This season has taken an obvious and blunt turn, which makes it necessary to use the character's love brain to not be able to grasp the selfishness in order to promote the plot. This is not an exposition of human nature, it is just a patch to round out the logic that cannot be better connected. The drama that logic is to watch has lost a certain degree of convincing
1. Why Jonah, who went back to the beginning to prevent his father from committing suicide, was so easily persuaded by Claudia to give up when he found out that he was deceived by Adam to trigger the plot? Jonah has never experienced a world without himself, why would he Believe Claudia's claim that a world without him is not a good thing? And why Claudia, who claims to have experienced the cycle without Jonah, can return to the cycle with Jonah, doesn't that prove that this cycle can indeed be changed?
2. Why did the middle-aged Jonah want to go back to 2019? He also stalled at home for a few days without doing anything, and didn't want to force Martha away six hours before the last day, if as he said he came back to save Martha, to prevent young Jonah from becoming him It looks like the young Jonah has already experienced the death of Martha. According to the logic, the middle-aged Jonah should also know that Martha was not killed by the end of the world, but the fact that she was shot by Adam. She's illogical in a warehouse
3. There was no direct cause of Regina's cancer throughout the cycle, so why did Claudia feel that she could save her daughter by sacrificing her father's continued cycle of fate? Claudia and the young Jonah and the early middle-aged Jonah have actually kept the whole cycle running the same, and didn't even prevent a few children from being killed, so what is the difference between Adam and Adam making a different choice? ?
4. Why do you still need to build a time machine when there are already caves and tunnels? Why do you still need to use children to do experiments when there are time machines? Are children's experiments a cycle that started in the first place to ensure the success of the time machine? Is it possible that only black holes with the existence of God particles can go to any point in time?
5. Why did it all start with Mikel's suicide? The direct cause of Mikel's disappearance at a young age was the disappearance of the red-haired Eric, because of the drugs that Eric hid and the parent-teacher meeting held to find Eric. The disappearance caused Mikel and everyone to enter the cave, and the reason for Eric's disappearance came from Noah's experiment. All this has nothing to do with the suicide of adult Mikel, so the suicide itself is in this circular logic. It's pointless.
6. Why did middle-aged Noah, who has been in the future for 33 years, leave his wife and go back to the past to continue to obey Adam, and what did he do to keep the cycle unchanged? The strong motivation for finding Charlotte was not revealed in the early stage, and he should be the one who least wants the cycle to end, because if there is no cycle, he will never meet Elizabeth, Elizabeth and Charlotte will disappear, and he will get the gram at the end. After Laudia's notes, she learned that Charlotte was his daughter, so why did she still give her a pocket watch in the first season?
I hope that the logic can also be approached in the case of more and more pits, looking forward to the third season
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