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Avatars: Machiavellian/Nihilistic Bastards?

  • Avatar of Undead_Prince

    Undead_Prince

    [1]Jul 21, 2008
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    Was surprised to see the avatars' outlook on Aang's problem in the finale. What's with the whole "ACHIEVE GOAL BY ANY MEANS NECESSARY" machiavellism? Combined with the "Guru"'s utterly nihilistic approach (have to shed all traits of humanity to achieve Avatar State) this creates a rather disgusting Ubermensch, who is

    1) ready to do absolutely anything to meet his ends,

    2) completely dehumanized, does not love/care for anybody or anything, and

    3) Uber-powerful!!

    Does this not strike you as odd and in fact Evil?? That's the Anti-christ right there!!

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  • Avatar of PhilosopherSo

    PhilosopherSo

    [2]Jul 21, 2008
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    um... no

    Watching all the nations tortured killed enslaved and imprisoned and doing nothing about it is the trait of man of good character?

    I agreed with Aangs choice to find an alternative to killing but you can't act like it was an easy one.

    If I have a gun and I see a man about to stab a child and I have only a split second to think... am I a bigger monster for killing the man or for allowing the child to die because I was more worried about my own spiritual state? I'm not saying that there aren't alternatives but you have to see that being in a position like that is not easy. The argument for killing is understandable.

    What if what Aang had tried didn't work? He was gambling with thousands of lives.
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  • Avatar of BaiMaoRieji

    BaiMaoRieji

    [3]Jul 21, 2008
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    Undead_Prince wrote:

    Was surprised to see the avatars' outlook on Aang's problem in the finale. What's with the whole "ACHIEVE GOAL BY ANY MEANS NECESSARY" machiavellism? Combined with the "Guru"'s utterly nihilistic approach (have to shed all traits of humanity to achieve Avatar State) this creates a rather disgusting Ubermensch, who is

    1) ready to do absolutely anything to meet his ends,

    2) completely dehumanized, does not love/care for anybody or anything, and

    3) Uber-powerful!!

    Does this not strike you as odd and in fact Evil?? That's the Anti-christ right there!!

    1 - "meeting ends" involves keeping the world in balance and making sure nobody tries to kill off everyone else

    2 - Dialogue from "Escape from the Spirit World."

    Yangchen: The Avatar must be compassionate towards all people, and the only way to do that is to live with them. The Avatar must experience sadness... Anger... Joy... and happiness.

    Dehumanized? I think not.

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  • Avatar of scottd2242

    scottd2242

    [4]Jul 21, 2008
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    I thought the past Avatars were telling Aang that idealism is a good thing, but don't let it get you or anyone else killed.

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  • Avatar of Undead_Prince

    Undead_Prince

    [5]Jul 21, 2008
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    BaiMaoRieji wrote:

    1 - "meeting ends" involves keeping the world in balance and making sure nobody tries to kill off everyone else

    2 - Dialogue from "Escape from the Spirit World."

    Yangchen: The Avatar must be compassionate towards all people, and the only way to do that is to live with them. The Avatar must experience sadness... Anger... Joy... and happiness.

    Dehumanized? I think not.

    From "The Guru":

    "Guru Pathik: The Thought chakra is located at the crown of the head. It deals with pure cosmic energy and is blocked by earthly attachment. Meditate on what attaches you to this world... Now, let all of those attachments go. Let them flow down the river. Forgotten.

    Aang: (startled) What? Why would I let go of Katara? I...I..I love her.

    Guru Pathik: (reasonably) Learn to let her go, or you cannot let the pure cosmic energy flow in from the universe.

    Aang: (crossly) Why would I choose cosmic energy over Katara? How could it be a bad thing that I feel an attachment to her?

    Guru Pathik: (firmly) You must learn to let go.

    ...

    Guru Pathik: (calling after him) No Aang! By choosing attachment, you have locked the chakra! (Aang draws to a stop) If you leave now you won't be able to go into the Avatar State at all!"

    From "Crossroads of Destiny":

    "Aang: Well, I met with this Guru who was supposed to help me master the avatar state, and control this great power. But to do it, I had to let go of someone I love, and I just couldn't.

    Iroh: Perfection and power are overrated. I think you were very wise to choose happiness and love."

    That was one of the central problems of the series' protagonist. Whether to choose power over humanity. People like Ozai and Azula choose power; people like Aang and Iroh choose humanity. One might also draw Christian or Buddhist parallels here, though I'd prefer not to. The point is, in order to become the Avatar one needs to cease being human. And this is in fact continuously demonstrated in the series, with the Avatar ("Avatar State") being totally ruthless and inhuman. I had the impression that Avatars learned to control this ruthlessness with wisdom, much like Aang was taught by the monks. In "Sozin's Comet", however, it turned out that the past Avatars in fact succumbed to the lure of power, and embraced the philosophy of "the ends justify the means". It reminded me of how Anakin Skywalker was pushed to the Dark Side by the machiavellian ideology of the Jedi Council.

    In fact, it took the authors a barely believable plot device to overcome this obstacle and make Aang go into Avatar State without shedding all his earthly attachments. I mean, can you believe that all he really needed was a sharp kick in the back? Talk about cop-outs...

    The final point here is that once the Avatar sheds all his earthly attachments, he'd probably stop caring about "balance" as well. Moreover, what if the "balance" starts shifting towards goodness, peace etc.? Would the Avatar be required to serve as an agent of chaos and destruction in order to restore the "balance" of Yin/Yang/Good/Evil/Whatever?

    PhilosopherSo wrote:
    Watching all the nations tortured killed enslaved and imprisoned and doing nothing about it is the trait of man of good character? If I have a gun and I see a man about to stab a child and I have only a split second to think... am I a bigger monster for killing the man or for allowing the child to die because I was more worried about my own spiritual state?

    Okay then, how about killing a child to save two children? Or killing 500,000 innocent people to save 1,000,000? Or cutting up one man for body parts to cure 2 or 3 other persons from a lethal illness? Or to cure 10 other persons from a non-lethal, but very painful and horrible disease? These are the sorts of questions that are extremely hard to answer for a moral person, and extremely easy for a pragmatic/machiavellian. In fact, in the most democratic and humane states the law does not take from the rich and give to the poor in equal share, though some might consider that humane. While you enjoy your donuts and computers, children in Uganda are starving to death, and wouldn't it be justifiable and humane to take all the "excess" food/machinery etc. from the rich countries and give it to the third world? See how many people agree to that, though. Some might even call you a communist. And we all know where the communist ideology finished up (i.e. most horrible crimes in the name of most lofty ideals).

    This is not about "spiritual state" or feeling good about yourself. This is about good and evil, pure and simple. Is it moral to do an evil act to achieve good ends? As they say, the road to Hell is paved with good intentions.

    The Avatars answer this question far too simply, which betrays them as inhumane powermongers. Whereas it was, IMHO, not too hard to find some sort of an alternative to killing Ozai - even without Spirit-bending, they could have just restrained him like they did with Azula. Once he's immobilised the problem's basically solved. Although forcing someone to lead a Man in the Iron Mask-like existence in a prison for the rest of his life is pretty harsh too, it's still better than taking his life - and please note that capital punishment has long been abolished in all European countries, no matter the person's crimes, so it's even more weird when supposedly good characters on a supposedly children's show preach the opposite ideal.

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  • Avatar of zakabbas

    zakabbas

    [6]Jul 21, 2008
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    uhhh......what now?
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  • Avatar of jakndaxluver

    jakndaxluver

    [7]Jul 21, 2008
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    ROFLMAO

    Avatars = Anti-Christ--that's the funniest thing I've heard in a long time!! ... Oh, wait, you're serious?

    First of all, morality isn't all black and white. Have you ever heard the term "a fate worse than death"? While I strongly believe that all life is sacred, just as Aang and the Air Nomads did, I think I'd rather die than rot in prison for the rest of my life, especially if I couldn't eat, move or take a dump because of restraints placed on me.

    And I fail to see credibility in your argument that past Avatars succumbed to the "lure of power". Kuruk was inactive, and lost the woman he loved; Kyoshi indirectly killed Chin the Conqueror, and brought an era of peace; Roku spared Sozin, and the world was plunged into a thousand-year war. None of these Avatars were power-hungry. Kyoshi did what she had to to protect her people. Are you trying to tell me that you wouldn't take a life to protect someone you love, if the only other option was his or her death?

    There were some things you were right about, though; the questions you asked about sacrificing a smaller number to save a larger number are indeed hard questions to answer. And personally, I would love to send some of my country's prosperity to people who need it, both the homeless here at home and starving masses overseas. Hell, one of the top five problems here is obesity, while one of the top five problems there is starvation, and that has always bothered me. However, I'm getting off topic.

    To reiterate what I've said, morality is not all black and white; there are many shades of gray. In most cases, things are a lose-lose situation, and you must choose the lesser of two evils. Kill a man to save a boy, or kill a boy to save a hunudred men? The Avatars didn't know there was a way to stop Ozai without killing him, and they gave Aang advice based on their own past experiences.

    It's easy to pretend to have the moral high ground, and proclaim that you would never commit an atrocity against another human being, but let's face it; no one can say what they would do in a situation until they have experienced it. Until you have been in a position where you have only a second to think before you MUST act, you cannot accurately predict what you would do.

    It's like that cocky freshman who was in my class last semester; during a lockdown, he was acting up instead of being quiet and following the procedure. He was talking about how if this was a real lockdown, and a crazed gunman stormed in, he'd kick his ass. I'm sure most of us have run into someone like that, and we've all had the same thought: "Yeah, right, you'd piss your pants and cry for your mommy."

    Oh boy, looks like I've started rambling again. Anyway, I believe we're all overthinking this. However, I disagree that Avatar is a "children's" show. My belief in this regard can be easily summed up by this quote:

    "It's important to understand the distinction between 'kiddie' and 'fun for all the family'; the latter is stuff anyone can enjoy as long as they're not the kind of slack-jawed sociopath-in-waiting who refuses to look at any game that doesn't have at least three police officers worth of blood on-screen at all times" - Yahtzee Croshaw, on LEGO Indy.

    True, it's about a video game, but I feel it can just as easily describe books, shows, movies, etc. as well.
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  • Avatar of fire_wheels

    fire_wheels

    [8]Jul 21, 2008
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    honestly, this a cartoon show on Nickelodeon and you're using words like inhumane, nihilistic, and anti-christ to describe it, do you see any irony here.

    and simply, imagine if all the past avatars just agreed with Aang and told him not to kill the Firelord...where would all the drama go? the whole point of that was to further increase Aang's internal conflict and in the end, to make his own choice, and to leave his legacy as the avatar that ended the 100 year war without violence. I mean, Iroh even gives an explanation to this.

    and the thing with the chakras, that was to master the avatar state, Aang could still go into it. Reinjuring his wound alerted and reminded him that his life was in danger and he reacted by going into the avatar state.

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  • Avatar of mark426

    mark426

    [9]Jul 21, 2008
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    fire_wheels wrote:

    honestly, this a cartoon show on Nickelodeon and you're using words like inhumane, nihilistic, and anti-christ to describe it, do you see any irony here.

    and simply, imagine if all the past avatars just agreed with Aang and told him not to kill the Firelord...where would all the drama go? the whole point of that was to further increase Aang's internal conflict and in the end, to make his own choice, and to leave his legacy as the avatar that ended the 100 year war without violence. I mean, Iroh even gives an explanation to this.

    and the thing with the chakras, that was to master the avatar state, Aang could still go into it. Reinjuring his wound alerted and reminded him that his life was in danger and he reacted by going into the avatar state.

    The Guru: If you leave now, you won't be able to go into the Avatar State at all!
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  • Avatar of fire_wheels

    fire_wheels

    [10]Jul 21, 2008
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    ..yet he did
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  • Avatar of mark426

    mark426

    [11]Jul 21, 2008
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    fire_wheels wrote:
    ..yet he did
    I know. That's what I don't understand.
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    picaboomman

    [12]Jul 21, 2008
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    i had to gogle search two of the word from the title
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  • Avatar of fire_wheels

    fire_wheels

    [13]Jul 21, 2008
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    huh, but they show you what Aang does. he meditates and unlocks the last chakra when he's inside the crystal tent by ignoring that Katara is in danger.
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  • Avatar of Undead_Prince

    Undead_Prince

    [14]Jul 21, 2008
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    jakndaxluver wrote:
    ROFLMAO Avatars = Anti-Christ--that's the funniest thing I've heard in a long time!! ... Oh, wait, you're serious?

    Yeah, not so funny once you actually stop to think about it.

    The Avatar is by all means a god in ATLA universe - he can do whatever he wants, without anyone being able to stop him. A god who disregards all human affection and all human values, with the excepion of "keeping the balance". To keep this balance, he will do anything, by definition including murder, mass destruction, or even genocide. Even if he did this in the name of good, it would be highly questionable from a moral perspective, and should such an entity arrive in our world, most would probably consider him nothing more than an omnipotent tyrant set to forcefully impose his understanding of what is good on the rest of the world.

    However, it gets even more complicated once we stop to consider what is actually included in the values the Avatar is sworn to uphold. What is "balance"? Taken from the Buddhist perspective, and from simple logic as well, this concept is beyond moral notions of good and evil. Sozin upset the balance by unleashing a global invasion; but the balance might be just as upset by peaceful assimilation of nations into a global state, and by changing the ruling regimes from monarchies and autocracies to democracies. Should in this case the Avatar interfere in order to restore the status quo? Should he forever keep humanity separated into four nations, ruled by petty kings? If "balance" refers to morality, should he be preventing the triumph of good over evil?

    In this respect the Avatar reminds me very much of Robert Sheckley's "Watchbird", about robotic guardians of the peace programmed to punish crime according to a few laconic criteria. The idea proved not only worthless but dangerous, as the watchbirds, highly intelligent and powerful but completely devoid of human sense and values, began interpreting instructions in ways unforeseen by their human creators, and harmful to humanity.

    The moral of the story is that justice cannot be inhuman. And the Avatar is precisely that - valuing the abstract and vague notion of "balance" over human lives.

    jakndaxluver wrote:
    And I fail to see credibility in your argument that past Avatars succumbed to the "lure of power"... The Avatars didn't know there was a way to stop Ozai without killing him, and they gave Aang advice based on their own past experiences.

    All their advice boiled down to "do whatever it takes to achieve your goal". If they were speaking from their own experience, then they have been actively applying this principle while alive. For all of their supposed wisdom, none of them actually took the time to examine the situation more thoroughly, nor did they take Aang's humanism seriously enough to at least momentarily doubt their own ruthless approach.

    And I think that's what the authors were actually trying to say, and that's why they introduced the "lion-turtle" with its Spirit-bending - as an alternative to the entire Avatar business. All previous Avatars resolved their problems with brute force, and apparently Aang was the first to actually consider humanism as an option - which is why he was chosen to bring back to the world the art of Spirit-bending - an art which had become forgotten once the Avatar had appeared.

    jakndaxluver wrote:
    Until you have been in a position where you have only a second to think before you MUST act, you cannot accurately predict what you would do.

    But that's precisely NOT the case; Aang was out to resolve his moral dilemma well before facing the Fire Lord. And for the most part, he did resolve it before the battle started, so that when he was taking the critical decision his mind was basically already made up.

    jakndaxluver wrote:
    I think I'd rather die than rot in prison for the rest of my life, especially if I couldn't eat, move or take a dump because of restraints placed on me.

    Who said anything about such a level of restraint? Ordinary benders may well be kept in regular prisons, as The Boiling Rock showed us; and for the uber-powerful there is Spirit-bending to make them harmless. And regular confinement is by far preferable to the death penalty, as I am sure any criminal would agree.

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    KikitheFiend

    [15]Jul 21, 2008
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    If you have actually read The Prince you would know that "the end justifies the means" only when used for the benefit of the collective. The advice given by the avatars was only to be used as a last resort, and at the time it would have been the only way to end the war, thus save the world. To say that the avatars wished to encourage machiavellian concepts in Aang, is to take the dialogue out of context.

    Machiavelli also tells us "If an injury has to be done to a man, it should be so severe that his vengeance need not be feared". Aang achieved this..... it would not have been any different had he killed the Fire Lord.

    As for the Pathik; it was not detachment from the world but from desire and earthly longings for the world. He encouraged Aang to sacrifice his own wishes for the greater good.

    Edited on 07/21/2008 11:35am
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  • Avatar of Undead_Prince

    Undead_Prince

    [16]Jul 21, 2008
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    fire_wheels wrote:
    huh, but they show you what Aang does. he meditates and unlocks the last chakra when he's inside the crystal tent by ignoring that Katara is in danger.


    Precisely. By the book, the only way to achieve Avatar State is by shedding all earthly attachments - i.e. all that makes us human. In order to save Katara, Aang was read to destoy his love for her - but conveniently was stopped by Azula's lightning. In the finale, so that Aang could kick ass and still get the girl, the authors managed to circumvent this requirement by introducing the concept of opening one's Thought Chakra by a sharp kick in the back (what happened during Aang's fight with Ozai).
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  • Avatar of fire_wheels

    fire_wheels

    [17]Jul 21, 2008
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    Undead_Prince wrote:
    Yeah, not so funny once you actually stop to think about it.

    No, it's not funny when someone is actually serious about ideas this ridiculous. Again, cartoon show for kids on Nickelodeon.

    All you're doing is speculating on what could happen, because none of this has happened, nor was there ever any intent by the creators of anything being represented that way or happening that way.

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    edmasterchaos

    [18]Jul 21, 2008
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    Well, it hasn't been confirmed if their fathers were married, but it hasn't been denied, so we can't be sure.
    No idea what "Machiavellian/Nihilistic"

    The concept of the Avatar is a god that resides in a human, the Avatar could just be a huge god in the sky that kills people who commit crimes, but no, the Avatar is a godly spirit that resides in a human being, so that it can find compassion, and understanding of a human's desire and potential.

    Honestly, if it wasn't for lifebending, killing Ozai would have been the best option, the man was too powerful, Iroh is slightly more powerful than him, and Iroh can easly take down an army, so it's easy to assume that Ozai would escape rather easly with his firebending.

    I could go on, but meh, it's just a tv show that ended.

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  • Avatar of fire_wheels

    fire_wheels

    [19]Jul 21, 2008
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    Undead_Prince wrote:
    fire_wheels wrote:
    huh, but they show you what Aang does. he meditates and unlocks the last chakra when he's inside the crystal tent by ignoring that Katara is in danger.
    Precisely. By the book, the only way to achieve Avatar State is by shedding all earthly attachments - i.e. all that makes us human. In order to save Katara, Aang was read to destoy his love for her - but conveniently was stopped by Azula's lightning. In the finale, so that Aang could kick ass and still get the girl, the authors managed to circumvent this requirement by introducing the concept of opening one's Thought Chakra by a sharp kick in the back (what happened during Aang's fight with Ozai).

    wha, I was replying to mark

    mark426 wrote:
    I know. That's what I don't understand.

    kikithefiend wrote:
    If you have actually read The Prince you would know that "the end justifies the means" only when used for the benefit of the collective. The advice given by the avatars was only to be used as a last resort, and at the time it would have been the only way to end the war, thus save the world. To say that the avatars wished to encourage machiavellian concepts in Aang, is to take the dialogue out of context.

    Machiavelli also tells us "If an injury has to be done to a man, it should be so severe that his vengeance need not be feared". Aang achieved this..... it would not have been any different had he killed the Fire Lord.

    As for the Pathik; it was not detachment from the world but from desire and earthly longings for the world. He encouraged Aang to sacrifice his own wishes for the greater good.

    k, this person explains it well. end discussion

    Edited on 07/21/2008 11:56am
    Edited 2 total times.
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  • Avatar of Undead_Prince

    Undead_Prince

    [20]Jul 21, 2008
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    KikitheFiend wrote:

    If you have actually read The Prince you would know that "the end justifies the means" only when used for the benefit of the collective.

    Ha ha, yes, the collective. Need I say fascism, or communism, or something like the French revolution? Doing something for the supposed benefit of the collective (i.e. majority) does not automatically make it moral.
    KikitheFiend wrote:
    The advice given by the avatars was only to be used as a last resort, and at the time it would have been the only way to end the war, thus save the world.
    It was not "last resort" advice; it was the only advice they offered. To them, killing Ozai didn't even seem like a problem. They did not propose, nor did they seriously think about, any alternatives.
    KikitheFiend wrote:
    Machiavelli also tells us "If an injury has to be done to a man, it should be so severe that his vengeance need not be feared". Aang achieved this..... it would not have been any different had he killed the Fire Lord.
    I see you're serious with this, and the old Florentian almost has you in his sleazy clutches. What he's actually saying, is that if you for some reason need to screw someone over, better kill him so that he can't get back at you. If the gAang actually followed this evil advice, they would have killed both Ozai and Azula, along with any number of people who might have been harboring ill feelings towards them.
    KikitheFiend wrote:
    As for the Pathik; it was not detachment from the world but from desire and earthly longings for the world. He encouraged Aang to sacrifice his own wishes for the greater good.
    Detachment from earthly longings = detachment from the world. You can find this in both Christian and Buddhist tenets (both religions view this world as somewhat evil and tainted by sin, and the goal in both is to detach oneself from this world and transcend into a better place, Heaven or Nirvana). Sorry for bringing up religious parallels again, but it's hard not to when discussing a show so obviouly influenced by religious/ethical concepts.

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