Sterling Corpus Evaluator (SCE) v1.0 — Run on Meghan Sullivan / AI Ethics Article (NPR, April 17, 2026)
Sterling Corpus Evaluator (SCE) v1.0 — Run on Meghan Sullivan / AI Ethics Article (NPR, April 17, 2026)
The philosopher trying to teach ethics to AI developers
Instrument: Sterling Corpus Evaluator (SCE) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Philosophical commitments, propositions, and theorems: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.
Corpus in use: Core Stoicism (Sterling), Nine Excerpts (Sterling), Sterling Logic Engine v4.0 (Kelly/Sterling), Sterling’s Framework for Personal Decision Making v3.3 (Kelly/Sterling), Stoicism Is Not Therapy But Training (Sterling), Two and One-Half Ethical Systems (Sterling), The Six Philosophical Commitments That Ground Stoic Practice (Kelly/Sterling), Dogmata, the Six Commitments, and the Structure of Sterling’s Stoicism (Kelly), The Little Enchiridion (Kelly), Harshness and Beauty in Epictetus (Sterling), Seddon’s Glossary (Seddon), Manual of Practical Rational Action (Kelly).
Step 0 — Protocol Activation
Full corpus list is in view. Source document has been read in full. The instrument is not proceeding from a prior conclusion about the finding.
The input is an NPR article (April 17, 2026) reporting on philosopher Meghan Sullivan’s work applying ethical frameworks to AI development, including her participation in an Anthropic summit and her advocacy for agency, virtue ethics, and practical wisdom as resources for AI developers and ordinary citizens. The article’s content is complex and multi-layered: it advances several interconnected ideas with embedded philosophical presuppositions. Tier Two applies.
Step 1 — Scope Calibration
Axis A — Complexity: Complex. The article presents interlocking claims across at least four domains: the nature of ethical philosophy, the function of virtue ethics, the concept of human agency, and the political economy of resistance to AI. No single governing proposition covers all of them.
Axis B — Corpus Domain: Substantially within the corpus’s domain, with significant portions falling outside it. The corpus addresses individual virtue, rational agency, value ontology, the philosophical commitments grounding Stoic practice, and the relationship between philosophical doctrine and psychological benefit. The article’s claims about AI development, corporate strategy, democratic participation, and consumer behavior are outside the corpus’s domain and will be declared accordingly.
Axis C — Presupposition vs. Surface Claim: The evaluation must reach beneath Sullivan’s surface claims to identify the embedded presuppositions. She does not explicitly defend a complete ethical theory; she advocates a practice orientation. What that practice presupposes philosophically is the primary subject of corpus evaluation.
Tier selection: Tier Two.
Self-Audit — Step 1: The complexity determination is warranted. The corpus domain question has been clearly demarcated rather than inflated or contracted. Tier Two confirmed.
Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 2.
Step 2 — Presupposition Extraction and Corpus Mapping
Four load-bearing presuppositions are extracted from the article’s central claims. Peripheral claims about corporate strategy, AI policy, and consumer economics are not presuppositions but empirical and political observations outside the corpus’s domain. They will receive a corpus boundary declaration at Step 4 rather than individual findings.
P1 — Philosophy functions as a resource for improving human behavior and decision-making in practical contexts.
Sullivan’s entire mission presupposes that philosophical reflection changes what people do — that applying ethical frameworks to AI developers produces better AI development. This is a functional claim about philosophy’s relationship to practice.
Corpus mapping: Core Stoicism (Sterling, Th 14); Stoicism Is Not Therapy But Training (Sterling); Nine Excerpts Section 3 and Section 7; SLE v4.0 Props 52–58.
P2 — Virtue ethics, centered on moral habits and practical wisdom, is the appropriate framework for addressing the ethical challenges of AI.
Sullivan is identified as a virtue ethicist. Her framework is Aristotelian: moral habits, practical wisdom, flourishing. This carries specific philosophical presuppositions about the structure of ethics and the nature of the good.
Corpus mapping: Two and One-Half Ethical Systems (Sterling); The Six Philosophical Commitments That Ground Stoic Practice (Kelly/Sterling) — C3 Moral Realism, C5 Ethical Intuitionism; SLE v4.0 Props 32–38.
P3 — Human agency is real, meaningful, and must be awakened from passivity in the face of powerful institutional forces.
Sullivan’s closing argument is that people “always have some choice” and that the primary obstacle to flourishing is a failure of imagination rather than a genuine lack of options. This presupposes libertarian or compatibilist agency of a robust kind.
Corpus mapping: Free Will and Causation (Sterling); SLE v4.0 Props 10–11, 52; Nine Excerpts Section 3; The Six Philosophical Commitments That Ground Stoic Practice — C2 Libertarian Free Will.
P4 — The goal of philosophical engagement with suffering and existential questions is to help people “achieve flourishing” and live “the good life.”
Sullivan frames the telos of her work as helping individuals and communities reach flourishing. This is an explicit eudaimonist claim. The content she gives it — more imagination, more options, waking up to agency — carries presuppositions about what flourishing consists in.
Corpus mapping: SLE v4.0 Props 43–51; Core Stoicism (Sterling) Th 14; Stoicism Is Not Therapy But Training (Sterling); Stoicism and Self-Interest: What Is Our Interest? (Sterling); Dogmata, the Six Commitments, and the Structure of Sterling’s Stoicism (Kelly).
Self-Audit — Step 2: All four presuppositions are load-bearing: the argument collapses without each. The corpus mapping is drawn from named documents, not from training data. Peripheral political and economic claims have been identified as outside the corpus’s domain and deferred to the corpus boundary declaration. No gap-filling has occurred.
Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 3.
Step 3 — Evaluation
P1 — Philosophy functions as a resource for improving human behavior and decision-making in practical contexts.
Finding against C2 (Libertarian Free Will) and Props 52–58 (SLE v4.0): Partial Convergence.
The corpus holds that philosophical doctrine changes behavior, but only through a specific causal mechanism: conviction produces belief-change, belief-change changes desires and emotions, and changed desires and emotions change action. Sterling argues this explicitly in Stoicism Is Not Therapy But Training: “all psychological benefits that Stoicism conveys can come only to those who believe Stoic principles. The psychology is parasitic on the philosophy.” Sullivan’s functional claim about philosophy improving practice converges with the corpus insofar as it treats philosophy as genuinely action-relevant. The divergence is in mechanism. Sullivan’s Socratic method — asking questions that expand the imagination and reveal more options — does not necessarily require the person to accept any philosophical doctrine. It is a technique for broadening practical perception. The corpus holds that techniques without doctrine produce nothing distinctively philosophical. A broadened range of perceived options does not, on the corpus’s account, change the underlying value judgments from which choices flow. Partial Convergence: the functional direction is correct; the mechanism is underspecified in ways the corpus would not accept.
P2 — Virtue ethics, centered on moral habits and practical wisdom, is the appropriate framework for addressing ethical challenges.
Finding against C3 (Moral Realism): Convergent on the realist commitment; Divergent on the structure of virtue.
Sullivan’s virtue ethics shares the corpus’s foundational moral realism: both hold that moral facts are real and that flourishing is a genuine end, not merely a cultural preference. This is a significant point of convergence. The Six Philosophical Commitments That Ground Stoic Practice states directly that moral realism is necessary because “virtue IS good” is a fact about reality, not a subjective preference.
However, Sullivan’s Aristotelianism carries structural presuppositions the corpus explicitly rejects. Two and One-Half Ethical Systems (Sterling) classifies Aristotelian virtue ethics as the “half” system — not one of the two coherent ethical systems (deontology and consequentialism), but a third view Sterling regards as philosophically unstable because it grounds virtue in what the virtuous person characteristically does rather than in an independent moral criterion that defines what the virtuous person should do. Sterling identifies as a deontological ethical intuitionist: moral duties are known directly by rational apprehension, not derived from an account of human character or flourishing. The corpus’s virtue is defined as holding only true value beliefs and acting on them (SLE v4.0 Props 34–37); it is not Aristotelian phronesis operating through habituated character.
Finding against C5 (Ethical Intuitionism): Partial Convergence.
The Socratic method Sullivan employs — asking questions that help interlocutors realize they have more options than believed — shares the intuitionist commitment to direct rational access: the interlocutor is helped to see something he could have seen had he attended correctly. This is structurally similar to the corpus’s account of rational perception of moral truth (Six Philosophical Commitments, C5). The divergence: Sullivan’s interlocutors are helped to perceive more options; the corpus holds that the key perception is not a wider set of options but a specific moral truth — that only virtue is genuinely good and that externals have no genuine value. Widening the range of choices without redirecting the value structure from which they flow does not reach the corpus’s target.
P3 — Human agency is real and must be awakened from passivity in the face of powerful institutional forces.
Finding against C2 (Libertarian Free Will) and SLE v4.0 Props 10–11: Convergent.
The corpus holds without qualification that judgment (assent to impressions) is in the agent’s control. SLE v4.0 Prop 52: “Judgment (assent to impressions) is in our control (by 10, 11).” Nine Excerpts Section 3: “The only things we control are inner events such as our beliefs, desires, and acts of will.” Sterling’s commitment to libertarian free will is constitutive of the entire system: the agent genuinely originates his assent; it is not determined by prior causes or external conditions. Sullivan’s insistence that “you always have some choice” and that the imagination’s limitations are the primary obstacle to flourishing is directly convergent with the corpus on this point. Where institutions and corporate leaders create the impression that no choice is available, the corpus would classify this as a false impression to which assent is being invited — and the corpus holds unambiguously that such assent is refusable.
Finding against the corpus’s account of what agency is directed at: Partial Convergence.
The convergence is genuine but partial. Sullivan locates the exercise of agency primarily in external decisions: which companies to give data and money to, how to vote, how to apply consumer and democratic power. The corpus holds that the primary domain of agency is assent — the internal governing judgments of the prohairesis. External action is the downstream consequence of correct internal agency, not its primary locus. Sullivan’s account treats the external exercise of choice as the substance of agency. The corpus treats it as an output that may or may not follow from genuine internal agency. An agent who votes and withholds consumer spending while still assenting to false value beliefs about what is genuinely good has not exercised his agency in the corpus’s primary sense. The primary work is internal, and Sullivan’s emphasis on external choice-sets leaves the internal unaddressed.
P4 — The goal of philosophical engagement is to help people achieve flourishing and live “the good life.”
Finding against SLE v4.0 Props 43–51 and Core Stoicism Th 14: Divergent on the content of flourishing; Convergent on flourishing as the genuine telos.
The corpus and Sullivan converge on the bare claim that flourishing is the appropriate telos of philosophical engagement. This is not a trivial convergence: it rules out hedonism, simple preference-satisfaction, and all merely procedural accounts of the good life. SLE v4.0 Prop 43: “The goal of life is eudaimonia.”
The divergence is substantial and load-bearing. The corpus specifies the content of flourishing with precision: complete moral perfection (acting virtuously) plus complete psychological contentment (positive feelings without negative feelings), with the latter being causally downstream of the former (SLE v4.0 Props 43–51). Crucially, Props 45–46 identify the exclusive cause of both psychological discontentment and moral imperfection: the belief that externals have value. Flourishing is achieved not by expanding one’s imagination about available options, not by exercising consumer or democratic power, but by eliminating the false belief that externals are genuine goods or evils. Sterling’s eudaimonia does not have more options in it; it has the correct value judgment, from which all psychological contentment follows necessarily.
Sullivan’s account of flourishing — reached through widened imagination, restored agency, and practical wisdom applied to the options available — does not address the corpus’s identified causal root of unflouring. Stoicism Is Not Therapy But Training (Sterling) makes this precise: “The problem is that the Stoic medicine has to be administered before the shock. Stoicism functions as an immunization, not as a cure.” A person who perceives more options but assents to the value of those options as genuine goods has not moved toward eudaimonia on the corpus’s account. He has merely enlarged the domain in which he pursues externals he falsely believes to be genuinely good.
This is the deepest divergence. It is load-bearing because Sullivan’s entire project presupposes that philosophical engagement with developers and citizens reaches the root of their existential distress. On the corpus’s analysis, it does not — unless it corrects the underlying false value beliefs from which that distress flows.
Self-Audit — Step 3: All four presuppositions have received findings. No Orthogonal verdicts have been used to avoid Divergent findings. The findings are not distributed for balance: P1, P2, and P4 carry significant divergences; P3 carries a genuine convergence on agency that the corpus would fully endorse. No findings have been issued on empirical or political questions within the article; those are deferred to the corpus boundary declaration. The same findings would be issued regardless of whether Sullivan’s project is sympathetic or unsympathetic to this framework.
Self-Audit Complete. Proceeding to Step 4.
Step 4 — Finding
Overall Verdict: Partial Convergence.
The Sullivan/NPR article presents a program that shares several structural features with the corpus — moral realism, genuine agency, philosophy as action-relevant, flourishing as the telos — without reaching the corpus’s core diagnostic claim or its specified mechanism of change.
Deepest Divergence.
The deepest point of divergence is the content of flourishing and its causal structure. The corpus holds that all psychological discontentment and all moral imperfection share a single cause: the false belief that externals have genuine value (SLE v4.0 Props 45–46). This is a precise etiological claim. Correction of that belief is the whole of the remedy; nothing else reaches the root. Sullivan’s program — widening the imagination, restoring the sense of agency, applying virtue ethics in practical contexts — addresses the surface but leaves the etiological root untouched. A person who recovers his sense of choice about which platforms to use, how to vote, and which companies to patronize has not, on the corpus’s account, moved toward eudaimonia unless those choices flow from corrected value beliefs. Sterling states the point in its sharpest form: “All psychological benefits that Stoicism conveys can come only to those who believe Stoic principles. The psychology is parasitic on the philosophy.” Sullivan’s Socratic method — practiced without requiring acceptance of the Stoic or any specific doctrine — produces expanded options, not corrected values.
A secondary but structurally significant divergence is the Aristotelian framework itself. Two and One-Half Ethical Systems (Sterling) classifies Aristotelian virtue ethics as the philosophically unstable “half system.” This is not a minor disagreement about emphasis. The corpus’s virtue is constituted by holding true value beliefs and acting on them; it is not constituted by the Aristotelian account of habituated practical wisdom operating through the cultivation of character traits.
Strongest Point of Convergence.
P3: the account of agency. Sullivan’s insistence that individuals always retain genuine choice, and that the primary obstacle to flourishing is a failure of imagination rather than a genuine lack of options, is directly convergent with the corpus’s libertarian free will commitment. The corpus holds that institutional power, social pressure, and material conditions can constrain the external field of action but cannot remove the agent’s capacity to assent or withhold assent. When Sullivan argues that political and corporate interests promote the false impression that no choice is available, she is describing precisely what the corpus calls a false impression — and the corpus is unambiguous that such impressions may be refused. This convergence is genuine and not merely verbal.
Corpus Boundary Declaration.
The article’s claims about AI development, the behavior of technology corporations, democratic and consumer power as political tools, and the institutional reception of philosophical ethics in Silicon Valley are empirical and political questions outside the corpus’s domain. The corpus addresses individual value ontology, rational agency, and the causal structure of psychological states. It does not address whether applying virtue ethics frameworks to AI development produces better AI, whether consumer power is an effective tool for shaping corporate behavior, or whether democratic institutions are the appropriate venue for resolving the existential questions AI raises. These questions receive no finding from the SCE. They require empirical investigation and political judgment that the corpus does not supply.
The SCE also cannot determine whether Sullivan’s philosophical project is sound on its own terms. The corpus governs the SCE. Whether Aristotelian virtue ethics is philosophically defensible independent of the Sterling corpus is outside the instrument’s reach.
Self-Audit — Step 4: The overall Partial Convergence finding follows from the Step 3 findings without adjustment at the synthesis stage. The deepest divergence (causal structure of flourishing and the Aristotelian framework) has been identified and stated first. The strongest convergence (agency) has been stated without inflation. No recommendation or action guidance has been issued. The corpus boundary declaration covers the empirical and political content of the article accurately.
Self-Audit Complete. SCE run complete.
Instrument: Sterling Corpus Evaluator (SCE) v1.0. Instrument architecture: Dave Kelly. Philosophical commitments, propositions, and theorems: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Analysis and synthesis: Dave Kelly. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic), 2026.