Free Will?

Priscilla 2022-04-22 07:01:08

This drama of Loki brings me back to the question I thought about when I was a child: Does free will exist? I thought before that whether our existence is just a brain wave signal of high-dimensional creatures, or a predetermined result. Program, everything goes to a fixed end point. Although we think of our actions as our own will, it may also be predetermined. When we don't even have a free will to resist the "will arranger", we will feel very scary. Loki is also like this. He found that there is no free will in the sacred timeline. TVA tailors, so Loki's fate is to be caught after the New York War, and finally killed by Thanos, just like the old Loki concluded: Loki's fate is to be lonely. Later, it was found that the will controlled by TVA could be resisted. The female version of Rocky Sylvie hid in the doomsday to fight against TVA, realizing her will to a certain extent. But Loki ruthlessly broke this fairy tale about free will in the end: Sylvie's resistance was actually arranged, which is very creepy. Although Kang the Last Conqueror says his foreknowledge is limited, who knows if there is a higher controller above it? So is there free will at all? Loki doesn't answer that question. Does that require knowing whether there is free will? I think Loki is inclined. As long as you follow your own ideas and dare to rebel against the rule-makers, at least it is a kind of subjective freedom for yourself.

View more about Loki reviews

Extended Reading

Loki quotes

  • [In a presidential suit]

    Loki: Oh, come on! What did you expect?

  • Loki: You're taking me somewhere to kill me?

    Mobius: No, I'm taking you some place to talk.

    Loki: Well, I don't like to talk.

    Mobius: But you do like to lie. Which you just did, 'cause we both know you love to talk.