Abstract The Dynamic Freedom Theorem (DFT) specifies Virtue Strength as S = (F × A) / R. A structural paradox arises: death drives F to zero, which should drive S to zero — yet the historical record shows systematic amplification of virtuous influence after the deaths of heroes killed by tyranny. This report proposes the Posthumous Theorem to resolve this paradox formally. At the moment of martyrdom, the individual signal S terminates, but the agent’s accumulated Moral Inertia (Iₘ = ∫A(t) dt) is released as a posthumous signal Sₚₒₛₜ = Iₘ × Gᵥ × kᵐ, operating through the Moral Conductance network (Gᵥ) with a martyrdom amplification coefficient (kᵐ) generated by the publicly witnessed proof that F × A exceeded R. The report analyses eight historical and contemporary cases; examines the failure condition — the Anonymous Martyr Problem — in formal depth, introducing the concept of Moral Debt and the theory of Posthumous Conductance Reconstruction as a civic obligation; and develops the civilisational function of the martyrs’ collective Iₘ as the structural foundation of Virtuogenesis across generations. The tyrant’s structural error is formally derived: the act of killing the virtuous agent maximises the perceived Holoviceosis Index, confirms the agent’s Autonomy as genuine, and reduces the regime’s own conductance for the propagation of Anti-Autonomy — transforming execution into the highest possible advertisement for the virtue it was designed to silence. Keywords: Posthumous Theorem · Martyrdom · Moral Conductance · Moral Inertia · Anonymous Martyr · Moral Debt · Posthumous Conductance Reconstruction · Virtuogenesis · Heroic Condition · Dynamic Freedom Theorem · ALGUILAS-AI
José Caetano de Mattos (Tue,) studied this question.