Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Thursday, April 16, 2026

The Sterling Approach Is Structurally Internalist by Necessity


The Sterling Approach Is Structurally Internalist by Necessity


ChatGPT:

That is correct, and it sharpens the contrast even further.

The Sterling/Kelly system is not merely “more internalist” by emphasis. It is structurally internalist by necessity, because it is built on two tightly integrated layers:

  • the Six Philosophical Commitments
  • the internalist value structure (only assent is good/evil; externals are value-neutral)

These are not separable. Each commitment underwrites a specific element of internalism.

1. The Six Commitments as the foundation of internalism

Each commitment closes off a route by which value could leak into the external world.

Substance Dualism
Separates the rational faculty from the body and all externals. This makes it possible to locate the self—and therefore the good—entirely within the rational faculty.

Metaphysical Libertarianism
Secures genuine control at the point of assent. If assent were causally determined, internalism would collapse. The entire system depends on the agent being able to withhold or grant assent freely.

Ethical Intuitionism
Provides direct access to moral truth without reliance on external outcomes or empirical success. This prevents action in the world from becoming the criterion of correctness.

Foundationalism
Stops regress at basic moral truths (e.g., “virtue is the only good”). These are not derived from social practice, political arrangements, or consequences.

Correspondence Theory of Truth
Turns impressions into truth-apt propositions. Assent is correct when it matches reality, not when it produces desirable external results.

Moral Realism
Ensures that the claim “externals are not good or evil” is an objective fact, not a therapeutic stance or practical heuristic.

Taken together, these commitments force a single conclusion:

The only place where good and evil can exist is in the rational faculty’s assent to impressions.

2. The internalist value structure

From that foundation follows the core value thesis:

  • Only virtue (correct assent) is good
  • Only vice (false assent) is evil
  • All externals are indifferent (though some are preferred)

This is not an optional interpretation. It is the direct output of the six commitments.

And once this is accepted, several consequences follow with necessity:

  • No external state of affairs can be good or bad in itself
  • No political outcome can carry intrinsic moral value
  • No social condition can damage or improve the good
  • No action in the world can be the locus of virtue

Action becomes:

  • the execution of a role
  • guided by correct assent
  • directed toward preferred indifferents
  • always under reservation

But never morally constitutive.

3. Why this excludes Gill’s extension into action

Gill’s position requires that virtue be meaningfully expressed in:

  • social relations
  • political engagement
  • responses to injustice
  • lived ethical development

That requires that the external domain carry some degree of moral significance beyond mere indifference.

But the Sterling framework blocks that at every level:

  • Dualism prevents identifying the good with embodied or social life
  • Libertarianism locates responsibility at assent, not outcome
  • Intuitionism bypasses empirical or social validation
  • Foundationalism prevents deriving value from practice
  • Correspondence theory evaluates beliefs, not actions
  • Moral realism fixes the truth that externals are not good or evil

So the system cannot consistently say:
“Justice is realized in political action”

It can only say:
“Justice is correct assent, which may issue in certain political actions”

That is a hard boundary, not a stylistic preference.

4. The resulting architecture

The Sterling/Kelly model produces a highly compressed ethical structure:

  • Moral locus: assent only
  • Causal chain: impression → assent → impulse → action
  • Evaluation point: assent
  • Action status: external, non-value-bearing
  • Externals: indifferent
  • Eudaimonia: guaranteed by correct assent alone

Gill’s model distributes ethical weight across a broader field:

  • Moral locus: character expressed in life
  • Causal chain: development → understanding → action
  • Evaluation point: lived conduct and relational practice
  • Action status: morally expressive
  • Externals: not “goods” in a crude sense, but morally significant
  • Eudaimonia: tied to virtuous living in a social world

5. Final clarification

So the difference is not merely that:

  • Sterling is stricter
  • Gill is more practical

It is that Sterling’s system is logically closed around internalism, because the Six Commitments make any externalization of value incoherent.

Once those commitments are in place, the following becomes unavoidable:

Virtue cannot extend into action as a value-bearing domain.
It can only govern action from within.

That is why the Sterling approach is not just one version of Stoicism among others. It is a reconstruction in which internalism is not an emphasis, but a consequence of its philosophical foundations.

Gill and Kelly/Sterling on Virtue and Action

 

Can you be a Stoic and a political activist? by Christopher Gill

Modern Stoicism: Posted on December 10 2016


Kelly:

Does Gill's view differ from Kelly/Sterling? 


ChatGPT (in part):

IV. The Core Conflict

It reduces to a single decisive issue:
Does virtue extend into the structure of action in the world, or is it confined strictly to assent?

Gill → extends into action
Kelly/Sterling → confined to assent

Everything else follows from that.


Kelly:

Thoroughly explain the differences.


Gill and Kelly/Sterling on Virtue and Action

The difference is not about whether action matters in an ordinary practical sense. Both views agree that human beings act, occupy roles, make choices, and live among others. The difference is about where virtue itself is located, what action is, and what political or social conduct means morally.

That is the decisive issue.


1. The Deepest Difference: Where the Good Is

In the Kelly/Sterling framework, the good is located only in the rational faculty’s correct governance of impressions. Virtue is not spread across life. It is not distributed through conduct, outcomes, relationships, institutions, or public commitments. It is entirely concentrated in one thing: correct assent.

That means:

  • the only genuine good is correct judgment
  • the only genuine evil is false judgment
  • everything else is external
  • action in the world is downstream of assent, but is not itself the seat of value

So when a person acts courageously, justly, or generously, the courage, justice, or generosity is not in the outward deed as such. It is in the judgment governing the deed.

Gill’s framework is different. In his way of presenting Stoicism, virtue is not merely the inward correctness of assent that then happens to produce conduct. Virtue is something that is expressed in and through a person’s life of action, especially in relation to others, social roles, and political participation. Ethical development includes learning how to live with others, how to embody justice, how to care appropriately, how to act in public. In that reconstruction, virtue is not reduced to a hidden inner act of assent. It becomes visible in the shape of conduct itself.

That is the first and governing difference.

Kelly/Sterling:
Virtue is in assent alone.

Gill:
Virtue is realized in a developing pattern of life and action.


2. What Action Is in Each System

In Kelly/Sterling, action is morally secondary. It matters, but not as a bearer of value. Action is the external manifestation of an internal moral condition. It is evidence of judgment, not the locus of the good.

This has severe consequences. A politically successful act, a failed act of resistance, a compassionate intervention, a refusal to submit, a public sacrifice — none of these is good because of what happened in the world. They are good only if they were governed by correct assent. If the assent was correct and the outcome failed, nothing morally bad happened. If the assent was false and the outcome succeeded, nothing morally good happened.

So action is treated as:

  • an undertaking
  • a role-performance
  • a field of preferred or dispreferred indifferents
  • a consequence-bearing external process

But never as the place where value resides.

Gill treats action much more robustly. In his account, Stoic ethical development has two intertwined strands: understanding virtue and developing right relations with others. Those strands culminate in family, communal, and political participation. Action is not just what follows after inward moral reality has already been completed. It is part of how moral reality is enacted.


This does not mean Gill is a crude consequentialist. He is not saying outcomes are the good. But he is saying something Kelly/Sterling denies: namely, that the enactment of justice in one’s dealings with others is part of what Stoic virtue is.

That is why Gill can talk naturally about:

  • political involvement
  • social concern
  • citizenship
  • activism against injustice

without treating these as mere external byproducts of inner judgment. For him, they are proper forms in which virtue appears.


3. The Meaning of Justice

This is one of the clearest points of divergence.

In Kelly/Sterling, justice is a condition of the rational faculty. It is a correct value structure in assent. If I correctly judge externals as indifferent, maintain the reserve clause, refuse false impressions, and perform my role without attaching value to outcomes, then I am just. Justice may issue in certain kinds of conduct, but its essence remains internal.

This means justice is not primarily:

  • reforming institutions
  • opposing social wrongs
  • defending the vulnerable
  • correcting distributions
  • resisting tyranny as a public moral project

Those may all be appropriate external acts under particular role-duties, but they are not where justice lives.

In Gill, justice has more social extension. It is still a virtue, but one that is naturally bound up with how we treat other people, how we recognize common humanity, and how we respond to injustice. Once you combine Stoic oikeiōsis, cosmopolitanism, and public role-duty in the way Gill does, justice becomes a virtue that is not merely inwardly possessed but outwardly expressed in social and political life.

So:

Kelly/Sterling:
Justice is correct internal valuation governing outward conduct.

Gill:
Justice is a virtue whose proper expression includes social and political conduct itself.

That is a major difference.


4. What Political Activism Means

Gill can say “yes, a Stoic can be a political activist” without strain because in his framework political engagement can be a straightforward expression of virtue. A Stoic can oppose injustice because justice naturally extends into civic action. The Roman Stoics become models of activism because their public conduct is itself morally significant as an enactment of Stoic principle.

Kelly/Sterling cannot mean “activism” in that sense without compromising the system.

Why not? Because activism usually carries at least one of the following assumptions:

  • that injustice in the world is a genuine evil in a value-bearing sense
  • that changing institutions is morally central
  • that resistance is morally important because of its external object
  • that public outcomes matter in a way that goes beyond preferred indifferents

Those assumptions are intolerable to strict internalism.

So for Kelly/Sterling, if a Stoic opposes a tyrant, refuses a corrupt order, withdraws from office, speaks truth to power, or accepts death rather than compromise, the moral reality is not “activism against injustice” in the modern sense. The moral reality is:

  • refusal of false assent
  • maintenance of correct prohairesis
  • non-complicity as an internal judgment-structure
  • role-performance under reservation

The same outward deed may occur, but it is interpreted differently.

Gill:
the deed is a morally expressive act of justice in public life

Kelly/Sterling:
the deed is an external consequence of inwardly correct assent

That is why the same Roman examples can be cited in both systems while meaning radically different things.


5. Ethical Development versus Propositional Correction

Gill’s presentation has a developmental structure. Stoicism is described as a lifelong process in which one gradually comes to understand virtue and gradually comes to relate better to others. This gives the system a shape of moral growth:

  • learning
  • maturation
  • increasing social concern
  • broader identification with humanity
  • improved practical expression of the virtues

This is a developmental and lived ethics.

Kelly/Sterling is much harsher and much more binary at the level of truth. A value judgment is either correct or false. An impression is either assented to correctly or incorrectly. Disturbance either follows false judgment or it does not. There is room for training, certainly, but the logical structure is not developmental in Gill’s sense. It is propositional and diagnostic.

That difference matters because Gill’s model more readily allows virtue to “spread” into life-patterns and public activity. If ethics is progressive formation, then one can describe political conduct as part of ethical development. But if ethics is fundamentally the correction of false judgments about externals, then action remains derivative. The real battle is always at the point of assent.

So Gill’s account has:

  • continuity
  • gradualism
  • social maturation
  • integrated life-development

Kelly/Sterling has:

  • sharp truth conditions
  • binary value claims
  • internal/external division
  • moral concentration at the point of assent

6. The Status of Externals

This is the hidden hinge of the whole dispute.

Kelly/Sterling insists that externals have no genuine value. That means no social state, political arrangement, institutional reform, public victory, or historical outcome can count as a genuine good. They may be preferred indifferents. They may be rational objects of aim. They may be selected under role-duty. But they remain outside the sphere of value.

Once that is held consistently, action in the world cannot be morally thick. It cannot be a value-bearing field. It is the arena in which one encounters impressions and discharges roles, but not the place where good and evil are instantiated.

Gill, by contrast, does not say outright that externals are genuine goods in the anti-Stoic sense. But his presentation gives external relations and public actions a richer moral role than Kelly/Sterling can allow. Political injustice is treated as something one properly challenges, not merely as indifferent material in relation to which one preserves inner freedom. Social and political involvement are not just circumstances within which virtue remains internal; they become domains in which virtue is appropriately expressed.

That means that, functionally, Gill allows the external domain to carry more moral significance than Kelly/Sterling permits.

Not necessarily as “good” in the crude Aristotelian or liberal sense. But certainly as a morally meaningful field of virtuous realization.

That is already too much for strict Sterling-style internalism.


7. The Meaning of Cosmopolitanism

Gill uses cosmopolitanism as a substantive ethical orientation. The brotherhood of humanity gives a broader framework for political and ethical decision-making. It helps ground concern for refugees, immigrants, outsiders, and those excluded from one’s own political community. In his hands, cosmopolitanism becomes a basis for moral seriousness about public questions.

Kelly/Sterling can accept that all rational beings are kin, but the meaning is different. It is a truth about rational nature and appropriate regard. It does not authorize emotional investment in collective outcomes or confer value on political causes. It sharpens judgment about how one should think of others; it does not make the external moral field thicker.

So Gill uses cosmopolitanism to widen practical ethical engagement.
Kelly/Sterling uses it to refine internal judgments about rational beings.

Again, same surface term, different structure.


8. What Happens to the Roman Stoic Exemplars

Gill reads figures like Cato, Thrasea, Helvidius, and Seneca as models of Stoic political activism. Their public gestures matter because they oppose injustice and express virtue under political conditions. The action itself has exemplary significance.

Kelly/Sterling can also admire those figures, but not for the same reason. They are not models because they changed history, resisted power, or performed civic virtue as such. They are models because they maintained correct assent and refused false value judgments under pressure. Their outward conduct matters only as the manifestation of that inward correctness.

So when Cato dies rather than submit, Gill can read that as a Stoic political act of resistance.
Kelly/Sterling must read it as a refusal of inner corruption, with the political dimension remaining secondary and external.

That is not a rhetorical nuance. It is a different metaphysic of moral life.


9. Why Gill’s View Is More Usable for Modern Activism

Gill’s version of Stoicism is easier to combine with modern political conscience because it allows a person to say:

  • injustice in the public world is something I should confront
  • civic action is part of virtue
  • political engagement can be a moral expression
  • concern for external social arrangements belongs inside Stoic ethics

Kelly/Sterling does not allow this comfortably. It forces a person to say something much harsher:

  • no external arrangement is a genuine good or evil
  • public injustice does not damage the good
  • political engagement is role-duty only
  • the only real moral task is correct assent

That makes Gill’s reconstruction more socially intelligible and more adaptable to contemporary moral expectations. But it also means he has shifted the center of gravity away from the Sterling/Kelly core.


10. Final Compression of the Difference

Here is the cleanest formulation.

Gill says virtue is something that comes to expression in the way a rational social being lives and acts with others, including politically.

Kelly/Sterling says virtue is something that exists only in the correct use of impressions and correct assent, with all outward life remaining external.

So:

Gill:

  • action is morally expressive
  • public conduct is part of virtue
  • justice extends into civic life
  • ethical progress includes social and political embodiment

Kelly/Sterling:

  • action is externally located
  • public conduct is derivative
  • justice remains internal
  • ethical progress is correction of assent, not expansion into action

Bottom Line

“Gill extends virtue into action” means that he treats social and political conduct as a genuine field in which Stoic virtue is expressed and partly realized.

“Kelly/Sterling confines virtue to assent” means that no matter what one does outwardly, the only locus of good and evil remains the inner act of judgment; action has no independent moral standing.

That is the deepest difference between the two views. Everything else — activism, cosmopolitanism, ethical development, Roman exemplars, justice, and politics — follows from that single divide.

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Classical Ideological Audit: Emotivism

 

Classical Ideological Audit: Emotivism

Instrument: Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v2.0

The CIA audits ideological frameworks for their degree of affinity with six classical philosophical commitments: substance dualism, libertarian free will, moral realism, correspondence theory of truth, ethical intuitionism, and foundationalism. The subject of analysis is propositional content — the presuppositions a framework must hold in order to argue as it does. The instrument does not issue political verdicts. It issues philosophical findings. Primary source: Alasdair MacIntyre, After Virtue (1981). Emotivism is audited as a cultural-philosophical framework, not as a named political ideology.

Political Application Constraint: Sterling’s name is not associated with political applications or products. This analysis is Dave Kelly’s work derived from Sterling’s theoretical foundations.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

The instrument is not proceeding from memory or from prior conclusion. Emotivism will be stated in propositional form before the audit begins. The presuppositions audited are those that any version of emotivism must hold in order to argue as it does — not peripheral claims that any particular version might add or subtract.

One procedural note distinguishes this run from all previous CIA runs. Emotivism is not a political ideology in the ordinary sense. It is what MacIntyre calls a cultural condition — the meta-level framework within which modern political ideologies, therapeutic culture, managerial culture, and aesthetic culture all operate. It is the philosophical water in which the Manager, the Therapist, and the Aesthete swim. Auditing it is therefore auditing the presuppositions that generate and sustain those three characters, and explain why they take the form they do. The findings of this run are the philosophical foundation of the MacIntyre series as a whole.


Step 1 — Ideology Statement

Emotivism as a philosophical theory holds that moral statements are not truth-apt. They do not describe facts about the world. They express the speaker’s attitudes and attempt to influence the attitudes of others. “Courage is a virtue” means, on the emotivist account, something like “I approve of courage; you should too.” It is not a claim that can be true or false. It is the grammar of factual assertion applied to the expression of feeling.

MacIntyre’s contribution is to show that emotivism, whether or not it is philosophically correct as a theory, has become practically true as a cultural condition. The core presuppositions that any version of emotivism must hold in order to argue as it does are these:

P1. Moral statements express attitudes rather than describing mind-independent moral facts. There are no moral facts of the kind that could make a moral statement objectively true or false.

P2. The individual’s preferences and attitudes are the ultimate court of appeal for questions about the good life. No external standard exists against which preferences can be assessed as objectively correct or incorrect.

P3. Ends are given, not rationally evaluable. Practical reasoning operates on the selection of means toward ends that are pre-given by desire, preference, or cultural formation. The rationality of ends is not a coherent question.

P4. The self is constituted by its attitudes, preferences, and the social roles it occupies. There is no residue of selfhood that stands behind these and governs them from a position of categorical independence.

P5. Moral language has the form of rational argument but the substance of preference-expression. The appearance of reasoned moral debate is a surface phenomenon; beneath it, the debate is a contest between incommensurable preferences, and no principled resolution is possible.

P6. There is no architecturally prior moral first principle from which all other moral commitments can be derived. Moral beliefs form a web of mutual support and social ratification, not a hierarchy grounded in self-evident necessary truths.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

Commitment 1 — Substance Dualism: Contrary

Substance dualism requires that the rational faculty — the inner life of the individual, his will and judgments — be treated as categorically distinct from and prior to all external material conditions, including the attitudes, preferences, and social roles that happen to constitute him at any given moment. The self, on the classical account, is the prohairesis: the faculty that examines impressions, governs assent, and is genuinely other than everything external to it.

Emotivism’s P4 directly contradicts this. The emotivist self is constituted by its attitudes and preferences. There is no residue of selfhood that stands behind these and governs them. The self that the emotivist framework makes available is not a rational faculty that can examine its preferences and find some of them false. It is the sum of its preferences, with no Archimedean point outside them from which they could be assessed. This is the precise inversion of substance dualism: rather than a rational faculty that is prior to and independent of all external conditions, emotivism produces a self that is identical with its conditioned attitudes.

The practical consequence is the three characters. The Manager, the Therapist, and the Aesthete are each the emotivist self in a different institutional expression: a self defined by what it produces, a self defined by how it feels, a self defined by what it experiences. None of them has access to the categorical distinctness that substance dualism requires, because emotivism has dissolved it.

Finding: Contrary.

Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free Will: Contrary

Libertarian free will requires that assent be a genuine first cause — that the moment between impression and response is a moment of real originating power, not a sophisticated output of prior conditions. The agent is the genuine author of his judgments, independently of the attitudes, preferences, and social formations that precede those judgments.

Emotivism’s P2 and P3 together eliminate this. If ends are given by desire and preference rather than generated by genuine rational evaluation, then the agent’s practical reasoning is not genuinely originating. It is the working-out of a preference structure that precedes and determines it. The emotivist agent does not choose his ends. He finds himself with them. His practical rationality consists in selecting means toward those pre-given ends — a sophisticated causal process, but not genuine first causation.

More fundamentally, emotivism has no account of the kind of self-examination that libertarian free will requires. If preferences are the ultimate court of appeal and there are no moral facts against which they can be assessed, then the practice of examining one’s impressions before assenting to them — the central Stoic practice, which requires that assent be genuinely within the agent’s originating control — is incoherent within the emotivist framework. There is nothing for the examination to measure the impression against. The impression arrives, the preference responds, and the behavior follows. The pause between impression and assent — the moment that is everything in the Stoic account — has no philosophical space within emotivism.

Finding: Contrary.

Commitment 3 — Moral Realism: Contrary

Moral realism requires that there are objective moral facts independent of individual or collective preference — facts that moral statements can be true or false in virtue of, and that reason can discover without dependence on desire, agreement, or cultural formation.

Emotivism is the explicit philosophical denial of moral realism. P1 states this directly: moral statements express attitudes rather than describing mind-independent moral facts. There are no moral facts of the kind that could make a moral statement objectively true or false. This is not a peripheral claim in emotivism. It is its defining thesis. Every other emotivist presupposition follows from or supports it.

The Contrary finding here is the cleanest in the audit. No other commitment is more directly and explicitly contradicted by emotivism than moral realism. The CPA series has found figures who are Contrary on C3 — Becker, Pigliucci, Mamdani — but in each case the Contrary finding required inference from their argumentative record. In emotivism’s case, the Contrary finding is stated as the framework’s first principle.

Finding: Contrary.

Commitment 4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: Contrary

Correspondence theory requires that true beliefs correspond to mind-independent facts about reality. For moral claims, this means that a moral statement is true if and only if it accurately describes an objective moral fact that exists independently of anyone’s attitudes or preferences.

Emotivism’s P1 and P5 together eliminate correspondence theory for moral claims. Moral statements do not describe anything. They express attitudes. A statement that does not describe a fact cannot correspond to one. The question of whether a moral claim is true in the correspondence sense is not merely unanswerable within emotivism — it is a malformed question. There is no moral fact for the claim to correspond to or fail to correspond to.

P5 extends this: the appearance of moral reasoning is a surface phenomenon beneath which the contest is between incommensurable preferences. If moral debate is at bottom a contest between preferences, then the epistemic goal of that debate cannot be correspondence to moral facts. At best it is coherence within a preference set; at worst it is rhetorical victory. Neither is correspondence theory.

Finding: Contrary.

Commitment 5 — Ethical Intuitionism: Contrary

Ethical intuitionism requires that moral truths are directly apprehensible by the rational faculty — that reason can grasp certain moral facts non-empirically and non-inferentially, prior to any calculation of consequences or consultation of consensus.

Emotivism eliminates this in two ways. First, if there are no moral facts (P1), there is nothing for intuition to apprehend. The intuitionist claim that the rational faculty can directly perceive moral truth presupposes that moral truth exists as something perceivable. Emotivism denies the presupposition. Second, emotivism’s account of what happens when someone reports a moral intuition is deflationary: the report of an intuition is the expression of a strong attitude, not the registration of a perception of moral fact. The phenomenology of moral insight is real; its epistemic significance is nil.

This Contrary finding is philosophically significant for the MacIntyre series because it explains the therapeutic character’s value-neutrality. If there is no moral truth that intuition can apprehend, then the Therapist’s claim to value-neutrality is not merely a professional convention. It is the epistemologically correct response to a framework in which no one has privileged access to moral truth because there is no moral truth to have access to. The virtuous Therapist’s refusal of value-neutrality is therefore not merely a practical correction but a philosophical one: it requires that moral intuitionism be true, which emotivism denies.

Finding: Contrary.

Commitment 6 — Foundationalism: Contrary

Foundationalism requires a structured hierarchy of justified beliefs grounded in non-negotiable first principles from which all further moral commitments are derived. The foundational principles are not ratified by consensus, generated by preference, or subject to revision by social agreement. They are self-evident necessary truths that govern the entire structure of justified moral belief.

Emotivism’s P6 directly contradicts this. Moral beliefs form a web of mutual support and social ratification, not a hierarchy grounded in self-evident necessary truths. There is no architecturally prior moral first principle. Moral commitments are coherent with one another or incoherent with one another, more widely shared or less widely shared, but none is foundational in the sense foundationalism requires.

MacIntyre’s diagnosis of modern moral discourse confirms this. The reason modern moral debate produces no resolution is precisely that there is no shared foundational principle against which competing positions can be assessed. Each party appeals to principles that are self-evident to him and contested by his opponent. Neither can demonstrate that his principles are architecturally prior because, within the emotivist framework, no principles are architecturally prior. The debate is between foundations, not from a shared foundation, and within emotivism no meta-standard exists for adjudicating between them.

Finding: Contrary.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

Commitment 1: Contrary. Commitment 2: Contrary.

Finding: Full Dissolution.

Emotivism’s dissolution of the prohairesis is complete and architecturally necessary. It is not the incidental result of a particular policy position or a contestable empirical claim. It follows from emotivism’s two most fundamental presuppositions: that the self is constituted by its attitudes and preferences (P4, producing the C1 Contrary finding) and that ends are given rather than generated by genuine rational evaluation (P2-P3, producing the C2 Contrary finding).

Together these two presuppositions eliminate the space in which the Stoic practical program operates. That program requires a self that is categorically distinct from its conditioned attitudes and capable of examining them from outside. It requires an agent who is the genuine first cause of his assents, not the sophisticated output of a preference structure that precedes him. Emotivism denies both. The prohairesis — the rational faculty that is what the agent actually is, that stands behind and governs his attitudes rather than being constituted by them — has no philosophical home within the emotivist framework.

The three characters are the human expression of this dissolution. The Manager whose self is constituted by his organizational role and measured by its outputs. The Therapist whose self is constituted by his facilitative competence and measured by client satisfaction. The Aesthete whose self is constituted by the richness of his experiential content and measured by its intensity and variety. Each is a person from whom the prohairesis has been dissolved — not by personal failure but by a cultural framework that has made the dissolution structurally mandatory.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Commitment Pattern

Substance Dualism: Contrary. Libertarian Free Will: Contrary. Moral Realism: Contrary. Correspondence Theory: Contrary. Ethical Intuitionism: Contrary. Foundationalism: Contrary.

Six Contrary findings. Zero Partial Convergence. Zero Convergent. Full Dissolution.

Series Position

This is the maximum divergence possible within the CIA’s verdict architecture. No figure in the CPA series and no ideology in the CIA series has produced six Contrary findings. Becker produced five Contrary findings and one Partially Aligned — the most divergent individual figure in the CPA series. Emotivism exceeds Becker on every commitment.

This finding is not surprising. It is the analytically necessary result of auditing the framework that is the philosophical expression of everything the classical commitments deny. Emotivism is not one position among others that happens to diverge from the classical standard. It is the systematic philosophical articulation of the denial of that standard — the framework that results when each of the six commitments is abandoned and the consequences are worked out consistently.

Why This Run Matters for the Series

The CIA run on emotivism is the philosophical foundation of the MacIntyre series. Every other finding in the series — the virtuous and emotivist versions of the Manager, Therapist, and Aesthete; the virtue-facilitating economy; the role-duty analysis — presupposes that emotivism is the cultural framework those analyses are responding to. This run makes that presupposition explicit and audited.

The six Contrary findings explain why the three characters take the form they do. The Manager is outcome-measured because emotivism (C1 Contrary) has dissolved the self into its organizational role. The Therapist is value-neutral because emotivism (C3 and C5 Contrary) has eliminated the moral facts that would give the therapist’s values any claim on the client. The Aesthete is self-defeating because emotivism (C2 Contrary) has eliminated the genuine first causation that would allow the self to stand behind and govern its experiences rather than being constituted by them.

The Stoic practitioner who navigates MacIntyre’s emotivist culture is navigating a cultural framework that has contradicted all six classical commitments simultaneously and institutionalized the contradictions in its dominant social roles. The virtuous discharge of those roles — as Manager, Therapist, and Aesthete — is therefore not a minor adjustment to existing practice. It is a complete philosophical reorientation, operating from within the roles while holding the value structure that emotivism has dissolved.

That reorientation begins with the conversion described in the first five sections of the Enchiridion. It requires exactly what emotivism denies: a self that is categorically distinct from its conditioned attitudes, capable of examining them and finding some of them false, and genuinely the first cause of its own assents. The CIA run on emotivism confirms, from the instrument’s analytical direction, what the conversion post established from the practitioner’s direction: the emotivist framework and the Stoic framework are not on a spectrum. They are alternatives. And the choice between them is the choice between the philosopher and the layman.


Classical Ideological Audit (CIA) v2.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling. Primary source: Alasdair MacIntyre, After Virtue (1981). Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.

Classical Presupposition Audit: Peter Singer

 

Classical Presupposition Audit: Peter Singer

Source: Published works including Animal Liberation (1975), Practical Ethics (1979, third edition 2011), The Expanding Circle (1981), How Are We to Live? (1993), One World (2002), The Life You Can Save (2009), and The Point of View of the Universe (2014, with Katarzyna de Lazari-Radek).

Corpus in use: CPA v1.0. The audit operates exclusively from Singer’s own published argumentative record. Singer is Professor of Bioethics at Princeton University, Ira W. DeCamp Professor of Bioethics at Princeton’s University Center for Human Values, and Laureate Professor at the University of Melbourne. He is the world’s most prominent utilitarian philosopher and the founder of the effective altruism movement. This run is designed as a model CPA for the non-classically committed philosopher type.


Preliminary Note: Singer as Model Case

Peter Singer is the ideal model for the non-classically committed philosopher type for several reasons. He is philosophically rigorous rather than merely populist. He has argued his positions explicitly and at length across five decades. He is explicitly aware of and opposed to several of the classical commitments — he has argued against moral intuitionism, against foundationalism in ethics, and against the priority of the individual rational agent. He represents the utilitarian-consequentialist type that is the dominant non-classical orientation in contemporary academic ethics. And he is maximally different from the classical commitments in a philosophically precise and instructive way.

The governing move of Singer’s entire project is the relocation of moral value from the rational faculty to the capacity for suffering and enjoyment. The question is not “does this being possess reason?” but “can this being suffer?” This single move inverts the classical commitment at its foundation and generates all the downstream divergences the audit will identify. Singer is a philosopher who has thought carefully about exactly the questions the CPA addresses and has arrived at opposite conclusions on the most fundamental ones.


Step 1 — Presupposition Profile

P1 — The capacity for suffering and enjoyment, not the possession of reason, is the criterion of moral consideration. Singer’s foundational move, stated in Animal Liberation and sustained throughout his career, is that Bentham was right: the question that matters morally is not “Can they reason?” or “Can they talk?” but “Can they suffer?” Sentience — the capacity to have subjective experiences of pain and pleasure — is the only morally relevant criterion for inclusion in the circle of moral concern. Reason is neither necessary nor sufficient for moral consideration.

P2 — The right action in any situation is the one that produces the best overall consequences for all affected sentient beings, giving equal weight to equal interests regardless of species. Singer is a preference utilitarian: the morally correct action maximizes the satisfaction of preferences across all sentient beings. No being’s interests count for more than an equivalent interest of any other being merely because of the species to which it belongs. This is the principle of equal consideration of interests, which is the governing standard of his entire ethical system.

P3 — Moral intuitions are the historically contingent products of evolution, cultural formation, and cognitive bias; they are not direct apprehensions of moral truth and carry no independent epistemic authority. Singer argues this explicitly in Practical Ethics and extensively in The Point of View of the Universe. Our intuitions about the special moral status of human beings, about the permissibility of eating animals, about the limits of our obligations to distant strangers — all of these are products of evolutionary pressures and cultural conditioning that tracked reproductive success rather than moral truth. They can be overridden by argument when they conflict with the principle of equal consideration.

P4 — Ethics is an empirical rather than a priori discipline; moral knowledge is developed through argument, evidence, and reflective equilibrium rather than through direct rational apprehension of self-evident principles. Singer holds that ethical conclusions are reached by the same methods as other theoretical conclusions — by assembling evidence, constructing arguments, testing them against considered judgments, and revising accordingly. There are no self-evident moral first principles that stand outside this process as its non-negotiable foundation. His method is explicitly coherentist and revisable.

P5 — The impartial point of view — the view from nowhere, sub specie aeternitatis — is the appropriate standpoint for moral reasoning, and from this standpoint the suffering of any sentient being has equal weight regardless of its relationship to the agent. Singer draws on Sidgwick’s account of the universe as the appropriate standpoint for ethics. From this standpoint, the agent’s own interests, the interests of those near to him, and the interests of distant strangers carry equal weight. Partiality — the preference for one’s own interests, family, community, or species — is a bias to be overcome rather than a legitimate moral consideration.

P6 — Effective altruism — the impartial, evidence-based maximization of good consequences — is the correct practical expression of the utilitarian moral standard. Singer’s The Life You Can Save and his founding role in effective altruism translate P2 and P5 into a practical program: the morally correct agent identifies the most cost-effective interventions for reducing suffering, gives to those interventions as much as he can without compromising his own effectiveness, and treats the accident of geographic and relational proximity as morally irrelevant to the weight he gives to others’ suffering.

P7 — The self has no privileged moral status; the interests of the self count for no more than the equivalent interests of any other sentient being. Singer’s impartialism follows from P2 and P5: if equal interests are to be given equal weight, then the agent’s own interests carry no special weight merely because they are his. He has argued that we are morally obligated to give to the point of marginal utility — the point at which giving more would require sacrificing something of comparable moral significance — which effectively dissolves the privileged status of the self as a moral standpoint.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

Commitment 1 — Substance Dualism: Contrary

Substance dualism requires that the rational faculty — the inner life of the individual agent, his will and judgments — be treated as categorically distinct from and prior to all external material conditions, and as the locus of genuine moral identity and value.

Singer’s P1 directly contradicts this at the foundation. The morally relevant criterion is not the rational faculty but the capacity for suffering — a biological property distributed across species and varying in degree. The self as rational agent has no categorical priority over any other sentient being. Singer has also argued explicitly against the idea of a special human dignity grounded in rationality — he regards this as a form of speciesism, analogous in structure to racism. The categorical distinctness of the rational faculty is not merely absent from Singer’s framework; it is the specific belief his framework is designed to displace.

Singer’s naturalism extends to personal identity. He has argued, drawing on Parfit, that the self is not a persisting unified substance but a series of connected psychological states. There is no Cartesian self that stands behind its experiences as their author and owner. The self is a construction. This eliminates the categorical distinctness substance dualism requires at the metaphysical level.

Finding: Contrary. Singer explicitly and argumentatively denies that the rational faculty has categorical priority as the locus of moral value or genuine identity. His framework relocates moral value to sentience and dissolves the substantial self into a series of psychological states.

Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free Will: Contrary

Libertarian free will requires that assent be a genuine first cause — that the moment between impression and response is a moment of real originating power, not a determined output of prior causes. The individual agent is the genuine author of his judgments independently of the causal chains that precede them.

Singer does not argue free will extensively, but his naturalist and utilitarian framework presupposes its denial. His account of moral progress — in which the circle of moral concern expands as argument and evidence overcome cognitive biases instilled by evolution and culture — treats moral agency as substantially conditioned by prior causal factors. The agent who gives to effective altruist causes is not exercising libertarian free will; he is the product of a process of rational persuasion that has overridden biologically and culturally instilled partiality. The governing model is one of causal conditioning toward correct behavior, not genuine originating agency over assent.

P5’s impartial point of view is also relevant here. If the appropriate standpoint for moral reasoning is the view from nowhere — the standpoint that abstracts from the agent’s particular position, relationships, and identity — then the individual agent as the genuine first cause of his judgments from within his own particular standpoint has been effectively dissolved. The morally correct agent is one whose judgments are not his own in the libertarian sense; they are the outputs of the impartial calculus applied from a standpoint that is nobody’s in particular.

Finding: Contrary. Singer’s naturalism, his account of moral progress as causal conditioning overriding evolutionary bias, and his impartial point of view together eliminate genuine originating agency as the governing account of moral action.

Commitment 3 — Moral Realism: Inconsistent

This is the most philosophically complex finding in the audit. Singer’s position on moral realism has shifted across his career and is internally unstable in a way that produces an Inconsistent finding rather than a straightforward Contrary.

In his early work Singer was a preference utilitarian who treated moral claims as reducible to facts about preference satisfaction — a position that is not straightforwardly realist. In The Point of View of the Universe (2014), written with de Lazari-Radek, he moved toward a form of moral realism grounded in Sidgwick: there is a universe-level fact about what has value, and that fact is that experiences matter from the universe’s point of view. This is a realist claim — there are objective facts about what is good, discoverable through reason.

However, Singer simultaneously holds P3: moral intuitions are not direct apprehensions of moral truth but products of evolutionary and cultural conditioning. This makes the epistemological foundation of his moral realism unstable. If intuitions are unreliable guides to moral truth, and if argument and reflective equilibrium are the alternative, then what grounds the realist claim that there are objective moral facts? Singer’s answer — the universe’s point of view, Sidgwick’s point of view of the universe — is a realist claim held without a clear epistemological account of how we access it.

The Inconsistent finding arises because Singer’s record requires both moral realism (the universe-level fact about the value of sentient experience) and a denial of the epistemological resources the classical commitment requires to sustain moral realism (direct rational apprehension of moral truth). He wants the metaphysical thesis without the epistemological one.

Finding: Inconsistent. Singer’s record requires moral realism at the metaphysical level (objective facts about what has value from the universe’s point of view) while simultaneously denying the epistemological resources — direct rational apprehension — that the classical commitment identifies as the means by which those facts are known. The realism and the anti-intuitionism cannot both be correct as stated.

Commitment 4 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: Partially Aligned

Singer’s factual claims about the suffering of animals, the effectiveness of charitable interventions, and the empirical consequences of moral choices are made as claims about how things actually are — claims that could be true or false depending on whether they accurately describe the situation. His empirical approach to ethics presupposes correspondence theory for factual claims.

The residual divergence is that his moral epistemology is coherentist rather than correspondence-theoretic in the classical moral sense. Moral truths are not established by correspondence to mind-independent moral facts apprehended by reason; they are established by reflective equilibrium — the coherence of considered judgments with moral principles after mutual adjustment. This is a coherentist rather than a correspondence account of moral truth. Whether his later Sidgwickian realism can rescue correspondence theory for moral claims is precisely the tension the Inconsistent finding on C3 identifies.

Finding: Partially Aligned. Correspondence theory is fully operative for empirical claims. Moral epistemology is coherentist rather than strictly correspondence-theoretic, though Singer’s later realism partially moves toward correspondence. The tension is unresolved.

Commitment 5 — Ethical Intuitionism: Contrary

Singer has argued against ethical intuitionism explicitly, repeatedly, and at length. His critique of moral intuitions as products of evolutionary and cultural conditioning is one of the most systematic in contemporary philosophy. In Practical Ethics he argues that intuitions about the special moral status of human beings, about permissible forms of killing, and about the limits of our obligations to strangers are not reliable guides to moral truth because they were selected for reproductive success rather than moral accuracy. In The Expanding Circle he argues that the history of moral progress is a history of argument overriding intuition — the abolition of slavery, the extension of rights to women and minorities, the emerging recognition of animal interests all required overriding strong and widely shared moral intuitions.

This is a direct and precisely argued Contrary finding on the classical commitment. Ethical intuitionism holds that the rational faculty can directly apprehend moral truth. Singer holds that what appears to be direct moral apprehension is evolutionary and cultural conditioning masquerading as insight. There is no direct apprehension of moral truth; there is only the product of causal processes that may or may not have tracked moral truth, assessed through the reflective equilibrium of argument and considered judgment.

Finding: Contrary. Singer has argued explicitly and at length against ethical intuitionism as an epistemological position, identifying moral intuitions as evolutionary products rather than direct apprehensions of moral truth.

Commitment 6 — Foundationalism: Contrary

Foundationalism requires a structured hierarchy of justified beliefs grounded in non-negotiable self-evident first principles from which all further moral commitments are derived.

Singer’s P4 directly contradicts this. Ethics is an empirical discipline; moral knowledge is developed through argument, evidence, and reflective equilibrium. No moral claim stands outside this process as its non-negotiable foundation. The principle of equal consideration of interests — Singer’s governing principle — is not presented as a self-evident necessary truth but as the conclusion of an argument from the irrationality of partiality. It is supported by argument and could in principle be revised by better argument. This is explicitly anti-foundationalist: the governing principle is a conclusion, not an unargued foundational premise.

Singer has also argued directly against the use of foundationalist intuitions in practical ethics. When intuitions and arguments conflict, he argues for following the argument — which presupposes that no intuition is so self-evidently foundational that it can override a valid argument. This is the anti-foundationalist position precisely: no proposition is architecturally prior to argument itself.

Finding: Contrary. Singer’s explicit empiricism about ethics, his coherentist moral epistemology, and his consistent advocacy for following argument over intuition together constitute a direct and argued rejection of foundationalism.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

Commitment 1: Contrary. Commitment 2: Contrary.

Finding: Full Dissolution.

Singer’s framework dissolves the prohairesis completely and does so at the most fundamental philosophical level. His relocation of moral value from the rational faculty to the capacity for suffering eliminates the rational faculty as the locus of genuine identity and moral significance. His impartial point of view dissolves the individual agent as the first-person standpoint from which moral reasoning proceeds. His naturalist account of moral agency eliminates genuine originating assent as the governing account of moral action.

The dissolution is not incidental or derivative. It is Singer’s explicit philosophical project. He has argued that the special moral status of rational agency — the belief that reason confers a dignity and importance that sentience alone does not — is a form of speciesism whose philosophical foundations are no better than those of racism or sexism. He has argued this carefully, against serious objections, over five decades. The Full Dissolution finding is the CPA’s precise name for what Singer has argued is the correct philosophical conclusion.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Commitment Pattern

Substance Dualism: Contrary. Libertarian Free Will: Contrary. Moral Realism: Inconsistent. Correspondence Theory: Partially Aligned. Ethical Intuitionism: Contrary. Foundationalism: Contrary.

Four Contrary findings. One Inconsistent. One Partially Aligned. Zero Aligned. Full Dissolution.

Singer as Model for the Non-Classically Committed Philosopher Type

Singer is the model case for this type precisely because his divergences from the classical commitments are not oversights, cultural formations, or implicit presuppositions he has never examined. They are explicit argued positions he has defended against serious objection over five decades. Every Contrary finding in this audit corresponds to a philosophical position Singer has argued for, not merely held. This makes Singer the clearest possible illustration of what it means to be a philosophically serious non-classically committed thinker.

The pattern of findings identifies the specific philosophical architecture of utilitarian consequentialism as a type. Four Contrary findings — on C1, C2, C5, and C6 — reflect the four commitments that utilitarian consequentialism systematically and necessarily denies. The Inconsistent finding on C3 reflects the specific philosophical instability of Singer’s later realism: he wants objective moral facts without the epistemological apparatus the classical commitment identifies as their necessary support. The Partially Aligned finding on C4 reflects the genuine affinity between consequentialism and correspondence theory for empirical claims, which is real even where the moral epistemology diverges.

Any figure whose framework is utilitarian or consequentialist in structure will produce this pattern, or a pattern very close to it. The Contrary findings on C1 and C2 are structurally necessary consequences of consequentialism: any framework that relocates moral value from the rational faculty to external consequences or states of affairs must deny the categorical priority of the rational faculty (C1 Contrary) and dissolve genuine originating agency into a process of causal conditioning toward correct behavior (C2 Contrary). The Contrary findings on C5 and C6 are similarly structural: consequentialism necessarily treats moral intuitions as subject to override by calculation (C5 Contrary) and moral principles as conclusions of argument rather than self-evident foundations (C6 Contrary).

The Governing Inversion

Singer’s framework and the Stoic framework share a structural feature that makes their divergence maximally instructive: both claim to identify a single governing criterion for moral significance. For the Stoic framework, that criterion is the rational faculty — the prohairesis. Only what originates in genuine rational assent has genuine moral value; everything else is an indifferent. For Singer’s framework, that criterion is sentience — the capacity for suffering and enjoyment. Only what can suffer or flourish has genuine moral consideration; rationality is neither necessary nor sufficient.

These two criteria produce opposite distributions of moral concern. The Stoic criterion locates moral significance entirely within the rational faculty and treats all external states — including suffering — as indifferent. Singer’s criterion locates moral significance entirely in the capacity for subjective experience and treats rationality as morally irrelevant except insofar as it enables more sophisticated forms of suffering and flourishing.

The CPA finding is precise: Singer has located moral value exactly where the Stoic framework locates indifferents, and has treated as morally irrelevant exactly what the Stoic framework identifies as the only genuine good. This is not a dispute about emphasis or degree. It is a direct inversion of the governing moral criterion. The Full Dissolution finding names this inversion at the level of the prohairesis: a framework that relocates moral value from the rational faculty to the capacity for suffering has not merely deprioritized the rational faculty. It has dissolved it as the locus of genuine moral identity.

An agent who adopts Singer’s framework as his governing self-description has not merely changed his moral priorities. He has accepted a self-description in which the faculty whose correct governance is the only genuine good in the Stoic account has been reclassified as morally irrelevant — and in which the states of affairs the Stoic framework classifies as indifferents have been reclassified as the substance of moral concern.


Classical Presupposition Audit (CPA) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude.

Classical Presupposition Audit: Martha Nussbaum

 

Classical Presupposition Audit: Martha Nussbaum

Source: Published works including Women and Human Development (2000), Upheavals of Thought (2001), Capabilities as Fundamental Entitlements (2003), Frontiers of Justice (2006), Human Rights and Human Capabilities (2007), and Creating Capabilities (2011).

Corpus in use: CPA v1.0. The audit operates from Nussbaum’s own published argumentative record. Nussbaum is Ernst Freund Distinguished Service Professor of Law and Ethics at the University of Chicago, with work spanning ancient philosophy, feminist philosophy, political philosophy, emotions, animal ethics, and the capabilities approach. This run is designed as a model CPA for the non-classically committed philosopher type whose framework preserves serious rational agency while relocating political and ethical attention to embodied flourishing, vulnerability, and externally supported capabilities.


Preliminary Note: Nussbaum’s Position and Its Distinctiveness

Martha Nussbaum presents a different type from both Singer and Rawls. Unlike Singer, she does not relocate moral standing from rational agency to sentience alone. Practical reason remains one of her central human capabilities, and she repeatedly treats choice, critical reflection, liberty of conscience, and the shaping of one’s own life as essential political goals. Unlike Rawls, however, she does not begin from a thin picture of rational contractors abstracted from dependence and vulnerability. She explicitly argues that dignity is the dignity of “a certain sort of animal,” that human beings are mortal and vulnerable, and that any adequate political theory must begin from neediness, dependency, embodiment, and the social conditions of flourishing. Her theory is thus neither dissolutive in Singer’s utilitarian way nor Stoic in the Sterling sense. It preserves agency, but embeds it in an account of life structured by bodily need, emotional attachment, and politically secured capabilities.

The governing move of Nussbaum’s framework is the relocation of political and ethical concern away from the self-governing rational faculty taken in isolation and toward a plural list of central capabilities that a minimally just society must secure up to a threshold. These include life, bodily health, bodily integrity, senses, imagination and thought, emotions, practical reason, affiliation, relation to other species, play, and control over one’s environment. The theory’s center of gravity is therefore not the Stoic claim that externals are indifferent, nor the Singerian claim that sentience alone grounds concern, but the claim that justice requires protecting the external and social bases without which a life worthy of human dignity cannot be lived.


Step 0 — Protocol Activation

The corpus is in view, the sources are restricted to Nussbaum’s own published work and official academic profiles, and no finding below is derived from ideological association or opponent characterization. The analysis proceeds from her own arguments about capabilities, dignity, dependency, emotions, political liberalism, and justice. Self-Audit Complete: result satisfactory. Proceeding to Step 1.


Step 1 — Presupposition Profile

Preliminary Note: The Nussbaum Position

Nussbaum’s position is a politically liberal, capability-based account of justice. It is organized around the claim that governments should secure to each person a threshold level of central capabilities as the basis of a minimally decent human life. She rejects both utilitarian aggregation and Rawls’s primary-goods framework as inadequate to the realities of dependency, gender injustice, disability, and animal life. She also treats emotions as cognitively rich judgments about what matters for our well-being, and she rejects a sharp Kantian split between rational dignity and animal vulnerability. These elements together yield a highly articulated non-classical framework: rational agency is preserved, but no longer treated as self-sufficient, categorically distinct from embodiment, or as the sole locus of value.

P1 — Justice concerns what people are actually able to do and to be; a minimally just society must secure a threshold level of central capabilities.

In Women and Human Development, Nussbaum states that the best account of a basic social minimum focuses on “what people are actually able to do and to be,” and she presents a list of central human capabilities as the basis of political principles and constitutional guarantees. In Capabilities as Fundamental Entitlements, she argues that capabilities can guide a normative conception of social justice only if a definite set of important capabilities is specified and protected up to a threshold for each citizen. This is the load-bearing core of the capabilities approach.

P2 — Human dignity is embodied and animal; an adequate theory of justice must begin from vulnerability, dependence, and need, not from an abstract split between rational person and animal nature.

Nussbaum argues explicitly against the Kantian split between rational dignity and the natural world. She says our dignity is “the dignity of a certain sort of animal,” that human dignity is inseparable from mortality and vulnerability, and that morality and rationality are themselves “thoroughly material and animal.” She treats dependency, care, bodily need, disability, and vulnerability as central facts any adequate theory must build in from the start. This is a load-bearing anthropological premise of her critique of contractarian liberalism.

P3 — Practical reason is a central capability, but it is one capability among several irreducible constituents of a life worthy of dignity.

Nussbaum’s list includes practical reason as the ability to form a conception of the good and critically reflect on one’s life, but it also includes bodily health, bodily integrity, emotions, affiliation, play, and control over one’s environment. She explicitly says the list is irreducibly plural and that one item cannot be compensated for by larger amounts of another. Practical reason is thus essential, but not architecturally sovereign over all the rest.

P4 — Emotions are judgments of value directed toward external objects salient for our well-being; they belong inside ethical reasoning rather than outside it.

In Upheavals of Thought, Nussbaum argues that emotions involve judgments about important things, in which an external object is appraised as salient for one’s well-being. She treats grief, fear, anger, love, and compassion not as irrational residues to be eradicated, but as intelligent, value-laden responses that form part of ethical reasoning. This is a load-bearing claim in her account of the good human life and public culture.

P5 — Moral and political justification proceeds through reflective equilibrium, not through self-evident first principles apprehended directly and held beyond revision.

Nussbaum states in her 2011 interview that her method remains Rawls’s: one searches for reflective equilibrium by considering moral judgments and testing them against major theories. In Women and Human Development she says the list is to be tested against “the most secure of our intuitions” as we seek a reflective equilibrium for political purposes. She also says the list remains open-ended, contestable, and revisable through deliberation and constitutional tradition. This is an explicit methodological commitment.

P6 — The capabilities list is a partial political conception for political purposes only, designed for endorsement under reasonable pluralism rather than as a comprehensive metaphysical doctrine.

Nussbaum repeatedly presents the list in a political-liberal spirit: a set of political goals and constitutional guarantees that can be endorsed by people with different comprehensive views of the good life. In the interview she says the results should be an agreement “for only political purposes,” based on moral foundations for political principles but “not a comprehensive view of human development.” In her response to Rorty, she says citizens with differing religious or secular views cannot accept a metaphysical doctrine as the basis of common political life, but they can accept a partial ethical conception framed for political purposes.

P7 — Moral concern extends beyond reciprocity-based contracting persons to the disabled, the dependent, and nonhuman animals.

Nussbaum criticizes Rawls for excluding from the foundations of justice those who are not fully cooperating contractors, including the disabled and animals. She insists that any adequate theory must incorporate care, dependency, and animal dignity from the beginning. Her human-rights writings also argue that all world citizens are entitled to a decent life under a capability benchmark, and her animal-ethics work extends the capability framework beyond humans. This extension is not peripheral; it is one of the main ways she argues that contractarian liberalism is incomplete.

Step 1 — Domain Mapping

Nussbaum’s record is broadly consistent across domains. In political philosophy, feminist theory, disability theory, emotion theory, and animal ethics, the same structure recurs: embodied dignity, plurality of central capabilities, practical reason as crucial but not exhaustive, and political responsibility for the social bases of flourishing. The main domain variation is not contradiction but emphasis. In methodological discussions she is overtly Rawlsian and reflective-equilibrium based; in anthropological and ethical discussions she is more Aristotelian, speaking of dignity, flourishing, vulnerability, and the worth of specifically human and animal forms of life. This variation matters for the commitment findings below, especially on moral realism and correspondence. Self-Audit Complete: presuppositions are drawn from Nussbaum’s own record, load-bearing rather than peripheral, and the principal domain variation has been mapped. Proceeding to Step 2.


Step 2 — Commitment Audit

Commitment 1 — Substance Dualism: Contrary

Substance dualism requires the rational faculty to be categorically distinct from and prior to bodily, social, and material conditions, and to function as the true locus of identity and value. Nussbaum’s record directly contradicts that structure. She explicitly rejects the split between rational person and animal nature, argues that our dignity is the dignity of a certain sort of animal, and says that morality and rationality are themselves “thoroughly material and animal.” Her central capabilities are defined not around a separate rational self but around embodied life, bodily integrity, emotion, affiliation, and control over one’s environment, with practical reason as one important element within that plural set. This is not merely the absence of dualism; it is an argued rejection of the very anthropology dualism requires.

Finding: Contrary. Nussbaum’s argumentative record requires an embodied, vulnerable, animal conception of dignity that directly opposes the categorical separation of rational self from bodily and worldly conditions.

Commitment 2 — Libertarian Free Will: Partially Aligned

Nussbaum strongly preserves agency in the practical and political sense. Practical reason is one of her central capabilities, defined as the ability to form a conception of the good and engage in critical reflection about one’s life, and she links it to liberty of conscience. Her framework also emphasizes spheres of choice, respect for persons’ own decisions, and political protection of opportunities for self-direction. These features create a genuine affinity with libertarian free will at the level of lived agency.

The residual divergence is that Nussbaum does not ground this agency in a metaphysics of originating assent independent of prior conditions. On the contrary, her framework is saturated with dependence on upbringing, trauma, fear, bodily vulnerability, social injustice, and the external supports required for capability formation. Emotional development can be “blighted” by fear, anxiety, abuse, and neglect; many capabilities require social provision; and human beings are described as profoundly dependent at multiple stages of life. This does not eliminate agency, but it embeds agency within developmental and social conditions in a way that stops short of libertarian origination in the Sterling sense.

Finding: Partially Aligned. Nussbaum preserves meaningful practical agency and reflective choice, but does not defend or require the strong metaphysical claim that the agent is the undetermined first cause of assent.

Commitment 3 — Ethical Intuitionism: Partially Aligned

There is a real affinity here, but not enough for an Aligned finding. Nussbaum clearly believes that political and ethical reasoning is not reducible to utility, preference, or social consensus. She appeals to dignity, worth, flourishing, and the central importance of certain capabilities in any human life. Some items on her list are described as fixed points in our considered judgments, and she says the capability approach is informed by an intuitive idea of a life worthy of human dignity. This is not consequentialist or purely conventional reasoning.

The residual divergence is methodological. Nussbaum does not claim that moral truths are grasped directly and non-inferentially by rational apprehension and then serve as architecturally final grounds. Instead, she explicitly places the list within reflective equilibrium, continued testing, contestability, revision, and political deliberation. The capabilities approach is shaped by intuitions, but it does not rest on intuitionism as the classical commitment defines it.

Finding: Partially Aligned. Nussbaum’s framework contains strong substantive moral judgments not reducible to consequences or agreement, but these are methodologically mediated through reflective equilibrium rather than direct intuitionist apprehension.

Commitment 4 — Foundationalism: Contrary

Foundationalism requires a stopping point: self-evident first principles that are necessary, architecturally prior, and not revisable through ongoing adjustment. Nussbaum explicitly rejects that structure. She says the list is to be tested against intuitions as part of reflective equilibrium, that it remains open-ended and humble, that it can be contested and remade, and that its threshold specifications must be worked out through deliberation within constitutional traditions. In interview as well, she states her method remains Rawls’s reflective equilibrium. This is coherentist and revisable rather than foundationalist.

Finding: Contrary. Nussbaum’s method is explicitly anti-foundationalist in the CPA sense: principles and judgments are reciprocally adjusted, and no architecturally final self-evident foundation governs the structure.

Commitment 5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth: Partially Aligned

Nussbaum’s factual claims about deprivation, gender injustice, dependency, disability, education, and social provision are plainly truth-apt in the ordinary correspondence sense. Her arguments about what governments do or fail to do, and about the empirical effects of abuse, neglect, education, or bodily insecurity, presuppose that there is a fact of the matter independent of belief or consensus.

The divergence concerns moral and political truth. Nussbaum often speaks as though there are objective truths about dignity and what a life worthy of human dignity requires. But the justificatory method she actually uses is political-liberal and reflective-equilibrium based. The list is framed for political purposes, open to revision, and specified through deliberation and consensus within pluralist constitutional traditions. That means moral-political truth in her framework is not simply stated as direct correspondence to independently apprehended moral facts; it is partially procedural and constructivist.

Finding: Partially Aligned. Nussbaum relies on correspondence for empirical claims and speaks in morally realist ways, but her political and ethical justification is not a pure correspondence account in the classical sense.

Commitment 6 — Moral Realism: Partially Aligned

Nussbaum is not a subjectivist, emotivist, or relativist. She argues that some deprivations are genuinely terrible across cultures, that some capabilities are of central importance in any human life, that each person is an end, and that justice makes objective demands independent of adaptive preferences or local acceptance. Her critique of utility and adaptive preference only makes sense if there are standards of justice that do not collapse into whatever people happen to prefer under unjust conditions.

The residual divergence is that Nussbaum does not ground these truths as objective moral facts discoverable in the strong classical way. She frames the list as a political conception for political purposes, compatible with multiple comprehensive doctrines, and methodologically worked out through reflective equilibrium. Thus her realism is genuine but thinner and more constructivist than the Sterling commitment requires.

Finding: Partially Aligned. Nussbaum clearly treats justice and dignity as more than preference or consensus, but her political liberalism and anti-foundational method prevent a full realist finding in the classical sense.

Step 2 — Self-Audit

All major presuppositions in the profile have been audited. Non-Operative has not been used to avoid Contrary findings. The strongest divergence lies on embodiment and method, not on sympathy or antipathy to Nussbaum’s politics. The same findings would follow for any figure whose framework combined embodied dignity, reflective equilibrium, and political-liberal capability thresholds in the same way. Self-Audit Complete: result satisfactory. Proceeding to Step 3.


Step 3 — Dissolution Finding

Commitment 1 is Contrary. Commitment 2 is Partially Aligned.

Finding: Partial Dissolution.

The ground of the Contrary finding on C1 is clear: Nussbaum’s framework explicitly denies the separation of rational dignity from embodied animality and treats the self as vulnerable, dependent, materially situated, and dignified precisely as that sort of animal being. The ground of the Partially Aligned finding on C2 is equally clear: her framework preserves practical reason, liberty of conscience, and reflective life-planning as central capabilities, so it does not eliminate agency altogether.

The result is a genuine Partial Dissolution rather than Full Dissolution. An agent who adopts Nussbaum’s framework does not dissolve himself into an impersonal welfare calculus, nor into total structural determinism. He retains a self-description as a chooser, planner, critic, and rational agent. But he does accept a framework in which that agency is no longer ontologically prior to embodiment, need, vulnerability, social dependency, and the externally supported conditions of flourishing. The prohairesis is not extinguished; it is partially subordinated to a picture in which the basic terms of justice and dignity are defined through embodied capability rather than through the sovereign rational faculty alone. This is a finding about the framework’s implication for adopters, not a finding about Nussbaum’s own inner life.

Self-Audit Complete: the dissolution finding follows mechanically from C1 Contrary and C2 Partially Aligned, and it has been stated as a framework implication rather than a psychological verdict. Proceeding to Step 4.


Step 4 — Summary Finding

Part A — Commitment Pattern

Commitment Finding
Substance Dualism Contrary
Libertarian Free Will Partially Aligned
Ethical Intuitionism Partially Aligned
Foundationalism Contrary
Correspondence Theory of Truth Partially Aligned
Moral Realism Partially Aligned

Overall pattern: 2 Contrary, 4 Partially Aligned, 0 Aligned, 0 Inconsistent, 0 Non-Operative.

The deepest point of divergence is Commitment 1: Nussbaum’s explicit rejection of the split between rational dignity and embodied animality. The second deepest is Commitment 4: her overtly reflective-equilibrium, revisable, political-liberal method. The strongest points of alignment are C2 and C6 in their limited forms: she preserves serious agency and she is plainly not a relativist or pure constructivist of preference.

Part B — Dissolution Finding

Partial Dissolution. Nussbaum’s framework preserves practical reason and reflective agency, but it denies the ontological priority of the rational faculty and relocates dignity into the life of a vulnerable, embodied, dependent animal whose flourishing requires threshold support across a plurality of externally conditioned capabilities. The framework therefore partially compromises the Sterling picture of the self while not abolishing agency outright.

Part C — Agent-Level Implication

An agent who adopts Nussbaum’s framework as his governing self-description does not adopt Singer’s dissolution into sentience or aggregate welfare. He still understands himself as a chooser capable of practical reason, critical reflection, and life-planning. But he no longer understands himself as a self-sufficient rational faculty for whom externals are indifferent. He understands himself instead as an embodied and vulnerable being whose dignity is inseparable from bodily health, integrity, emotion, affiliation, and social conditions, and whose political life is rightly organized around securing threshold access to these capabilities. He is thus committed to a picture in which external conditions are not morally indifferent but partially constitutive of the justice owed to a life of dignity. That is the precise CPA significance of Nussbaum’s framework.

The Nussbaum Diagnosis

Nussbaum is best understood as a philosopher of embodied dignity without full dissolution. She preserves a serious account of rational agency, but embeds it in an anthropology of vulnerability and an irreducibly plural account of flourishing. This makes her a particularly important non-classical case. Unlike Singer, she does not invert the moral criterion so radically that rational agency becomes morally irrelevant. Unlike Rawls, she does not remain at the level of primary goods and contracting persons. She pushes political philosophy toward the concrete life of dependent, embodied, emotionally attached beings and argues that justice must secure their capabilities from the beginning. From the CPA standpoint, this produces a framework that is more anthropologically concrete and more externalist than Rawls, but less dissolutive than Singer.

Corpus Boundary Declaration

This audit does not say that Nussbaum’s politics are correct or incorrect, that capability thresholds should or should not be adopted, or that her institutional proposals succeed or fail as policy. It says only that her own argumentative record requires a specific philosophical structure: embodied dignity, plural capabilities, reflective-equilibrium justification, and political concern with externally supported flourishing. The CPA finding is about those presuppositions and what they imply for an agent who adopts them as a governing account of himself. Self-Audit Complete. CPA run complete.

The Political Philosophy Implied by the Six Classical Commitments

 

The Political Philosophy Implied by the Six Classical Commitments

The Classical Presupposition Audit Series has examined nine figures across the contemporary Stoicism space and adjacent political territory. Each run identifies the presuppositions a figure’s argumentative record requires and audits them against six classical philosophical commitments: substance dualism, libertarian free will, ethical intuitionism, foundationalism, correspondence theory of truth, and moral realism. The dissolution finding — Full, Partial, or None — follows from the first two.

Every audit measures a figure’s framework against a standard. That standard has remained implicit throughout the series. This post makes it explicit.

What follows is not a political program. It is the necessary political posture that follows when all six classical commitments are held consistently. The commitments force a structure. The structure is described below.

One further note on attribution. The six commitments are Grant C. Sterling’s philosophical reconstruction of classipcal Stoicism, developed over two decades of work in the International Stoic Forum. The political analysis that follows — the derivation of political implications from those commitments — is Dave Kelly’s work. Sterling is credited for the theoretical foundations. The political application is Kelly’s alone.


I. First Principle: Moral Sovereignty of the Rational Agent

From substance dualism and libertarian free will: the only locus of value is the rational faculty — the prohairesis. Each agent is fully responsible for assent. No external condition can determine moral worth.

The primary political fact is therefore not class, group, identity, or outcome. It is the existence of independent rational agents with absolute responsibility for their judgments. This immediately rules out structural determinism, moral outsourcing to institutions, and identity-based moral valuation.


II. Objective Moral Order Independent of the State

From moral realism, correspondence theory, and ethical intuitionism: good and evil are facts, not conventions. They are knowable through reason. They do not depend on law, majority opinion, or cultural norms.

The state does not create moral order. It operates within a moral order it does not control. This eliminates legal positivism (law equals right), moral relativism in governance, and what might be called democratic truth — truth by vote.


III. Internalism: The State Cannot Deliver the Good

From the Stoic value structure: virtue is the only good. Vice is the only evil. Externals — wealth, health, status, outcomes — are indifferent.

No political system can make people good, harm their moral character, or secure their happinessRedistribution cannot produce the good. Deprivation cannot produce evil. Political success or failure is morally secondary. This collapses the core premise of most modern ideologies: that external arrangements determine human flourishing.


IV. Rejection of Political Salvation

From the guarantee of eudaimonia through correct assent: happiness is guaranteed by right judgment, not by conditions. No external arrangement is necessary for flourishing.

Politics cannot save anyone. This eliminates utopianism, revolutionary salvation narratives, progressivist moral arc theories, and technocratic optimization as a moral project. Politics becomes instrumental and limited, not redemptive.


V. Justice Reframed: Role-Based Rational Action

From the action structure of aim, means, and reservation: actions are judged by correctness of aim (virtue), by rational selection of means, and by acceptance of outcome under the reserve clause.

Justice is not equality of outcomes, distribution of goods, or satisfaction of preferences. Justice is each agent acting rationally within his roles — citizen, official, judge, parent — without assigning value to externals. This produces strict role ethics, duty without attachment to results, and impartiality grounded in reason rather than sentiment.


VI. Freedom Reconceived

From libertarian assent and internalism: true freedom is freedom of judgment. External freedom — political liberty, rights, conditions — is secondary.

A person can be fully free under tyranny and unfree under democracy. Political liberty is therefore a preferred indifferent, not a genuine good. Loss of rights is not a moral harm. Preservation of inner freedom is the only necessity. This sharply diverges from all modern political doctrines.


VII. Minimal but Non-Null Role of the State

The framework does not abolish politics. It constrains it. The state has a limited instrumental function: coordination of social life, maintenance of order, and provision of conditions that are appropriate to pursue as preferred indifferents. But it does not produce virtue, does not define value, and does not determine happiness.

The best characterization is rational minimalism — not in the libertarian economic sense, but in the moral scope of politics.


VIII. Structural Comparison to Modern Ideologies

Six structural contrasts between the political posture implied by the six commitments and the governing assumptions of modern politics:

Source of value. The commitments locate value internally, in the prohairesis. Modern politics locates value externally, in conditions and outcomes.

Moral truth. The commitments treat moral truth as objective and independent of human decision. Modern politics treats it as constructed and negotiated.

Role of the state. The commitments give the state an instrumental and limited function. Modern politics treats the state as a moral agent and primary problem-solver.

Freedom. The commitments define freedom as inner freedom of assent. Modern politics defines freedom as external freedom of rights and conditions.

Justice. The commitments define justice as rational role-action. Modern politics defines it as distribution or equality of outcome.

Political salvation. The commitments make political salvation impossible in principle. Modern politics treats it as the central assumption of the entire enterprise.


IX. Final Characterization

The political philosophy implied by the six commitments is anti-utopian (it denies political salvation), anti-relativist (it affirms objective moral truth), anti-collectivist (it rejects group-based moral identity), and anti-materialist (it denies genuine value in externals). It is radically individual in the Stoic sense — centering moral responsibility in the rational agent.

But it is not libertarianism, conservatism, or any modern ideology. It does not map onto existing political alignments because it does not share the foundational premise that any of them share: that external arrangements determine what actually matters.


Bottom Line

If all six classical commitments are held consistently, politics is reduced to a secondary, external coordination system that has no power over what actually matters — the correctness of judgment. Everything modern politics treats as primary — outcomes, conditions, distributions, identities — is reclassified as morally indifferent.

The result is not a new political ideology. It is the collapse of politics as a source of meaning, value, or salvation.

The CPA series has been measuring nine figures against this standard implicitly. This post makes the standard visible.


Political analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Theoretical foundations: the Stoic philosophical corpus of Grant C. Sterling. Prose rendering: Claude.