THE SIX PHILOSOPHICAL COMMITMENTS THAT GROUND STOIC PRACTICE
THE SIX PHILOSOPHICAL COMMITMENTS THAT GROUND STOIC PRACTICE
How Sterling Replaces Ancient Physics with Defensible Foundations
THE PROBLEM STERLING IS SOLVING
Classical Stoicism:
Ethics logically depends on Physics (materialism, cosmic determinism, pneuma, etc.)
Modern situation:
Ancient physics is indefensible.
“Ancient Stoic physics, then, is clearly obsolete and no reasonable person can believe in it any more.”
— Brad Inwood, Stoicism: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford University Press, 2018), p. xxiv.
Three options:
- Keep ancient physics (intellectually dishonest)
- Drop foundations, keep techniques (pragmatic but unstable)
- Replace ancient physics with defensible classical foundations ← Sterling’s approach
Sterling’s solution:
Six classical philosophical commitments that ground the practice without requiring ancient Stoic physics.
HOW THE SIX COMMITMENTS GROUND THE PRACTICE
1. SUBSTANCE DUALISM
Commitment: Mind/soul and body are ontologically distinct substances.
What it grounds:
Enchiridion 1 — The Dichotomy:
“Some things are in our control, others not.”
“In our control: belief, impulse, desire, aversion—in a word, everything that is our own action.”
“Not in our control: body, property, reputation, office—in a word, everything that is not our own action.”
Why dualism is necessary:
- If mind = body (materialism), then mental events are just brain states
- Brain states are physical, subject to physical causation
- Therefore mental events (beliefs, desires) are determined by prior physical causes
- Therefore they’re NOT “in our control” in the required sense
With substance dualism:
- Mind is distinct from body
- Mental acts (assent, desire, will) are acts of mind/soul
- Mind has its own causal powers, not reducible to physical causation
- Therefore mental acts CAN be “in our control”
Practice grounded:
- “I am my prohairesis” — You ARE the rational soul, not the body
- External vs Internal distinction — Body is external TO the soul
- Step 2 (Recognition) — Can separate: External event / Impression / Prohairesis
- The entire dichotomy — Only what soul does is in your control
Without dualism:
- Can’t coherently separate “you” from “body/externals”
- No principled basis for dichotomy of control
- Practice loses ontological foundation
2. LIBERTARIAN FREE WILL
Commitment: The will is genuinely free — not determined by prior causes.
What it grounds:
Th 6: “The only things in our control are our beliefs and our acts of will.”
Why libertarian free will is necessary:
- If determinism is true, your “choices” are caused by prior events
- You couldn’t have chosen differently (given same prior causes)
- “Control” becomes illusory — just feeling of control while determined
- Practice becomes futile — you’re going to assent/not assent based on prior causes anyway
With libertarian free will:
- Assent is a GENUINE choice
- You could have chosen differently
- The pause is real — you can actually STOP automatic process
- Decision (Step 5) is an authentic free act
Practice grounded:
- Step 3 (Pause) — Requires that automatic assent CAN be interrupted
- Step 5 (Decision) — Requires genuine choice between assenting/refusing
- Th 8 — “Desires are in our control” — because will is free, desires (caused by beliefs) are controllable
- The entire training — Practice makes sense only if you can freely choose differently
Without libertarian free will:
- “Practice” is just going through motions determined by prior causes
- Can’t genuinely choose to pause or refuse assent
- Stoicism becomes descriptive (how determined beings feel) not prescriptive (what to do)
3. ETHICAL INTUITIONISM
Commitment: We have direct, non-inferential access to moral truths.
What it grounds:
Sterling’s foundational theorems as self-evident:
Sterling identifies the basic theorems of Core Stoicism as “unprovable fundamental postulates defensible only by appeal to intuition of their truth” (Core Stoicism, prefatory note). Theorem 10 — that virtue is the only genuine good and vice the only genuine evil — is not derived from prior premises. It is directly apprehended. The agent does not infer it; he sees it.
Why intuitionism is necessary:
- Examination (Step 4) requires ability to KNOW if impression is true/false
- If moral knowledge requires inference from disputed premises, examination stalls
- If “good/evil” are just learned conventions, no way to test impressions against truth
- Need direct access to moral reality to recognize false value claims
With ethical intuitionism:
- You can directly grasp “only virtue is good”
- You can recognize “this external is good” as FALSE
- Examination reveals truth through rational intuition
- The seeing is literal — the rational faculty apprehends the falsehood directly, not by inference
Practice grounded:
- Step 4 (Examination) — Can actually test if impression matches moral reality
- Recognition of false value — Once clearly seen as false, the rational faculty cannot voluntarily endorse it
- Sterling’s (a) — Can refuse false values because you RECOGNIZE them as false
- The training works — Character change happens as you learn to see moral truths
Without intuitionism:
- How do you KNOW “only virtue is good”? Just assume it? Cultural conditioning?
- Examination has no epistemic ground
- Can’t distinguish true from false value judgments with certainty
- Practice rests on unfounded assertions
4. FOUNDATIONALISM
Commitment: Some beliefs (foundational) are self-evident; others justified by deriving from foundations.
What it grounds:
The entire theorem structure (Th 1–29):
- Core axioms (Th 1–2, Th 6, Th 10) are foundational
- Other theorems derive from these
- Testing impressions means comparing to foundational truths
Why foundationalism is necessary:
- If all beliefs require justification by other beliefs (coherentism), infinite regress
- Need stopping point — self-evident truths that don’t require further justification
- Examination requires STANDARD against which to test impressions
- Standard must be epistemically secure (foundational)
With foundationalism:
- Th 10 (“only virtue is good”) is foundational — grasped directly as true
- Other truths derive: Th 12 (externals not good/evil) follows from Th 10–11
- Examination tests impression against foundational structure
- No circular reasoning — testing against independently established foundations
Practice grounded:
- Step 4 (Examination) — Tests impression against foundational truths (Th 10–12)
- Sterling’s systematic structure — Th 1–29 provide the testing framework
- Why examination WORKS — Impressions tested against epistemically secure foundations
- Prosoche vigilance — Watching for violations of foundational truths
Without foundationalism:
- What standard do you test impressions against?
- If “only virtue is good” needs justification, by what? (regress problem)
- Examination becomes relativistic or circular
- No secure ground for practice
5. CORRESPONDENCE THEORY OF TRUTH
Commitment: A belief is true if and only if it corresponds to reality.
What it grounds:
The entire notion of “false impressions”:
Sterling: “We can accept that a given impression is TRUE, or reject it as unproven or false.”
Why correspondence theory is necessary:
- Practice requires distinguishing TRUE from FALSE impressions
- Need account of what makes impression true/false
- Alternative theories (coherence, pragmatist) don’t provide needed objectivity
- Must be able to say: “Impression claims X, but reality is Y, therefore false”
With correspondence theory:
- Impression: “Intrusion is evil”
- Reality: Only vice is evil (by Th 10), intrusion is external (by Ench 1)
- Test: Does impression-claim match reality? NO
- Verdict: FALSE impression
- Action: Refuse assent
Practice grounded:
- Step 4 (Examination) — Tests if impression CORRESPONDS to reality
- Step 2 (Recognition) — Separates impression-as-claim from reality-claimed-about
- Sterling’s entire method — Based on impressions making truth-claims testable against reality
- Why refusal works — False impressions genuinely don’t match reality
Without correspondence theory:
- On what basis is impression “false”?
- Pragmatist: “False” = doesn’t lead to desired results (but this makes truth subjective)
- Coherentist: “False” = doesn’t cohere with other beliefs (but this is circular)
- Need objective standard: Reality itself
6. MORAL REALISM
Commitment: Moral facts exist independently of our beliefs about them.
What it grounds:
Th 10: “Only virtue is good, only vice is evil.”
Why moral realism is necessary:
- Practice requires OBJECTIVE distinction between good and evil
- If “good/evil” are subjective preferences, no basis for calling values “false”
- If culturally relative, Stoicism is just one cultural preference among many
- Need: “Virtue IS good” is true regardless of what anyone believes
With moral realism:
- “Only virtue is good” is FACT about reality
- “Externals are good” is FALSE — contradicts moral reality
- Examination reveals how impression-claims match/mismatch moral facts
- Sterling’s (a) refuses FALSE values because there ARE true values
Practice grounded:
- Th 10–12 — Objective facts about what is/isn’t good/evil
- DOD — Refuses false values because values can be objectively true/false
- Sterling’s (a)–(c) — Can distinguish true from false value propositions
- Th 14 — Valuing only virtue produces happiness BECAUSE virtue objectively is good
Without moral realism:
- Why shouldn’t you desire externals? Just cultural conditioning? Personal preference?
- “Only virtue is good” becomes “I/we prefer valuing only virtue”
- No way to say someone’s value judgments are “wrong”
- Practice loses normative force — just one life strategy among many
HOW THE SIX WORK TOGETHER TO GROUND PRACTICE
The Five-Step Method requires all six:
STEP 1: RECEPTION
- Substance dualism: Impression appears to soul/prohairesis (distinct from body)
- Correspondence theory: Impression makes claim about reality
STEP 2: RECOGNITION
- Substance dualism: Can separate external event / impression / prohairesis (you)
- Correspondence theory: Recognize impression AS claim (not as reality)
STEP 3: PAUSE
- Libertarian free will: Can genuinely choose to interrupt automatic assent
- Substance dualism: Will (part of soul) can act independently of physical causation
STEP 4: EXAMINATION
- Foundationalism: Test impression against foundational truths (Th 10–12)
- Correspondence theory: Does impression-claim match reality?
- Ethical intuitionism: Can know if impression matches moral reality
- Moral realism: There ARE moral facts to match against
STEP 5: DECISION
- Libertarian free will: Genuinely choose to assent or refuse
- Ethical intuitionism: Having recognized the truth directly, the rational faculty cannot voluntarily endorse what it has seen to be false
- Moral realism: Refusing false values because there are true values
WITHOUT THESE COMMITMENTS, PRACTICE COLLAPSES
Remove substance dualism:
- → No principled self/external distinction
- → Dichotomy of control loses ontological ground
- → Can’t separate “you” from body/events
Remove libertarian free will:
- → Choice is illusory (determinism)
- → Can’t genuinely pause or decide
- → Practice becomes descriptive of determined process, not transformative training
Remove ethical intuitionism:
- → Can’t KNOW if examination reveals truth
- → Moral knowledge requires controversial inference
- → Step 4 stalls without epistemic access to moral reality
Remove foundationalism:
- → What do you test impressions against?
- → Infinite regress or circular reasoning
- → No secure standard for examination
Remove correspondence theory:
- → No objective sense of “false impression”
- → Can’t test if impression matches reality
- → Truth becomes subjective or relativistic
Remove moral realism:
- → “Only virtue is good” is just preference
- → No objective basis for refusing false values
- → Practice loses normative force
STERLING’S ACHIEVEMENT
He showed:
1. Stoic practice requires philosophical foundations
- Can’t just be “techniques”
- Ethics depends on metaphysics/epistemology
2. Ancient Stoic physics won’t work (Inwood is right)
- Materialism, cosmic determinism, pneuma are indefensible
3. But classical philosophy provides alternative foundations
- Six commitments from defensible classical tradition
- Ground the practice without ancient physics
- Make Stoicism philosophically rigorous
4. This is “Core Stoicism”
- Core = Essential practice (Five Steps, DOD, DOA)
- Stoicism = Grounded in systematic philosophy
- Not pragmatic techniques, but philosophically-founded way of life
THE COMPLETE GROUNDING STRUCTURE
SIX PHILOSOPHICAL COMMITMENTS (Foundations)
↓
THEOREMS TH 1–29 (Derived systematic structure)
↓
ENCHIRIDION 1–2 (Practice instructions)
↓
FIVE-STEP METHOD (Operationalization)
↓
DOD & DOA (Disciplines of practice)
↓
PROSOCHE (Vigilance enabling practice)
↓
CHARACTER TRANSFORMATION (Outcome)
↓
EUDAIMONIA (Goal)
Every level depends on the level above.
Remove foundations → Structure collapses.
Sterling’s contribution: Provided defensible foundations for ancient practice.
This answers Inwood’s challenge: Yes, ancient physics is obsolete. But Stoic practice can be grounded in defensible classical philosophy instead. Sterling did exactly this.
Status: Dave Kelly’s independent contribution. The Five-Step Method (Reception, Recognition, Pause, Examination, Decision) is Dave Kelly’s instrument. Sterling’s six commitments are Sterling’s theoretical identification. The mapping of commitments to steps is Dave Kelly’s analytical work. Governing propositions sourced to Core Stoicism (Sterling). Inwood citation: Stoicism: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford University Press, 2018), p. xxiv.