred system, the corrective project would be a coherence-restoration exercise. If truth were defined by pragmatic success, the corrective project would be a success-optimisation exercise. Correspondence theory is what makes it a truth-seeking procedure: the agent is asking whether his impressions match how things actually are, and correcting them when they do not.

Right Assent as Alignment Not Coherence

Foundation Three states that right assent guarantees eudaimonia. The content of “right assent” is determined by correspondence theory: right assent is assent that aligns with reality — that corresponds to the objective evaluative structure of the world. This is a stronger claim than assent that coheres with other Stoic beliefs, or assent that a Stoic procedure endorses, or assent that produces good consequences in practice. Right assent is correspondence-to-reality assent, and the guarantee holds because aligning with the objective evaluative structure of reality produces the state that is genuinely good. The alignment formulation distinguishes the guarantee from a conditional recommendation: it is not that Stoic-style assent tends to produce good outcomes but that assent corresponding to reality constitutes the correct relationship to one’s own evaluative life — which just is eudaimonia.


The Three Foundations

Foundation One — only internal things are in our control — is supported by correspondence theory through the objective-facts-as-standard dimension. The claim that externals are indifferent is a fact about the universe — a claim about how things actually are evaluatively. Correspondence theory specifies what it means for this claim to be true: it matches the objective evaluative structure of reality. The control dichotomy is therefore not merely a practical distinction but a truth claim about evaluative reality, and correspondence theory is what makes it a truth claim.

Foundation Two — unhappiness is caused by falsely believing externals are good or evil — is most directly dependent on correspondence theory. The falsity condition requires correspondence theory to carry it: “falsely” means failing to match reality. Without correspondence theory, the corrective project has no determinate standard of falsity — only a standard of incoherence with Stoic theory or unhelpfulness in practice. Correspondence theory is what makes the corrective project a truth-seeking procedure rather than a coherence-restoration or preference-adjustment exercise.

Foundation Three — right assent guarantees eudaimonia — requires correspondence theory for “right assent” to mean more than “internally consistent” or “pragmatically effective.” Right assent is correspondence-to-reality assent. The guarantee holds because alignment with evaluative reality produces the state that is genuinely good. Without correspondence theory, “right” in “right assent” has no determinate content — and the guarantee becomes conditional on whatever standard happens to be invoked.


Integration with the Other Commitments

Correspondence theory requires substance dualism (C1) to establish the rational faculty as a genuine truth-tracking system rather than a physical process that merely instantiates states. Correspondence is a relation between a representation and the world. For the rational faculty’s assents to be genuine representations — capable of corresponding or failing to correspond to reality — the faculty must be a real representing subject, not merely a physical system caused by reality. Dualism establishes the subject; correspondence theory specifies the truth-relation the subject’s representations stand in.

Correspondence theory requires libertarian free will (C2) for the correctness or incorrectness of assent to be attributable to the agent. If assent were a determined output of prior causes, the correspondence or failure of correspondence would be a property of the causal chain, not of the agent’s own truth-tracking act. Libertarian free will makes the agent the genuine originator of his assents, and therefore genuinely responsible for whether those assents correspond to reality.

Correspondence theory requires moral realism (C3) to supply the evaluative facts that moral judgments either correspond to or fail to correspond to. Correspondence is a relation between two terms: the judgment and the fact. Moral realism supplies the fact. Without moral realism, there are no objective evaluative facts for correspondence to be a relation to, and correspondence theory has no application in the moral domain.

Correspondence theory requires ethical intuitionism (C5) to give the agent access to the evaluative facts against which his judgments are assessed. The agent must be able to apprehend directly that virtue is the only genuine good before he can determine whether any given judgment corresponds to that fact. Without intuitionism, the agent knows that correspondence is the standard but cannot reach the facts that constitute it.

Correspondence theory requires foundationalism (C6) to organise the evaluative facts into a structured hierarchy that makes assessment tractable. The junction of correspondence and foundationalism is the architectural point at which the framework’s epistemological and metaphysical dimensions connect: foundational moral truths are both self-evidently known (intuitionism) and objectively real (moral realism), and correspondence theory specifies the relation between the agent’s judgments and those truths.


The Discriminatives

Any notion of truth wherein something can be true yet not match reality is Sterling’s own formulation of his primary discriminative, stated with maximum emphasis in Document 18. This is not a standard philosophical discriminative label. It is the negative boundary of the entire commitment: whatever allows truth without match is excluded. Sterling’s utter rejection of this option is absolute: such notions of truth are not alternative accounts to be considered but positions that destroy the framework’s corrective character. If something can be true without matching reality, then the impression that wealth is a genuine good might be true — it might cohere with the agent’s other beliefs, or be useful for him, or be endorsed by his community. Correspondence theory excludes all of these as criteria: only match with reality determines truth.

Cultural relativism about truth fails on the without-objective-facts dimension. If moral truth were culturally relative — if what is true about good and evil varied with cultural formation — then there would be no basis for calling value impressions false rather than culturally contingent. The impression that wealth is a genuine good would not be false in any culture where that belief is standard. Correspondence theory excludes cultural relativism by establishing that truth is match with mind-independent reality, not match with culturally produced standards. The evaluative structure of reality does not vary with culture.

Coherentism applied to truth fails on the match dimension and the pure-realism dimension. Coherentism defines truth as internal consistency within a belief system. A perfectly coherent set of false value judgments is still false — still failing to match reality — regardless of how well its members cohere with each other. Sterling’s pure realism excludes coherentism: the only criterion of truth is correspondence with the facts, not coherence within a system. Coherentism also cannot account for the force of Sterling’s corrective project: if truth were coherence, the agent who holds a consistent set of non-Stoic value beliefs is not in error but merely in a different coherent system. Correspondence theory is what makes him genuinely wrong.


Sterling/Kelly Philosophical System. C4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth (Truth as Alignment with Reality). Corpus-governed recovery essay. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Analytical judgments and architecture: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.