Do the Six Commitments Oppose Modern Marxism in Theory and Practice?
Do the Six Commitments Oppose Modern Marxism in Theory and Practice?
Based on Sterling’s Stoicism and the Six Philosophical Commitments. Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026.
Prompt: Do the six commitments oppose modern Marxism in theory and practice?
Yes, and the opposition is systematic rather than incidental. The six commitments and modern Marxism conflict at every foundational level — metaphysical, epistemological, ethical, and practical. The conflict is not between different answers to the same questions. It is between frameworks that disagree about what the questions are.
Substance Dualism vs. Marxist Materialism
Marxism is committed to dialectical materialism: reality is material through and through, consciousness is a product of material conditions, and the self is constituted by its social and economic relations. On this account, the agent is not prior to his circumstances — he is produced by them. Class position, mode of production, and historical forces shape who he is at a constitutive level.
Substance dualism denies this at the root. The agent is his rational faculty, which is ontologically distinct from all material conditions including body, social position, and economic circumstance. No external condition constitutes the self. The standing point — the prohairesis — is prior to all of this. A Marxist account of the self is precisely what substance dualism is designed to exclude.
Libertarian Free Will vs. Historical Determinism
Marxism holds that historical development follows deterministic laws — the dialectic of productive forces, class struggle, and historical necessity. Individual agency is real but subordinate to structural forces. The trajectory of history is not chosen by individual rational agents; it is driven by material contradictions that individuals instantiate but do not originate.
Libertarian free will asserts that the agent is the originating cause of his acts of assent, genuinely uncaused by prior material conditions. This is not merely a different account of freedom — it is a direct negation of historical determinism. If the agent genuinely originates his judgments, he cannot be explained as the product of his historical moment. The Marxist framework requires that individual consciousness be structurally explained. The libertarian free will commitment refuses structural explanation as constitutive of the agent.
Ethical Intuitionism vs. Class-Relative Morality
Marxism holds that moral ideas are part of the ideological superstructure — they reflect and serve the interests of the dominant class. There are no moral facts independent of historical and class position. What counts as just or unjust, right or wrong, is determined by the material interests of those who hold social power. Moral claims that present themselves as universal are, on the Marxist account, class ideology in disguise.
Ethical intuitionism holds that moral truths are necessary facts about reality, directly apprehended by the rational faculty, independent of what anyone believes or what class interests anyone serves. Theorem 10 — that virtue is the only genuine good — is not a class ideology. It is a moral fact. The rational faculty that apprehends it is not shaped by productive relations. The Marxist critique of morality as ideology is itself false on the intuitionist account, because it denies the possibility of non-ideological moral knowledge that intuitionism specifically claims.
Foundationalism vs. Dialectical Revisionism
Marxist dialectics holds that all positions are historically conditioned and subject to negation and supersession. There are no fixed foundational truths — the dialectic moves through contradiction toward historically determined syntheses. What counts as knowledge is itself historically relative.
Foundationalism holds that some propositions are self-evident necessary truths that do not require justification by appeal to something further, are not subject to historical revision, and are not conditioned by the position of the knower. Theorem 10 could not have been otherwise. 2+2=4 could not have been otherwise. The dialectic has no authority to supersede necessary truths. The foundationalist position is by design immune to the Marxist critique of fixed positions as historically conditioned ideology.
Correspondence Theory vs. Ideological Truth
On the Marxist account, what counts as true is shaped by social and material conditions. The correspondence of a proposition to reality is never a simple matter because what appears as reality is itself mediated by ideology. True consciousness is class consciousness — an understanding of one’s position within the productive system and its interests. False consciousness is the acceptance of the dominant ideology as universal truth.
Correspondence theory holds that a proposition is true if and only if it corresponds to reality, independently of who believes it, what class interests it serves, or what historical moment produces it. The Marxist account of false consciousness is itself a truth claim that presupposes correspondence theory — it claims that the worker’s beliefs fail to correspond to how things actually are. The Marxist cannot both deny correspondence theory and diagnose false consciousness, because the diagnosis requires the standard the theory provides.
Moral Realism vs. Historical Materialism’s Ethics
Moral realism holds that moral facts — that virtue is the only genuine good, that externals are indifferent — exist independently of what anyone believes, prefers, or constructs. These facts are not produced by social relations and cannot be revised by historical development.
Historical materialism holds that the good is historically variable, that justice is a class concept, and that communist society will produce a different moral vocabulary appropriate to its conditions. There are no eternal moral facts — morality is always the morality of a particular mode of production. On the Marxist account, Sterling’s claim that virtue is the only genuine good is either bourgeois ideology or a naïve philosophical abstraction. On Sterling’s account, the Marxist denial of objective moral facts leads directly to the conclusion that draws his most concentrated argument: if there are no objective moral facts, there is no basis for calling anything unjust, no basis for the Marxist critique of exploitation, and no reason why the proletariat’s interests should take precedence over the bourgeoisie’s. The Marxist project is morally self-undermining without moral realism.
The Practical Opposition
In practice the opposition is equally sharp. The Stoic framework locates the problem of human suffering entirely within the agent’s own false value judgments. Unhappiness is caused by assenting to impressions that present externals as genuine goods or evils. The solution is the correction of those judgments, available to the agent at every moment regardless of his material conditions. A slave can practice Stoicism. A prisoner can achieve eudaimonia. The external conditions of production, class position, and economic structure are all indifferents — appropriate objects of practical attention but not constitutive of the agent’s good or harm.
Marxism locates the problem of human suffering in the structure of productive relations. Alienation, exploitation, and false consciousness are products of material conditions that the individual cannot overcome through interior correction. The solution is collective political action to transform the material base. Individual interior work is at best secondary and at worst a distraction from the real source of suffering — or worse, a mechanism of accommodation that stabilizes an unjust system by making individuals content with their conditions rather than motivated to change them.
From the Stoic framework, the Marxist diagnosis is itself a false value judgment at a collective scale: the claim that material conditions are genuine evils and that external transformation is the genuine good. From the Marxist framework, the Stoic solution is ideology in the precise sense — it produces acceptance of material conditions by relocating the source of suffering in the individual’s own psychology rather than in the structure that produces the individual’s conditions.
The Two Frameworks Are Not in Dialogue
The two frameworks are not in dialogue. They are in fundamental opposition at every level — about what the self is, what knowledge is, what morality is, what truth is, and where human suffering comes from and what can be done about it. Every one of the six commitments contradicts a load-bearing element of the Marxist system. And the contradiction runs in both directions: Marxism, to sustain its own critique of exploitation and false consciousness, requires objective moral facts and a correspondence theory of truth — the very commitments it denies at the theoretical level. Sterling’s reconstruction is not one political position among others. It is a philosophical framework within which the Marxist project, as theory and as practice, is incoherent.
Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling. Analysis and text: Dave Kelly, 2026. Analytical judgments are Dave Kelly’s; prose rendering is Claude’s.