So, other objections to Siri Theory ...
1) Siri lost the papal office since he accepted Vatican II.
2) Siri was a coward.
3) Was Siri unaware that he was the pope? If not, how could that be?
Respondeo:
1) There are many people who accept V2 without pertinaciously adhering to any error in it, much less to any heretical proposition. Simply being in material error about V2 does cause loss of membership (and therefore loss of office) in the Church. No one has ever produced a single heretical proposition ever uttered by Siri.
2) So? That has nothing to do with whether he was pope. Apart from that, it's very easy for our valiant armchair keyboard warriors to declare this. Let's say someone threatened to exterminate your entire extended family or threatened to kill all bishops and priests behind the Iron curtain or to nuke the Vatican (various opinions about the nature of said threat that are out there). Until you're in that situation, just shut up about accusing anyone else of cowardice. I'd like to think that I wouldn't cave, and perhaps if he felt it was a matter of faith, where they threatened these things unless he rejected Christ, perhaps at that point he would not have given in. But just to be pope? He may have thought it was just political and not a matter of faith, where they didn't like him for one reason or another. He's reported to have said in response to these threats: "If you don't want me, pick someone else." He may not really have wanted to be pope anyway. He didn't think perhaps that this would result in the selection of an AntiPope, but just some other guy they wanted instead of him (as per his comment).
3) You can be mistaken about an assessment of your own state, and in fact often are. So Siri gets threatened. He steps down. Since in his mind, he may not really have wanted to be pope anyway and knowing that he has free will ... he judged it inside his own mind to have been an act of free will. And it was on one level. Even if I'm under grave pressure, I could still say no ... and whatever I do would still ultimately be an act of free will, and in one sense a free choice. But that is not the sense or meaning of Canon Law, when it says that resignations made under duress are invalid. EVERY RESIGNATION just as every human act is an act of FREE WILL. Even if I had a gun to my head, I could say no and take the bullet. Of course, in that case they would have forced me to "resign" via the bullet anyway. Yet that is not what is intended. Basically, if you WOULD NOT HAVE RESIGNED were it not for the duress, that's legally not considered a free resignation (even if ultimately in an absolutely sense it's still an act of free will, since you can say no). But that line between the two can blur in your own mind, especially if you were reluctant to accept in the first place.