I finished watching the first season of Loki this morning. The background is that Loki took the Rubik's Cube to escape during the escort after the New York War, and the Time and Space Administration directly deleted this behavior in order to prevent the occurrence of wrong events. time branch. They believe that there is a sacred time line, and all events on this time line have been regulated, and all events that escaped this sacred time will be captured by them and sent personnel to delete them artificially. . And this kind of behavior caused me to think - does fate really exist? Does the meaning of destiny mean that it has everything written, and all my actions are within his given limits, or that all my actions are actually my own, and my actions make up my destiny? The answer it gave me was that fate was already written. This must be contrary to the established cognition of the world, because the public believes that fate can be changed through hard work. If fate cannot be changed, then what is the meaning of everything we do? He threw out this grand proposition, but used a very perfunctory method to fool the topic without giving any answers or ideas. His method of expression is to set up three time guardians, who will guard this timeline, so they set up a time mutation authority to detect and delete all behaviors escaping from the sacred timeline. In order for people to obtain free will, Loki is going to overthrow the Time Mutation Authority, to overthrow the three so-called Time Guardians. The final episode sets up another suspense - these three timekeepers aren't the final boss. A scientist from the 31st century discovers the existence of a multiverse, which triggers a chaotic war between the universes. In order to maintain stability, the scientist decides to become God himself, to make the universe cycle according to his known time - the sacred time line, so that no one will discover the multiverse to avoid the war caused by the discovery. It's like the ancient emperor's policy of ignoring the people, blindfolding the eyes of the subjects, blocking their brains, so that they don't know how big the sky is outside, how wide the ground is, so no one wants to expand, no one wants to resist, everything It's all right. This method of processing returns to the original thinking, and I can only understand it as a digression. Is fate a given or undetermined? Can it be changed at all? And I think that can change.
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