Following the notation of Moroianu's *Lectures on Kähler Geometry*, we let $(M,g,\Omega,J)$ denote the metric $g$, symplectic form $\Omega$, and complex structure $J$ of a Kähler manifold $M$, satisfying the compatibility condition $g(X,Y) = g(JX,JY) = \Omega(X,JY)$ for vector fields $X,Y$. Supposing further that $V\lrcorner\ \Omega = dH$ for $H$ a real-valued (explicitly biholomorphic) Hamiltonian potential $H:M\to\mathbb R$, such that V is real-holomorphic (is this correct?) then we immediately have the following Lie derivative relations: $$ \mathcal{L}_V \Omega = \mathcal{L}_V J = 0\quad\Rightarrow\quad \mathcal{L}_V g = 0 $$ or equivalently this proposition: >> **Proposition** Every real-holomorphic Hamiltonian vector field on a Kähler manifold is Killing. This proposition is (in essence) a Hamiltonian converse to the following proposition of Moroianu's >> **Proposition 9.5** *(Moroianu)* Every Killing vector field on a compact Kähler manifold is real holomorphic. Three specific questions are asked: **Q1** Is the proposition $\mathcal{L}_V g = 0$ correct (for the assumptions given)? **Q2** Where can it be found in the literature? **Q3** Does it "trivially" imply $\mathcal{L}_V \mathcal{R} = 0$, where $\mathcal{R}$ is the scalar curvature? **Note:** My numerical calculations suggest $\mathcal{L}_V \mathcal{R} \ne 0$. The <i>practical</i> question is simply which is buggy: the formal reasoning associated to the proposition, or the code, or the "trivial" expectation that **Q3**'s answer is "yes"? Deficiencies in my understanding of terms like "real-holomorphic" are plausible (and even likely). Answers/references/general advice are *very* welcome!