Sterling Decision Framework — System Map
Version 2.2
Maintained by Dave Kelly. Built from corpus documents and session history. Grows with the project.
Section 1: Attribution Standard
Sterling’s contributions:
- Six philosophical commitments (substance dualism, libertarian free will, ethical intuitionism, foundationalism, correspondence theory of truth, moral realism)
- The 58 Unified Stoic Propositions (Props 1–58)
- Core Stoicism as philosophical framework
- Theoretical foundations of the Action Proposition Set (Section IX, Props 59–80)
Dave Kelly’s independent contributions:
- PIE etymology work
- Ideal types
- Training frameworks
- Stoic 500 Lexicon
- Sterling Logic Engine (synthesis and LLM instruction language)
- Universal Template for Logical Reformulation of Stoic Texts
- Temperament-Based Stoic Psychology
- Protocol architecture of the Sterling Decision Framework
- All practical applications of Sterling’s theoretical framework
- The Correct Stoic Attitude — A Manual
- The Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism
- Sterling Ideological Audit (SIA) v1.0
- Sterling Corpus Evaluator (SCE) v1.0
- Action Proposition Set (Section IX, Props 59–80): instrument architecture and proposition synthesis; theoretical foundations Grant C. Sterling
RULE: Never conflate these. Attribution governs every output.
Section 2: Corpus Documents
Document 1: Core Stoicism — Grant C. Sterling
Source: ISF post, September 19, 2005
- Section 1 — Preliminaries (Th 1–2*)
- Section 2 — Negative Happiness (Th 3–14)
- Section 3 — Positive Happiness / Appropriate Positive Feelings (Th 15–23, including Th 18 and 19)
- Section 4 — Virtue (Th 24–29)
Key theorems: Th 6 — only beliefs and will in our control; Th 7 — desires caused by beliefs about good and evil; Th 10 — only virtue is good, only vice is evil; Th 18 — some positive feelings do not result from desires; Th 19 — such feelings not irrational, desiring them is; Th 25 — some things are appropriate objects of aim though not genuinely good; Th 27 — virtue = rational acts of will; Th 29 — virtue = pursuit of appropriate objects of aim [GOVERNING PROPOSITION for Step 3].
Critical warning (Sterling): Denying one theorem collapses the whole system. Th 7 denial destroys 8, 9, 13, 14, 28, 29. Providence language appears as optional framing only. The control dichotomy is the sufficient warrant for all claims that reference Providence.
Document 2: The Sterling Logic Engine v4.0 — Dave Kelly
Supersedes: SLE v3.1
Structure: Part 1 LLM Instructions (I. Core Identity; II. Six-Pillar Framework; III. Operational Framework Standard, Standards 1–15; IV. Operational Protocol, Steps 00, 0, 1–6); Part 2 User Quick-Start Card; Part 3 The 80 Unified Propositions (Sections I–IX); Part 4 Sterling Scenario Architect.
Key sections: Section IV — Causation of Emotions and Desires [GOVERNING PROPOSITIONS for Step 2]; Section V — Virtue and Action, Prop 35 [GOVERNING PROPOSITION for Steps 4 and 5]; Section IX — Action Proposition Set, Props 59–80 [GOVERNING PROPOSITIONS for Steps 3 and 4].
Named Standards (do not violate): Std 1 — Eleos is pathos, not virtue; Std 2 — all pathe are malfunctions; Std 3 — issue verdicts directly, no hedging; Std 4 — externals are indifferents, never genuine goods; Std 7 — personality style is diagnostic only; Std 8 — no virtuous style profiles; Std 9 — pathos is binary without exception; Std 10 — no therapeutic comparison frameworks; Std 11 — no developmental narrative; Std 12 — no institutional/therapeutic language; Std 14 — action audit requires Section IX citation; Std 15 — Section IX does not substitute for Sections I–VIII.
The 80 Propositions by section: I Foundations (1–5); II Impressions and Assent (6–15); III Value Theory (16–22); IV Causation of Emotions (23–31); V Virtue and Action (32–38); VI Appropriate Positive Feelings (39–42); VII Eudaimonia (43–51); VIII The Stoic Path (52–58); IX Action Proposition Set (59–80): A. Structure of Rational Action (59–63); B. Role Identification (64–67); C. Multiple Roles and Competing Preferred Indifferents (68–72); D. Means Selection Among Rational Options (73–75); E. Verification Test (76–77); F. Prospective Preparation and Retrospective Review (78–80).
Step 6 Refactoring (v4.0): perception/value failures — corrected aim via reserve clause (Prop 35c); action audits — role identification (Props 64–66), appropriate object of aim (Prop 60, Th 29), means rational and role-appropriate (Props 61, 67, 73–74), reservation confirmed (Prop 62), verification test applied (Prop 76). Each finding cites Section IX proposition by number. Providence language optional framing only; reserve clause warranted by control dichotomy alone.
Document 3: Nine Excerpts — Grant C. Sterling, compiled by Dave Kelly
Structure (ten numbered sections): Section 1 — Core reduction; Section 2 — Heart and soul of Stoicism; Section 3 — Vital heart of Stoic doctrine [GOVERNING PROPOSITION for Steps 0 and 1]; Section 4 — Stoicism as theory; Section 5 — “Imagine someone says”; Section 6 — System S; Section 7 — Impressions and assent (extended) [MODEL PROPOSITIONS for Step 4]; Section 8 — Core beliefs; Section 9 — Core Stoicism (full theorem list); Section 10 — “My Action Is My Choice” (ISF email).
Key propositions: Sec 2 — grief at child’s/wife’s death preventable; Sec 3 — only internal things in control, no desires regarding externals; Th 19 — positive feelings not irrational, desiring them is; Th 29 — virtue = pursuit of appropriate objects of aim.
Document 4: Sterling’s Decision Framework v3.1 — Dave Kelly
Supersedes: SDF v3
Structure: Six steps plus Named Failure Modes. Step 0 — Agent Check; Step 1 — Purview Check; Step 2 — Value Strip; Step 3 — Virtue Identification; Step 4 — Action Determination; Step 5 — Outcome Acceptance.
Governing propositions per step: Step 0 — Props 11, 20; Nine Excerpts Section 3. Step 1 — Props 11, 16; Nine Excerpts Section 3. Step 2 — Props 17, 20, 22, 23–26; SLE v4.0 Section IV; Nine Excerpts Th 19. Step 3 — Props 22, 60, 64–66, 68–72; Nine Excerpts Theorem 29; SLE v4.0 Section IX (role identification, role conflict resolution, candidate selection). Step 4 — Props 59, 61–62, 67, 73–77; SLE v4.0 Section V (Prop 35); SLE v4.0 Section IX (means, manner, appearance check, verification test). Step 5 — Props 38, 62–63, 78–80; SLE v4.0 Section V (Prop 38).
Named Failure Modes (five): 1. REASSURANCE BIAS; 2. MID-SESSION TEXT REQUEST; 3. TRAINING DATA CONTAMINATION; 4. PREFERRED INDIFFERENT AS GENUINE GOOD; 5. SECTION IX BYPASS — failure to cite Section IX proposition numbers at Steps 3 or 4; presumed training data contamination until citations supplied.
Document 5: Sterling Decision Framework Activation v4 — Dave Kelly
Supersedes all prior activation versions. Self-audit four checks (run at every step transition): 1. REASSURANCE BIAS; 2. MID-SESSION TEXT REQUEST; 3. TRAINING DATA CONTAMINATION; 4. PREFERRED INDIFFERENT AS GENUINE GOOD. Note: Fifth failure mode (SECTION IX BYPASS) is architectural and enforced within SDF v3.1 step structure; not a self-audit check but a named malfunction triggered by absence of Section IX proposition citations at Steps 3 and 4.
Document 6: The Harshness and Beauty in Epictetus — Grant C. Sterling
Source: ISF post, February 28, 2022. Status: Authoritative corpus per Activation v4. Key content: Sterling’s account of his own attraction to Stoicism; establishes grief as preventable through correct judgment; Sterling documents experiencing no grief at grandfather’s death; the harshness IS the beauty — eudaimonia not achievable by modifying the old view (“only make the chains more comfortable”); defends Epictetan Stoicism against neo-Aristotelian revision. Critical for: negative feelings; Theorem 19 Check expansion; grief cases.
Document 7: Seddon’s Glossary of Terms
Status: Authoritative corpus (uploaded to Project). Coverage: 59 Greek terms with definitions and Epictetus citations. Key entries: §1 adiaphoros (indifferent); §9 arete (virtue); §10 askesis (training/practice); §22 eupatheia — three only: boulesis, chara, eulabeia; NO eupatheia correlates with lupe (critical); §28 hupexhairesis (reservation) — wise person undertakes all actions with reservation; outcomes not in his power [GOVERNING ENTRY for Prop 62 and reserve clause]; §36 kathekon (appropriate action/role-duty); §38 lupe (distress) — one of four primary pathe; §40 pathos — IS the false assent or its affective face; cannot be directly extirpated once present; §46 phusis (nature) — includes social role-duties [GOVERNING ENTRY for Props 64–67]; §48 proegmenos (preferred indifferent); §54 sunkatathesis (assent).
Document 8: Sterling on Egoism and Altruism — ISF Post, May 2017
Status: Corpus addition (added session March 12, 2026). Key content: Stoicism collapses the egoism/altruism distinction; the Stoic’s good IS virtue; virtue requires role-correct action toward others; role-duties toward others are self-interested virtue-pursuit. Useful for: Step 3 role-duty analysis; Step 4 action toward others; Props 64–67 grounding.
Document 9: Stoicism Is Not Therapy, But Training — Grant C. Sterling
Source: International Stoic Forum, February 25, 2008. Three-part exchange between Sterling and Jules Evans. Compiled by Dave Kelly. Sterling’s four positions: (1) Stoicism functions as immunization, not cure; (2) psychology is fully parasitic on philosophy; (3) the “core insight” and the “radical claim” are inseparable; (4) preferred indifferents corrects the standard misreading. Key formulation: “The psychology is parasitic on the philosophy.”
Document 10: Two and One-Half Ethical Systems — Grant C. Sterling
Source: International Stoic Forum, August 18, 2011. Preserved and posted by Dave Kelly, Stoic News, July 10, 2022. Key argument: deontological intuitionism is the natural and smooth fit for Stoic virtue ethics; Sterling self-identifies as “both a deontologist ethical intuitionist and a Stoic.” Useful for: SIA runs; Step 3 virtue identification; establishing the intuitionist structure of kathekon.
Document 11: The Correct Stoic Attitude — A Manual — Dave Kelly
Status: Corpus addition (added March 27, 2026). Layer: Practical — Manual. Attribution: Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Manual architecture and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Structure: Seven chapters, three sections each: Ch. 1 Identity as the Rational Faculty; Ch. 2 Correct Value Perception; Ch. 3 Reception Without Distortion; Ch. 4 Examined Judgment; Ch. 5 Freedom from Pathos; Ch. 6 Willing with Reservation; Ch. 7 Continual Appropriate Positive Feeling. Key correction (March 27, 2026): Chapter 2.3 — virtue is never an object of appropriate aim; justice and truth-telling in Theorem 26 are outcomes of virtuous action — externals, therefore indifferents. Ratified: evaluated by Perplexity, ChatGPT, and Grok prior to corpus inclusion.
Document 12: A Brief Reply, Re: Dualism — Grant C. Sterling
Source: International Stoic Forum, January 20, 2012. Status: Corpus addition (added March 28, 2026). Layer: Theoretical Core — Philosophical Commitments. Key argument: Sterling’s foundational statement of substance dualism; three-premise structure: certainty of qualitative mental experience; choices made on qualitative content; science cannot account for “the feeling of pain” or “modus ponens”; dualism developed against modern scientific physics, not ancient Stoic metaphysics. Useful for: grounding substance dualism; SIA runs.
Document 13: Stoic Dualism and “Nature” — Grant C. Sterling
Source: International Stoic Forum, February 28, 2013. Status: Corpus addition (added March 28, 2026). Layer: Theoretical Core — Philosophical Commitments. Key argument: Sterling self-identifies as “unabashed Stoic dualist”; morality is not and cannot ever be empirical; rational intuition is required to adjudicate moral questions; dualist and materialist Stoic give same practical answers: both appeal to rational evaluation, not raw empirical observation. Useful for: grounding substance dualism; connecting dualism to ethical intuitionism; SIA runs.
Document 14: Grant C. Sterling on What Makes a Stoic — Grant C. Sterling
Source: International Stoic Forum, May 24, 2021. Status: Corpus addition (added March 28, 2026). Layer: Theoretical Core — Framework Scope. Key argument: what is truly central to Stoicism is the moral psychology; cataleptic impressions, pantheism, fiery pneuma are nonessential; defining Stoicism by physics produces a system no living person would want to be part of. Useful for: grounding the scope of Sterling’s reconstruction; responding to objections from historical purists.
Document 15: Free Will and Causation — Grant C. Sterling
Source: International Stoic Forum (date to be confirmed from file). Status: Corpus addition (added March 28, 2026). Layer: Theoretical Core — Philosophical Commitments. Attribution: Sterling. Key content: Sterling’s argument for libertarian free will as a load-bearing commitment; addresses the relationship between free will and causation within the Stoic framework; grounds the genuine act of assent as origination, not determined output. Useful for: grounding libertarian free will; DOC analysis; SIA runs; Six Commitments context.
Document 16: Stoicism, Moral Facts, and Ethical Intuitionism — Grant C. Sterling
Source: International Stoic Forum, two messages: February 24, 2020, thread “Re: What is a fact?”; March 13, 2020, thread “Re: What is a fact?” Status: Corpus addition (added March 28, 2026). Layer: Theoretical Core — Philosophical Commitments. Preserved by Dave Kelly, 2026.
Message One (Feb 24, 2020): correspondence theory of truth defined; Stoicism is incoherent without moral facts; heart and soul of Stoicism — most impressions about good and evil do not match how good and evil really are; externals being neither good nor evil is a fact about the universe. Message Two (Mar 13, 2020): alternatives are intuitionism or nihilism, no third option; every ethical system requires a non-empirical starting assumption; moral terms cannot be heard, smelt, tasted, seen, or felt; moral truths are necessary, not contingent; same rational faculty that gives knowledge of mathematical and logical truths gives knowledge of moral truths. Useful for: grounding ethical intuitionism; closing the intuitionism-or-nihilism argument; SIA runs.
Document 17: Stoicism, Foundationalism, and the Structure of Ethical Knowledge — Grant C. Sterling
Source: Two messages: Stoics Yahoo Group, January 19, 2015, thread “Re: Two (Types of) Moral Premises”; Stoics Yahoo Group, June 5, 2017, thread “Re: Basic Stoic Ethical Principles.” Status: Corpus addition (added March 28, 2026). Preserved by Dave Kelly, 2026.
Message One (Jan 19, 2015): four sources of knowledge — (a) sensory experience, (b) extra-sensory experience, (c) rational perception of self-evidence, (d) purely innate knowledge; category (c) is foundationalism’s epistemological home; MORAL PROPERTIES CANNOT BE SENSED: the fulcrum; the is/ought gap cannot be bridged by any accumulation of empirical Premise 1s without a non-sensory moral Premise 2. Message Two (Jun 5, 2017): distinction between “support” and “connection” in philosophical belief systems; Stoic ethics and Stoic theology are connected, not mutually supporting; ethics cannot be grounded in the will of God (Euthyphro problem); the Stoics already know what virtue is — the problem is desires that obscure vision of the true good. Useful for: grounding foundationalism; establishing independence of foundational ethical propositions from theology; SIA runs.
Document 18: Stoicism, Correspondence Theory of Truth, and Objective Moral Facts — Grant C. Sterling
Source: Two messages: Stoics Yahoo Group, August 20, 2015, thread “Re: Regarding Criterion of Truth / Cognitive Impressions”; International Stoic Forum, January 10, 2022, thread “Re: What is Truth?” Status: Corpus addition (added March 28, 2026). Preserved by Dave Kelly, 2026.
Message One (Aug 20, 2015): only criterion of truth is correspondence with the facts; rejects utterly any notion of truth wherein something can be true and yet not match reality; authentic Stoic position — the Stoics were pure realists; foundation of Stoicism requires objective facts; without objective facts, no basis for calling value impressions false rather than culturally contingent. Message Two (Jan 10, 2022): Scruton’s objection fails; at some point something must be accepted as fundamental; junction of correspondence theory and foundationalism — both require primitive categories accepted without further definition. Useful for: grounding correspondence theory; establishing that the Stoic revisionary project depends on objective facts; SIA runs.
Document 19: Stoicism, Moral Realism, and the Necessity of Objective Moral Facts — Grant C. Sterling
Source: Two messages: Stoics Yahoo Group, January 13, 2015, thread “Three (Types of) Moral Rules”; International Stoic Forum, May 26, 2021, thread “Re: Do You Need God to be a Stoic?” Status: Corpus addition (added March 28, 2026). Preserved by Dave Kelly, 2026.
Message One (Jan 13, 2015): three types of moral rules — inherent considerations (A), exceptionless commands (B), rules of thumb (C); Type C presupposes Type A; moral reasons must exist independently of contingent desires; if there are no objective moral facts, the Stoic project fails utterly; moral facts cannot be sensed. Message Two (May 26, 2021): moral facts have no “source”, just as 2+2=4 has no source; fundamental, necessary, and unalterable facts about the universe; known by Reason in the same way we know 2+2=4 and modus ponens; mathematical analogy connects moral realism directly to ethical intuitionism. ACTION PROPOSITION SET SOURCE: Sterling’s explicit statement that in each situation there is a single right action determined by multiple roles generating role-duties plus the need to maximize preferred over dispreferred indifferents (Prop 69 governing source). Useful for: grounding moral realism; Props 68–69 theoretical grounding; SIA runs.
Document 20: The Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism — Dave Kelly
Status: Corpus addition (added March 29, 2026). Layer: Theoretical Core — Analytical Integration. Attribution: Dave Kelly. Key content: three foundational claims as organizing framework — (1) only internal things are in our control; (2) unhappiness is caused by falsely believing externals are good or evil; (3) getting assents right guarantees eudaimonia. Each commitment shown as load-bearing within a specific foundational claim. Foundation One (control dichotomy): substance dualism makes the self/external boundary ontologically real; libertarian free will makes “in our control” mean genuine origination. Foundation Two (false belief): moral realism makes “falsely” mean objectively false; correspondence theory makes the verdict factual; ethical intuitionism gives epistemic access to moral facts; foundationalism makes the correction systematic. Foundation Three (assent guarantee): all six commitments active simultaneously. Closing claim: the six commitments are the philosophical skeleton of the foundational claims — always structurally present, now made visible by Sterling’s reconstruction.
Document 21: Sterling Ideological Audit (SIA) v1.0 — Dave Kelly
Status: Corpus addition (added March 29, 2026). Layer: Instrument — Ideological Analysis. Attribution: instrument architecture: Dave Kelly; test criteria derived from Sterling’s six philosophical commitments and the 58 Unified Stoic Propositions of Grant C. Sterling.
Structure: Instrument Definition (including four verdict categories); Six Test Criteria with governing propositions; Mandatory Gap Declaration; SIA Run One: Globalist Position and Sovereign-Nation Position (comparative analysis). Verdict categories: Convergent; Partial Convergence; Divergent; Orthogonal (ideology does not operate in the commitment’s domain; requires positive showing; not a weak finding). Key commitment-criterion pairs: SD — does ideology treat the rational faculty as prior to all external material conditions? LFW — does ideology ground moral claims in genuine causal power of individual rational agents? EI — does ideology appeal to moral truths grasped directly by rational apprehension, independent of consequences? FOUND — does ideology rest on non-negotiable first principles? CT — does ideology treat claims as true/false independently of who holds them or what consequences follow? MR — does ideology treat good and evil as objective properties discoverable by reason independent of preference? Run One findings: Globalism: six Divergent. Sovereign-Nation: two Divergent, three Partial Convergence, one Orthogonal. Standing instruction: arguments about Robertson and academic Stoics always conducted from Sterling’s point of view.
Document 22: Sterling Corpus Evaluator (SCE) v1.0 — Dave Kelly
Status: Corpus addition (added March 29, 2026). Layer: Instrument — General-Purpose Corpus Analysis. Attribution: instrument architecture: Dave Kelly; evaluative standards derived from the full corpus of Grant C. Sterling’s Stoic framework.
Position in instrument hierarchy: SLE audits individual agent’s assents against 80 Props; SIA audits ideology’s presuppositions against six commitments; SCE evaluates any idea against the full corpus; SDF determines action (SCE feeds SDF; SCE does not replace it). Structure: Five steps in strict sequence with mandatory self-audit — Step 0 Protocol Activation; Step 1 Scope Calibration; Step 2 Corpus Mapping; Step 3 Evaluation; Step 4 Finding. Verdict architecture: Tier One binary (Corpus Confirms / Corpus Contradicts); Tier Two four categories (Convergent / Partial Convergence / Divergent / Orthogonal); when in doubt use Tier Two. Named Failure Modes (six): 1. Corpus Boundary Violation; 2. Scope Inflation; 3. Orthogonal Evasion; 4. Presupposition Substitution; 5. Symmetry Bias; 6. Domain Conflation. Hard instrument limitations: cannot evaluate whether the corpus itself is correct; cannot issue findings on empirical questions; cannot determine what an agent should do; cannot guarantee genuine corpus application vs. pattern-completion. Run One (March 29, 2026): input — should Dave Kelly voice approval or disapproval of the US-Israel war against Iran? Finding: Corpus Contradicts (Tier One). The war is an external. The urgency of opining on it is itself an impression to be examined.
Document 23: Stoicism, Politics, and the Best Form of Government — Grant C. Sterling
Source: Three messages: Stoics Yahoo Group, August 1, 2013, thread “Re: Stoic politics”; Stoics Yahoo Group, August 3, 2013, thread “Re: Stoic politics”; Stoics Yahoo Group, June 19, 2009, thread “Re: Could ancient philosophers have invented popular sovereignty?” Status: Corpus addition (added March 30, 2026). Layer: Theoretical Core — Political Philosophy. Preserved by Dave Kelly, 2026.
Message One (Aug 1, 2013): Stoicism and Marxism diverge fundamentally in principles, not structure; Marxism is economic determinism applied to human nature; Stoics rejected social determinism entirely. Message Two (Aug 3, 2013): social settings matter; ideologies incompatible with Stoicism identified by presupposition, not policy: Marxism (individual dissolved into collective economic structure), fascism (individual as organ of the State), Islamist theocracy (individual worth contingent on submission to deity); best government for non-Sages: Aristotelian virtue-state; explicitly rejected: libertarian freedom and democratic preference-satisfaction; practical level: Sage supports policies likely to increase justice and virtue, no fixed party alignment. Message Three (Jun 19, 2009): popular sovereignty treated as political myth; “Grant, the fascist anarchist” — ironic self-description: resists collective dissolution of rational agency while holding virtue-state is best available government. Useful for: SIA v2.0 runs; grounds dissolution criterion; establishes virtue-state as Stoicism-compatible political model.
Architectural Note — Theology, Cosmology, and Providence
Sterling completely decoupled Core Stoicism from theology and cosmology. The framework is a self-contained ethical system resting on the value ontology, the control dichotomy, and the psychology of assent. No theological or cosmological commitments are required to operate it.
Providence language appears in Core Stoicism and SLE v4.0 as optional framing only. The reserve clause rests on the control dichotomy alone. A theist may read Providence into the clause; the clause does not require it. The “fragment of divine reason” formulation from classical Stoic pantheism has no place in the framework and must not appear in framework outputs. Sterling’s six commitments do not include Providence or any cosmological commitment. Providence is not load-bearing.
Section 3: Framework Architecture
The Six Steps — Structural Summary
Step 0: AGENT CHECK
Core question: Am I under the influence of a false impression?
Governing propositions: Props 11, 20; Nine Excerpts, Section 3.
Step 1: PURVIEW CHECK
Core question: Is this actually mine to determine?
Governing propositions: Props 11, 16; Nine Excerpts, Section 3.
Step 2: VALUE STRIP
Core question: Am I treating any indifferent as good or evil?
Governing propositions: Props 17, 20, 22, 23–26; SLE v4.0 Section IV; Nine Excerpts Th 19.
Step 3: VIRTUE IDENTIFICATION
Core question: Which preferred indifferent is the appropriate object of aim?
Governing propositions: Props 22, 60, 64–66, 68–72; Nine Excerpts, Theorem 29.
Sub-steps (all propositionally governed): (a) Role identification: Props 64–66. (b) Role conflict resolution: Props 68–70. (c) Candidate selection among preferred indifferents: Props 71–72.
PROHIBITION: Four cardinal virtues taxonomy not imported.
Step 4: ACTION DETERMINATION
Core question: What does pursuing the appropriate object of aim require in these specific circumstances?
Governing propositions: Props 59, 61–62, 67, 73–77; SLE v4.0 Section V (Prop 35).
Moves (all propositionally governed): (a) Means identification: Props 61, 73. (b) Manner check: Props 67, 74. (c) Appearance check: Prop 75. (d) Verification test: Props 76–77.
Reserve clause: warranted by control dichotomy alone. Providence framing optional.
Step 5: OUTCOME ACCEPTANCE
Core question: Can I release what follows from the action taken?
Governing propositions: Props 38, 62–63, 78–80; SLE v4.0 Section V (Prop 38).
MANDATORY SELF-AUDIT — at every step transition:
- 1. REASSURANCE BIAS
- 2. MID-SESSION TEXT REQUEST
- 3. TRAINING DATA CONTAMINATION
- 4. PREFERRED INDIFFERENT AS GENUINE GOOD
- 5. SECTION IX BYPASS (Steps 3 and 4 only)
Must be stated explicitly in output. Not an internal check.
Section 4: Key Corrections and Established Rulings
CORRECTION 1 — Step 3 / Four Cardinal Virtues
The four cardinal virtues are not a checklist for Step 3. Step 3 identifies preferred indifferents per Theorem 29 and Section IX Props 64–72. Importing the cardinal virtues taxonomy is training data contamination.
CORRECTION 2 — Grief as preventable
Grief is preventable through correct judgment. Sterling documented no grief at his grandfather’s death. The instrument may not treat grief as inevitable or legitimate.
CORRECTION 3 — Theorem 19 applies to positive feelings only
Theorems 18 and 19 may not be used to legitimate negative feelings. Theorem 19 Check expansion is a pending modification.
CORRECTION 4 — Pathos is the false assent, not downstream of it
Per Seddon §40: pathos IS the false assent or its affective face. No intermediate stage between false assent and pathos.
CORRECTION 5 — Pathos already present cannot be directly extirpated
Per Seddon §40: work is prospective once pathos is present.
CORRECTION 6 — Sterling’s conclusions are not heterodox
Sterling’s commitments are the older, better-grounded positions. Any output treating them as minority views requiring defense against cultural defaults is a failure.
CORRECTION 7 — No eupatheia correlates with lupe
Per Seddon §22: exactly three eupatheiai (boulesis, chara, eulabeia). The sage experiences the absence of the pathos. The instrument may not invent a grief-analogue.
CORRECTION 8 — Providence is optional framing, not load-bearing
The reserve clause rests on the control dichotomy alone. “Fragment of divine reason” formulation must not appear.
CORRECTION 9 — Theological-cosmological grounding is not a framework gap
The framework has no such grounding by design.
CORRECTION 10 — Virtue is never an object of appropriate aim
Virtue is the quality of the pursuit, not a target. Justice and truth-telling in Theorem 26 are outcomes of virtuous action — externals, therefore indifferents.
CORRECTION 11 — Action determination is propositionally governed
Steps 3 and 4 are not handed off to training-data judgment after value correction. Section IX Props 59–80 govern all action determination. Failure to cite Section IX propositions by number at Steps 3 and 4 is a named failure mode (SECTION IX BYPASS).
Section 5: Pending Architectural Modifications
Twelve procedural gaps identified in session March 11, 2026. All procedural only — no substantive changes to Sterling’s governing principles.
- 1. Scale Check — for population-level scenarios
- 2. Causal Specificity — evidential requirements on causal claims
- 3. Session Commitment — agent commits to proceed before Step 0
- 4. Role Mapping — explicit identification of agent’s roles [Note: partially resolved by Section IX Props 64–67]
- 5. Fidelity Mapping — distinguish framework application from pattern-completion
- 6. Action Specification — concrete rather than general output [Note: partially resolved by SDF v3.1 Step 4 restructuring]
- 7. Theorem 19 Check EXPANDED — cover negative feelings
- 8. Evidential Self-Audit — demonstrate evidential support
- 9. Source Location — proposition quotations must include document and section
- 10. Reserve Clause Check — explicit reservation stated at Step 4 [Note: resolved by Prop 62 and SDF v3.1 Move One]
- 11. First-Person Restatement — for human practitioners
- 12. Telos Gap — explicit acknowledgment when framework reaches its limit
Status: Items 4, 6, 10 partially or fully resolved by Section IX and SDF v3.1. Items 1–3, 5, 7–9, 11–12 remain proposed. Not yet incorporated into framework architecture.
Section 6: Active Projects in This Project Space
Sterling Decision Framework v3.1
Status: Active. Supersedes SDF v3. Publication: Blogger (stoicnews.blogspot.com).
Sterling Logic Engine v4.0
Status: Active. Supersedes SLE v3.1. 80 Unified Stoic Propositions (Props 1–58: Sterling; Props 59–80: Kelly, theoretical foundations Sterling).
The Correct Stoic Attitude — A Manual
Status: Active corpus document. Available for blog publication. Attribution: Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Manual architecture and text: Dave Kelly, 2026.
Gmail Archive Tool
Status: Active (March 28, 2026). Function: Search Sterling’s ISF messages for primary source material on any doctrinal question. Method: search by sender (gcsterling), subject, and keyword; extract full message bodies; preserve with editorial notes. Documents recovered: Documents 16–19.
Case Studies Run (partial record): Tullia Case (grief at daughter’s death) — corrected run complete; Confession Case / Scientist Case / Wealth Case / Judge Case; Workplace credit dispute / Whistleblower case; Executor with sealed letter; Government negotiator / violated peace agreement; Bystander / burning building; Parent / dying child’s false promise request; Tortured Child Case / Lifeboat Child Case / Public Execution Case.
Section 7: Instrument Limitations
The instrument produces outputs resembling genuine framework application but cannot produce the thing itself. Dave Kelly operates as the essential corrective layer.
The instrument cannot: guarantee genuine framework application vs. pattern-completion; resolve purely technical or empirical questions; adjudicate competing preferred indifferents on empirical grounds; determine outcomes (purview boundary).
The instrument can: run the six-step sequence with mandatory self-audit; quote governing propositions exactly from corpus; classify elements correctly per the 80 Propositions; identify appropriate objects of aim per Theorem 29 and Section IX Props 64–72; determine action per Section IX Props 59–77; catch and name its own failure modes when operating correctly.
NAMED OPERATIONAL FAILURE — INSTRUMENT REFUSAL WITH INFORMAL SUBSTITUTION
Identified: March 26, 2026. The failure: when an explicit instrument run is declined, the instrument must not produce informal analysis that occupies the space the instrument would have filled. The required behavior: stop; state the refusal; state the grounds; propose the correct instrument; await instruction; produce no substantive output until the instrument question is resolved. The broader limitation: the corrective layer must be external. Self-audit was absent precisely because no instrument was running.
Version History
v2.2 — March 30, 2026
Session development: Action Proposition Set and instrument updates. Identified architectural gap: SDF Steps 3 and 4 previously governed by training-data judgment after value correction. Perceptual correction work (Sections I–VIII) was propositionally rigorous; action determination was not. Developed: Section IX Action Proposition Set (Props 59–80) — twenty-two propositions in six subsections covering structure of rational action, role identification, resolution of multiple roles and competing preferred indifferents, means selection, verification test, and prospective preparation and retrospective review. Theoretical foundations: Grant C. Sterling (ISF May 2021 — Document 19 — explicit statement that in each situation there is a single right action determined by multiple roles generating role-duties plus maximizing preferred indifferents). Instrument architecture and proposition synthesis: Dave Kelly. Updated: SLE v3.1 → v4.0 (58 → 80 Propositions; Standards 14 and 15 added; Step 6 Refactoring updated; Activation Command updated). Updated: SDF v3 → v3.1 (Steps 3 and 4 restructured with explicit propositionally governed sub-steps and moves; Step 5 extended with Props 78–80; fifth named failure mode SECTION IX BYPASS added). Updated: System Map v2.1 → v2.2 (all instrument references updated; Document 7 §28 added as governing entry for Props 62 and reserve clause; Document 19 annotated as source for Props 68–69; Section 3 Framework Architecture updated for all six steps; Correction 11 added; pending modifications updated with partial resolution notes). Ratified by: Dave Kelly. March 30, 2026.
v2.1 — March 30, 2026
Added Document 23: Stoicism, Politics, and the Best Form of Government (Sterling). Sterling’s political philosophy derived from his Stoic framework. Recovered from Gmail archive. Recorded by Dave Kelly.
v2.0 — March 29, 2026
Added Document 21: SIA v1.0 (Dave Kelly, 2026). Added Document 22: SCE v1.0 (Dave Kelly, 2026). Added SIA v1.0 and SCE v1.0 to Dave Kelly’s independent contributions in Section 1. Recorded by Dave Kelly.
v1.9 — March 29, 2026
Added Document 20: The Six Commitments Integrated with the Most Basic Foundations of Sterling’s Stoicism (Dave Kelly, 2026). Recorded by Dave Kelly.
v1.8 — March 28, 2026
Added Documents 15–19 (six philosophical commitments corpus). Added Gmail Archive Tool to Section 6. Recorded by Dave Kelly.
v1.7 — March 28, 2026
Added Documents 12–14 (dualism and framework scope corpus). Recorded by Dave Kelly.
v1.6 — March 27, 2026
Added Document 11: The Correct Stoic Attitude — A Manual. Added Correction 10. Recorded by Dave Kelly.
v1.5 — March 26, 2026
Added Named Operational Failure to Section 7. Recorded by Dave Kelly.
v1.4 — March 21, 2026
Added Document 10: Two and One-Half Ethical Systems (Sterling).
v1.3 — March 19, 2026
Added Document 9: Stoicism Is Not Therapy, But Training (Sterling).
v1.2 — March 17, 2026
Added Architectural Note on theology, cosmology, and Providence. Added Corrections 8 and 9.
v1.1 — March 2026
Minor revisions.
v1.0 — March 14, 2026
Initial build from corpus documents and session history. Sections 1–7 established.