Sterling vs. Modern Therapy: Why "Acceptance" Isn't Stoicism
Sterling vs. Modern Therapy: Why "Acceptance" Isn't Stoicism
A comparison of Ben Sedley's ACT/mindfulness approach (Psychology Today, March 2026) with Sterling's Core Stoicism, revealing fundamental philosophical incompatibilities.
The Two Approaches
Ben Sedley (Acceptance and Commitment Therapy): Clinical psychologist advocating "making space" for painful feelings through mindful acceptance.
Grant C. Sterling (Core Stoicism): Systematic philosopher teaching elimination of suffering through correct value-beliefs (58 Unified Stoic Propositions).
These frameworks are completely incompatible, not complementary.
On the Nature of Pain and Suffering
Sedley's claim:
"Life is Pain, highness. Anyone who says differently is selling something." (quoting The Princess Bride)
Sterling's response: WRONG.
This confuses pain (physical sensation) with suffering (pathos from false beliefs).
Per Props 24-32: Suffering = pathos = false value-beliefs about externals.
Life contains: Pain (physical, indifferent per Prop 20), dispreferred externals (poverty, illness, death), but NOT suffering (unless you assent to false value-beliefs).
Sedley treats suffering as inevitable. Sterling: suffering is OPTIONAL - caused by your assent to false judgments.
On What Causes Suffering
Sedley's claim:
"Suffering comes from trying not to have the thoughts and feelings you're having."
Sterling's response: WRONG. This reverses cause and effect.
Suffering doesn't come from fighting feelings. Suffering (pathos) comes from FALSE VALUE-BELIEFS that produce those feelings in the first place.
Per Prop 25: "Emotions and desires are caused by acts of assent to impressions."
The causal chain:
- You assent to "This external outcome is BAD" (false belief - Prop 20)
- This produces grief/anxiety/anger (pathos - Props 24-32)
- Then you might fight the emotion or accept it
- But the emotion EXISTS because of step 1, not step 3
Sedley says: Stop fighting the feeling.
Sterling says: Stop assenting to the false belief that caused the feeling.
Sedley treats symptoms. Sterling corrects causes.
On "Acceptance"
Sedley's claim:
"Acceptance is about genuinely making space for discomfort... There is room inside you for these emotions and sensations, even the feelings that are uncomfortable."
Sterling's response: DANGEROUS CONFUSION.
Two types of "acceptance":
1. Accepting EXTERNALS (Sterling endorses):
- Per Prop 35c: "If nothing prevents it" = accepting Providence's outcomes
- Illness happens → accept it (external, indifferent)
- Person dies → accept it (external outcome)
- This is rational acceptance of what's not up to you
2. Accepting FALSE-BELIEF-GENERATED PATHOS (Sterling rejects):
- Sedley: "Make space for grief over loss"
- Sterling: Grief over loss = false belief that loss is evil
- Don't "accept" pathos - CORRECT the false belief causing it
Sedley wants you to hold the grief. Sterling wants you to eliminate the grief by correcting the judgment.
On the Goal
Sedley's goal:
"Knowing that doesn't stop it hurting, but maybe the awareness that you can hold it frees up some energy that you would have spent fighting it."
Sterling's goal:
Per Prop 44: Eudaimonia = complete absence of pathos (apatheia)
NOT: "Hold your pain more skillfully"
BUT: "Eliminate suffering by correct value-beliefs"
Sedley's promise: You'll still hurt, but waste less energy fighting.
Sterling's promise: You won't hurt at all if you classify externals correctly.
Sedley: Manage suffering. Sterling: Eliminate suffering.
On "Observing" Feelings
Sedley's exercise:
"Notice them with curiosity... Where do these feelings sit inside your body? How big are they? Do they have a shape?"
Sterling's response: This treats pathos as if it's LEGITIMATE.
Per Props 24-32: Pathos = PROOF of false value-belief.
When you feel grief:
- Don't "observe it with curiosity"
- Recognize: "I'm assenting to false belief that external is evil"
- CORRECT the belief
- Pathos dissolves
The "body scan" approach assumes emotions are just "there" (neutral data), ignores that emotions PROVE correspondence failure, treats symptoms rather than causes.
Sedley wants you to befriend your pathos. Sterling wants you to recognize pathos as diagnostic of error.
On "Making Space" for Feelings
Sedley's claim:
"Your mind might tell you that there is no room inside you for these feelings. Yet, what is your experience telling you right now? You can breathe around these feelings."
Sterling's response: FALSE DICHOTOMY.
It's not: "Fight feelings vs. Make space for feelings"
It's: "Hold false beliefs generating feelings vs. Correct beliefs eliminating feelings"
Per Prop 15-16: Desire and emotion are caused by assent.
If you correct assent: No grief to "make space for," no anxiety to "breathe around," no depression to "hold."
Sedley assumes you MUST have painful feelings. Sterling: You only have them if you assent to false value-beliefs.
On What's "Up to You"
Sedley's implicit claim: Feelings just HAPPEN to you. You can only control your RESPONSE to them.
Sterling's explicit teaching (Per Prop 10-11): Your ASSENT is up to you.
The feelings don't "just happen."
Causal chain:
- Impression arises: "I lost something important"
- YOU CHOOSE to assent to "This is bad" (up to you)
- Grief follows automatically (Prop 25)
What's up to you: Your value-judgment about the impression
What's not up to you: The impression itself, and (once you've assented falsely) the resulting emotion
Sedley treats you as passive recipient of feelings. Sterling: You actively CAUSE your feelings through your assent.
The Fundamental Difference
| Question | Sedley (ACT) | Sterling (Stoicism) |
|---|---|---|
| What is suffering? | Fighting painful feelings | False value-beliefs about externals |
| What causes it? | Resisting what's there | Assenting to false judgments |
| What's the solution? | Accept/observe feelings | Correct value-beliefs |
| What's the goal? | Live well despite pain | Eliminate suffering (apatheia) |
| Is pain inevitable? | Yes | Physical yes, pathos no |
| What's up to you? | Response to feelings | Assent causing feelings |
| Role of emotions? | Data to observe | Proof of false beliefs |
| Standard of success? | Psychological flexibility | Eudaimonia (flourishing) |
Why Sedley's Approach Is Dangerous
1. Legitimizes pathos: Treats suffering as normal rather than diagnostic of correspondence failure.
2. Prevents cure: Manages symptoms instead of correcting cause.
3. Perpetuates false beliefs: "Accept your grief" reinforces belief that "loss is evil."
4. Removes agency: Treats feelings as happening TO you, not caused BY you.
5. Lowers standard: "Live with pain" instead of "eliminate suffering."
The Stoic Response
If someone came to a Stoic practitioner saying "I'm learning to hold my painful feelings with compassion," the response would be:
"Why are you having painful feelings at all? What external are you treating as good or evil?
If you lost something and feel grief, you're assenting to 'That thing was my good.' That's false (Prop 20). Correct that belief and the grief disappears.
Don't 'make space for grief.' Eliminate the false judgment causing grief.
Sedley wants you comfortable with correspondence failure. Sterling wants you to achieve correspondence.
His approach is sophisticated resignation. Stoicism is cure."
Specific Proposition Violations in Sedley
Prop 20-23 violated: Treats painful feelings as if they're ABOUT real goods/evils. Should recognize: feelings PROVE false classification of externals.
Prop 24-32 violated: Treats pathos as if it's normal/acceptable/something to manage. Should recognize: pathos = diagnostic of correspondence failure.
Prop 25 violated: Treats emotions as if they "just happen." Should recognize: emotions caused by your assent to impressions.
Prop 44-52 violated: Sets goal as "hold pain skillfully" not "eliminate suffering." Should recognize: eudaimonia = complete absence of pathos.
The Two Frameworks Compared
Sedley (ACT/Mindfulness):
- Life is painful (inevitable)
- Suffering = fighting the pain
- Solution = accept/observe pain
- Goal = live well DESPITE pain
- Pain is given, response is choice
Sterling (Core Stoicism):
- Life contains dispreferred externals (not "painful")
- Suffering = false beliefs about externals
- Solution = correct value-beliefs
- Goal = apatheia (no suffering)
- Assent is choice, pathos follows assent
Conclusion
Modern therapeutic culture (represented by Sedley): Manage your suffering skillfully. Accept that pain is inevitable. Learn to hold it with compassion.
Classical Stoic philosophy (Sterling's framework): Eliminate suffering through correct value-beliefs. Recognize that pathos proves false judgments. Achieve apatheia through correspondence.
These are not complementary approaches. They are fundamentally incompatible frameworks with opposite goals.
Sedley offers sophisticated techniques for living with suffering. Sterling offers systematic elimination of suffering's cause.
The choice is between resignation and cure.
Source: Ben Sedley, "Wisdom From 'The Princess Bride'," Psychology Today, March 1, 2026. Compared with Grant C. Sterling's Core Stoicism framework. For Sterling's systematic presentation, see Core Stoicism.
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