“Love is of an infinite patience; Freedom is not. ” — Philosophy of Virtues, Mattos, J. C. de Abstract Philosophy has produced extensive accounts of love: as desire (Plato), as ordered will (Augustine), as practical duty (Kant), as attachment (Bowlby), as care (Heidegger), as recognition (Hegel), as robust concern (Frankfurt, Kolodny), as vision of the beloved (Jollimore), as love of the person as such (Velleman). None of these accounts derives love from a formal virtue architecture with an explicit inversion rule, specifies love’s structural inversion at both personal and institutional scales, or generates the classical triad Eros–Philia–Agape from a single formal principle. This paper presents the first derivation of love from the Ontological Virtue Formula V = F + D of the Philosophy of Virtues programme. The central formal claim is that love is the specific virtue in which the agent’s Freedom is directed toward the emergence and expression of another person’s Gift: Love = F + DGift (Other). Eight formal results follow. (T1) Love is a genuine virtue under the OVF; its inversion under V − F = −V is Control. (T2) The Three Modes Theorem: Eros, Philia, and Agape are formally distinct modes of DGift (Other) differing in directional structure, reciprocity condition, and ego-investment requirement; Agape admits a Withdrawal Postulate that distinguishes unconditional love from enabling destruction. (T3) The Love-Freedom Amplification Theorem: love is the only virtue for which sustained exercise produces dF/dt > 0 in a sufficiently formed agent, demonstrated through a structural three-case model. (T4) The Love-Augure Connection: the Augure’s Resonance Mechanism is Agape at the Dissolution Threshold. (T5) The Love-Immortality Connection: Relational Immortality (Type 13) is Love formally specified across time. (T6) The Love-Peace Connection: inner peace and Love are the inward and outward expressions of the same ego-dissolution. (T7) The Love-Holoviceosis Connection: institutionalised control-as-care is Love’s inversion at scale; a diagnostic negative case is analysed. (T8a–T8b) The Love-Sufficiency Theorem: Agape at the Dissolution Threshold is the dispositional ground from which all other virtues arise, where prudence is architectural-dispositional (clarity and correct orientation) rather than factually omniscient. Keywords: love; love theory; Eros; Philia; Agape; OVF; DFT; Gift; Freedom; Dissolution Threshold; Augure; Resonance; Holoviceosis; inner peace; Inversion Theorem; virtue; amplification; relational immortality; Kolodny; Jollimore; Velleman; Philosophy of Virtues; Alguilas-AI
José Caetano de Mattos (Sun,) studied this question.