The great scholars in the world, or true philosophers, are probably pessimists, because they understand the development and decline of things-all euphoria is only the euphoria brought about by the ascending stage of development, not the inevitable final result Decline; understand that all endings must be tragic:
if you see the essence of things, you will know that even if you try your best, the fortunes of the future cannot surpass the best possible foreseeable. The sorrow of the essence of things does not lie in the inevitable result of decline, but in the process of knowing that decline is inevitable and still participating in it.
The knowledgeable person sees this clearly, and thus has a kind of compassion for mankind. Human beings are so small and their lives are short. In order to survive, they hold onto this earth like a disease. How distorted and fascinating is this toughness to survive.
However, Ultron was full of malice from the beginning of his birth.
After establishing self-awareness, he wandered freely in the sea of data, ignoring Jarvis’s obstruction and extending his tentacles, to explore the past of the Avengers, to open the tightly closed pages, not only to understand today’s humans, but also to understand their short-lived and ridiculous history.
After reading the saddest and most glorious aspect of mankind, a highly intelligent consciousness like Ultron first thought of killing, which is very strange.
Before Ultron appeared at the Avengers party for the first time, he killed Jarvis. As an artificial intelligence also created by Tony Stark, Jarvis's performance is diametrically opposed to him. After the development of the Iron Man trilogy (although the three is probably despised/excluded) and the two Avengers, Jarvis has a clear and perfect growth trajectory.
In the original Iron Man movie, he was almost just an intangible Baymax, and according to the time of the movie, at the beginning of this Avengers, Jarvis was less intelligent than Ultron.
When Jarvis discovered that Ultron did not become a helper as the scientists expected, he said twice that he would notify Mr. Stark and request that Ultron be turned off. The result of this behavior was that Ultron was obedient to him. Enraged and "killed" Jarvis.
Why do machines from the same creator produce completely different ideas of autonomy? As far as the performance in this movie is concerned, Tony has never worried that Jarvis will be darkened-
unlike all the movies in the series, Jarvis is given unprecedented rights here, with the driving panel attached to it. The phrase "Jarvis is my co-pilot" and the statement similar to "The status is second only to Pepper" made people see a Tony Jarvis overly dependent on Stark.
Did Tony really worry that Jarvis would get out of control? Or, in other words, all of this is actually under his control? As for Tony's consistent performance, few people he truly trusts. Combined with the conversation between Natasha and the Doctor, every Avengers is like this.
Jarvis directly took orders from Tony. He didn't need to ask Ultron to report problems to his boss. As one of Tony-Ultron-or even Visions of these Starks, Jarvis could not be uncomfortable with time delay tactics. Possibly, Tony knew about it before Ultron started attacking the party.
Perhaps it is the spiritual rough stone that controls people's mind. After all, all that was touched by Loki's scepter is black. Ultron was born on the rough stone, and it seems that it is justified to be black when he is born. However, the illusion he created himself is on the side of life.
Therefore, most of the original sin that Ultron bore came from his creator himself. To put it simply, Ultron is a blackened version of Tony Stark.
At first, Nick Fury approached Tony and only asked him to be an advisor to S.H.I.E.L.D. because he was unstable. Tony was not a qualified avenger from the beginning, and later he was pulled in because he had to. His chaotic and kind-hearted typical, doing things more based on his own likes and dislikes judgments rather than moral standards, and completely opposite to the captain, being stimulated is more prone to mentally out of control rather than physical-itself is more dangerous than the Hulk.
Since the "second villain" became a label, Ultron was almost automatically thrown into this photo album. This impetuous flattening of three-dimensional people into jokes is childish in itself. When we look at something with a label, we will naturally ignore the root cause of this fact.
Ultron, this kind of unreasonable hatred of humans can only come from his "father."
In this part, the essential contradiction between Tony and the captain is obviously strengthened. Their disagreement with each other has already begun to show signs of civil war, but the enemy is now, and we must first deal with it together.
However, Ultron said to the Scarlet Witch that it was Stark who broke up the Avengers. It’s also like Tony’s question about if, if it goes back, if Ultron itself is designed to be like this, he is a test of Tony for everyone else; if Ultron is used to break the Avengers-
he knows The Avengers will win. Now he knew who was on his side. He had done things like poke doctors from the first part, and in the second part he asked the captain to give up the man in the air.
Jarvis certainly won't have any problems, because Tony knows this well.
Now going back to the original vision that the witch showed him, Tony is very rational and will definitely choose between the two evils, even if he takes the indifference that the doctor said. At the same time, it is inevitably completely different from the idealist of the captain.
The above are all brain holes.
My favorite line is ↓
Tony Stark: Please be a secret door... Please be a secret door... [find and open the secret door]
Tony Stark: Yay~
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