The Six Commitments and the Rational Faculty — A Dialogue
Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Analysis, instrument architecture, and prompts: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic).
Q: Should my constant inner dialogue be at the level of the six commitments?
No. And the corpus is precise about why.
The six commitments are the philosophical ground that makes the system defensible. They are what you reach for when the system is challenged — when someone argues that Epictetan practice rests on ancient physics you can no longer accept, or that free will is an illusion, or that moral facts don’t exist. The commitments are the bedrock answer to those challenges. They are not the operative vocabulary of daily practice.
The operative vocabulary of daily practice is the theorem level — specifically the three foundations and the propositions that flow from them. In ordinary circumstances the inner dialogue runs on those: this is not in my control; this impression is making a claim; the claim is false — this is not a genuine evil; what is my role here, and what does it require of me; I aim at this preferred indifferent, with reservation.
That is the level Epictetus himself works at in the Enchiridion. He does not say “remember C1 — substance dualism requires that your body be ontologically distinct from your prohairesis.” He says “my leg you will fetter, but my moral purpose not even Zeus himself has power to overcome.” The commitment is present and load-bearing, but it operates silently, as background. The foreground is the practical verdict.
Sterling’s own note in Core Stoicism applies here: the theorems are meant to show how the ideas are connected and how they flow — not to be rehearsed as a checklist in real time. The one exception is the pre-Reception orientation — C5 and C6 held as a standing background before any impression arrives. But even those are not active deliberation. They are the settled terrain the trained agent already inhabits. The training builds them in. The practice runs on them without naming them.
So the answer: the six commitments should be understood thoroughly, held securely, and available for defense when the system is challenged. The constant inner dialogue operates at the level of the theorems and the Five Steps — at the level Epictetus himself speaks.
Q: Isn’t it important to know which commitments are operating at each of the Five Steps?
Yes — and that is precisely Dave Kelly’s contribution, not something derivable from the corpus alone.
The commitment-to-step mapping establishes which commitments are load-bearing at which moment of the act. That mapping is analytically important for three reasons.
For the practitioner. Knowing that C2 is operative at the Pause and the Decision — and not merely “generally present” — tells you what specifically fails when the act breaks down at those moments. If the Pause collapses, the failure is not a failure of moral realism or correspondence theory. It is a failure of genuine origination. Locating the failure precisely tells you what needs to be rebuilt. A practitioner who knows only the theorems can identify that something went wrong. A practitioner who knows the commitment-to-step mapping can identify where in the act it went wrong and which philosophical condition was not operative.
For the training discipline. The askesis is not generic. Different steps require different things from the agent. Reception and Recognition require the standing orientation of C5 and C6 — built through prior habituation, not retrieved in the moment. The Pause requires C2 specifically — the capacity to interrupt the automatic assent sequence, which is a function of libertarian origination, not of moral knowledge. The Examination requires C3, C4, and C6 simultaneously. The Decision requires C2 and C5 together. Training that does not distinguish these moments trains everything generically and strengthens nothing specifically.
For understanding why the act can fail at one step and not another. The CDS runs confirm this: commitment density is uneven and concentrated. C3 is Operative only at direct-recognition moments. C6 is Operative only at maximal-stakes clauses. The act is not uniformly vulnerable — it has specific failure points at specific steps, each traceable to the commitment that is load-bearing there and nowhere else. That is architecturally important knowledge, and it distinguishes a corpus-governed practice from a general Stoic orientation.
The commitment-to-step mapping is what makes the Five Steps more than a procedure. It makes them a precision instrument.
Q: Are the commitments the conditional basis for the rational function?
Yes. That is the exact formulation.
The six commitments are not conclusions the rational faculty reaches. They are the conditions under which the rational faculty can function as what it claims to be — a faculty that examines impressions, issues verdicts, and guarantees eudaimonia through correct assent.
C1 — Substance Dualism is the condition under which there is a rational faculty at all, distinct from the body and from the impressions it receives. Without it, the “faculty that examines” is just another physical process among physical processes, with no real boundary between examiner and examined. The rational function requires a real examiner.
C2 — Libertarian Free Will is the condition under which the rational faculty’s acts are genuinely its own. Without it, the examination produces a verdict but no one issues it — the process runs to a determined conclusion and the faculty is not functioning, only occurring. The rational function requires genuine origination at every act of assent.
C3 — Ethical Intuitionism is the condition under which the rational faculty can complete its examination without an infinite regress of prior arguments. The examination must terminate somewhere — at a moral fact directly apprehended. Without C3, the faculty never reaches a verdict; it only reaches the next argument. The rational function requires a stopping point that is not itself in need of examination.
C4 — Foundationalism is the condition under which the examination has a stable, non-negotiable standard. Without it, the standard is revisable by whatever else the agent believes, and the faculty’s verdicts are only as reliable as the coherence of the surrounding belief set. The rational function requires bedrock.
C5 — Correspondence Theory of Truth is the condition under which the faculty’s verdicts mean something determinate. The examination tests whether the impression corresponds to reality. Without C5, “corresponds to reality” has no content. The rational function requires a truth-standard external to the faculty’s own preferences.
C6 — Moral Realism is the condition under which the examination is examining something real rather than something constructed. Without it, “virtue is the only genuine good” is a useful organizing principle rather than a fact, and the entire corrective demand of Stoic practice loses its authority. The rational function requires that what it examines be genuinely there to be examined.
Strip any one of the six and the rational faculty does not function less well. It fails to be the kind of thing Epictetus says it is — the self-contemplating faculty that alone can issue authoritative verdicts about impressions, guarantee eudaimonia through correct assent, and make the instruction of the Enchiridion something more than advice.
The six commitments are therefore not add-ons to the rational faculty. They are its conditional basis — what must be true for it to be what it is claimed to be.
Q: So there is an awareness of C5 and C6 before an impression is received?
Yes — and the CDS runs established this precisely.
The pre-Reception orientation is not an awareness in the sense of active deliberation. It is a settled background condition — the trained disposition the agent already inhabits before any specific impression arrives.
C6 is operative before Reception because the agent already holds, as a settled fact about the structure of reality, that only virtue is genuinely good and only vice genuinely evil, and that externals carry no genuine moral weight of their own. This is not retrieved when the impression arrives. It is already there. The impression arrives into a world where that fact is already settled.
C5 is operative before Reception because the agent already holds that impressions, when they arrive, will be propositional — they will assert something about moral reality, making them either accurate or inaccurate representations, not mere psychological events. When the impression arrives, it arrives as a claim, not as a brute stimulus, because the correspondence framework was already in place.
This separates two kinds of commitment operation. Active operation — the commitment does specific work at a specific step, as C2 does at the Pause and Decision, and as C3, C4, and C6 do at Examination. Background operation — the commitment constitutes the standing orientation within which the act is possible at all. C5 and C6 operate this way before Reception. They are not activated by the arriving impression; they are the condition under which the impression can be received as the kind of thing the Five Steps can then engage.
The prior rendering that listed C5 and C6 at Step One was not wrong, but it was imprecise. The more accurate formulation is that C5 and C6 are pre-operative — constituting the background against which Reception is possible — and then continue threading through subsequent steps in their active mode.
C5 and C6 before Reception are the awareness of a man who already knows where he is standing, not the awareness of a man consulting a map.
Q: Substance Dualism becomes operative at the Recognition step. How does that operate together with Correspondence Theory?
At Recognition, C1 and C5 are both operative, but they are doing different work on different aspects of the same event. The impression has already arrived at Reception, where C5 and C6 were operative as the standing background orientation. Recognition is the step at which the agent explicitly performs the three-way separation: event, impression, self. That act of separation is where C1 and C5 become active rather than merely background.
C1 operates on the separation itself. Recognition is the moment the agent explicitly locates himself as distinct from the impression and from the event that generated it. The impression presented itself at Reception as though it were simply what is the case — as though the event and the impression and the agent’s response were all one continuous thing. Recognition breaks that continuity. The agent identifies the impression as a claim arriving from outside, addressed to him, distinct from him. That act of explicit separation requires that the agent actually be distinct from the impression — not merely treating himself as distinct for practical purposes, but being ontologically other than what has been presented. C1 is the condition under which the separation is real rather than performed. Without C1, the three-way distinction collapses: the agent, the impression, and the event are all continuous physical process, and Recognition has no content — there is nothing to separate because there is no distinct subject doing the separating.
C5 operates on the status of what is being separated. Recognition names the impression explicitly as a claim rather than as reality. The agent does not merely notice that an impression has arrived — he registers it as the kind of thing that asserts something, that has a propositional structure, that either corresponds to how things actually are or fails to. C5 is what gives the impression that status. Without C5, the impression has no truth value and the act of naming it as a claim has no content — there is nothing for the correspondence standard to apply to. The agent can separate himself from it (C1) but cannot register what he has separated himself from as the kind of thing that can be right or wrong.
How they operate together. C1 makes the separation real by supplying a genuinely distinct subject. C5 makes the separation meaningful by specifying what the separated item is — a truth-claim about moral reality, not a brute event. Together they constitute the full structure of Recognition: the agent who is really distinct from the impression (C1) explicitly registers it as a claim that either corresponds to reality or does not (C5). Neither is sufficient without the other. C1 without C5 produces a real separation with no determinate content on the impression’s side — the agent has distanced himself from something but that something is not yet the kind of thing the Five Steps can engage. C5 without C1 produces a truth-claim arriving into a system with no distinct subject to receive it as a presentation — the propositional content is there but there is no one standing apart from it to register it as such. Together: a distinct examining subject explicitly names what has arrived as a truth-claim addressed to him. That is Recognition.
Q: C2 operates at the Pause. How does it operate with C1?
C1 and C2 are the two commitments most directly concerned with the agent himself — what he is and what he does — and their joint operation at the Pause is the condition under which the Five Steps are a practice rather than a description of mechanism.
C1 at the Pause. The Pause is the interruption of the automatic assent sequence. The impression arrives with force — it presents itself as obviously true, as requiring an immediate response. The Pause is the moment the agent does not simply follow that momentum. That non-following requires someone who is not identical with the process being interrupted. A physical system does not interrupt itself. The rational faculty can interrupt the sequence precisely because it is not part of the sequence — it is a distinct substance that can hold the moment open rather than being carried forward by it. That is C1’s work at the Pause: it is the ontological ground of the gap the Pause opens. Without C1, there is no real distance between the agent and the impression driving the sequence, and the interruption has no subject capable of performing it.
C2 at the Pause. Opening that gap is a genuine act of origination. The Pause is not a mechanical delay built into the system. It is something the agent does — something he could fail to do, something that is genuinely his. Without C2, the Pause is either guaranteed by the system’s design, in which case it is not the agent’s act, or it never really occurs, in which case the sequence simply runs to its conclusion. C2 is what makes the Pause an achievement rather than a feature. The agent genuinely originates the interruption — holds open what the impression’s momentum would close.
How they operate together. C1 supplies the ontological space — the real distance between agent and impression within which a Pause is possible at all. C2 supplies the causal act — the genuine origination that actually opens and holds that space for this specific impression in this specific moment. Neither is sufficient without the other. Without C1, there is no space to open — the agent and the impression are not distinct enough for a real gap to exist between them. Without C2, the space exists in principle but nothing opens it in practice — the agent has the capacity but does not exercise it as a genuine originating act. Together: the agent who is really distinct from the impression genuinely acts to hold the moment open. That is the Pause.
Why this matters for the Five Steps as a whole. C1 and C2 together constitute what it means for there to be an agent in the Stoic sense at all. C1 answers what the agent is. C2 answers what the agent does. Being a distinct faculty without genuine origination produces a spectator, not a practitioner. Genuine origination without a distinct faculty produces an origination that belongs to no one. This is why C1 and C2 are the dissolution conditions in the CPA instrument — the two commitments whose joint absence produces Full Dissolution. What is left without both is a process with no subject. Epictetan practice addressed to that process is not practice — it is a description of mechanism.
Q: Examination step is where C3, C4, and C6 integrate.
Confirmed. The three commitments at Examination are C3 (Ethical Intuitionism), C4 (Foundationalism), and C6 (Moral Realism). Their integration at this step is the most complex joint operation in the Five Steps — three commitments doing distinct work simultaneously, each necessary to the others’ effectiveness.
C6 — Moral Realism at Examination. C6 supplies the target. The Examination is not a comparison of the impression against the agent’s preferences, or against social consensus, or against what would be useful to believe. It is a test against moral facts that exist independently of all of those. Only virtue is genuinely good. Only vice is genuinely evil. Everything else is indifferent. Those facts are what the impression is measured against. Without C6, the Examination has no fixed target. The question “is this impression accurate?” becomes “is this impression useful?” The examination degenerates into preference management.
C4 — Foundationalism at Examination. C4 supplies the structure. The moral facts C6 establishes are organized in a dependency hierarchy — some are foundational, others derived from them, others derived from those. The agent does not test the impression against every moral proposition simultaneously — he applies the primary rule first (is this internal or external?) and the answer at that level determines everything downstream. Without C4, the agent has moral facts but no principled structure for deploying them. A sophisticated rationalization could always find some proposition to support the impression’s false claim. Foundationalism is what makes the primary rule primary and non-negotiable.
C3 — Ethical Intuitionism at Examination. C3 supplies the access. The Examination must terminate. If each moral fact requires a prior argument to establish it, the Examination never completes. C3 is the commitment that allows the Examination to close: foundational moral truths are directly apprehensible by the rational faculty without requiring a prior chain of inference. This is what Epictetus means in Discourses 4.1 when he says the agent who genuinely holds the classification should settle the question on the spot, by intuition, just as in a case involving sight. The man who “thinks it over” has the verbal form of the dogma without genuine apprehension.
How the three integrate. All three are operative simultaneously at every moment of the Examination, each addressing a different dimension of the same act. C6 answers what the examination is about: moral facts that are objectively real. C4 answers how the examination is structured: against a fixed hierarchical standard with a non-negotiable primary rule. C3 answers how the examination completes: by direct apprehension of the foundational moral truth the impression is being tested against.
Remove any one and the Examination fails in a specific way. Without C6: the agent examines the impression against nothing real. Without C4: the examination is vulnerable to rationalization and never reaches a non-negotiable verdict. Without C3: the examination never terminates, or terminates only at the level of an argument that could be countered. The three failure modes are: contentless, unfocused, and vulnerable to rationalization respectively.
Q: C2 operates at the Decision step to decide whether the impression corresponds to reality?
Yes — and the precise relationship between C2 and C5 at Decision is what answers this fully.
C2 at Decision. The Examination has issued a verdict. The open moment is still open. The agent must now close it — must actually withhold assent from the false impression and formulate the true proposition that replaces it. That closing is a genuine act of origination. It is not the automatic output of the examination’s conclusion. The verdict indicates the correct direction. C2 is what moves the agent in that direction as a real act rather than a determined consequence.
Both paths remain genuinely available at Decision. The agent who has examined the impression and seen it is false can still assent to it. The examination does not compel the Decision. C2 is precisely what makes the Decision something the agent does — something he could do otherwise — rather than something the examination produces. The moral character of the act belongs to the Decision, not to the Examination, because the Decision is where genuine origination occurs. Virtue consists of rational acts of will. The Decision is the act of will. C2 is what makes it one.
C5 at Decision. C2 alone does not answer the question of what the Decision is oriented toward. C5 specifies the character of what C2 originates. The Decision is not a free choice between equally weighted options. It is a truth-aligning act — the agent brings his assent into correspondence with what the Examination revealed. The moral fact was already there before the impression arrived. The Examination found it. The Decision is the act of pointing the agent’s cognitive state toward that fact rather than toward the false impression. Without C5, the Decision is an origination aimed at nothing fixed. The agent chooses — and what he chooses is correspondence. He chooses truth.
How they operate together. C2 makes the Decision an act. C5 makes it a truth-aligning act. Neither alone is sufficient. C2 without C5 produces genuine origination with no determinate standard — the agent closes the open moment but the closing is not constrained by correspondence to reality. C5 without C2 produces a correct correspondence conclusion that no one genuinely chose — the process arrives at truth but it was not an act of will. Together they produce the only thing that closes the Five Steps correctly: the agent genuinely originates a movement of his assent toward the moral fact the Examination revealed.
C1 at Decision. One further commitment is operative here, and its role is precise. C1 locates the Decision in the right place — in the distinct rational faculty, not in the body or in the external circumstances that produced the impression. The Decision belongs to the agent in the most literal sense. This is why Epictetus can say “my moral purpose not even Zeus himself has power to overcome” — the Decision is located in the one faculty no external power reaches, precisely because that faculty is a distinct substance. C2 makes the Decision a real act. C5 makes it a truth-aligning act. C1 ensures it is located where it must be — in the only domain that is genuinely the agent’s own.
Theoretical framework: Grant C. Sterling, Eastern Illinois University. Analysis, instrument architecture, and prompts: Dave Kelly, 2026. Prose rendering: Claude (Anthropic).
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