Post
by burnt2ashleys » Mon Dec 09, 2019 7:41 pm
I explained this to a handful of acquaintances some months ago. Turns out that a Philosophy teacher that has a master's degree teaches more!
So, Plato. Greek guy, thought a lot, wrote a bunch. He thought so hard that he theorized that everything that exists is an imperfect copy of some ideal original. Every single human is an imperfect copy of an ideal human counterpart hiding somewhere in this wacky abstract "World of Ideas", so on and so forth for every conceivable thing. Does that mean there's an ideal me out there? Technically? It's likely. However, that is not analogous to the Ultimate Self that Homestuck employs (nor is it your ultimate self, the best person you can be at any given moment). The Ultimate Self is a mechanic of possibly(?) SBURB wherein god-tier players who have succeeded and are growing into their roles as gods start to get merged with every other self that they inhabit, à la Rose from the Davesprite timeline being subsumed into the Alpha timeline Rose. Since it's every self, this explains why Dirk, for example, became "evil" when the phenomenon affected him, the amount of "good" Dirks out there was not as large as the amount of "evil" Dirks, so he averaged out at "evil".
Now, this would imply many things, including "Wouldn't this destroy the player?" / "Wouldn't this make an already-powerful god even more powerful?" / "Wouldn't this make them unpunishable by the clock?", to which I'd conjecture that this is for a greater manner of control over the variables (players) from Skaia. From the get-go, god-tiers are less a gift, and more a job. You can do anything you want! But if you step out of line to kill or die for something, you will be removed from the equation. Rebelling against Skaia (*ahem*) would earn you a Just death, and dying for someone or something else would earn you a Heroic death. Either way, lives whosoever gets by without really making an impact. You play your part, you get to live. Autonomy and dissent earn you naught but death. Add to this Skaia's most likely motivation, self-replication, and you get that the Ultimate Self is but one of many tools used by Skaia to control its variables in any given situation so as to continue existing and seeding copies of itself, ad infinitum. As to why this isn't addressed narratively, one can wager that it's because the narration changed hands to Dirk, someone who has already achieved his Ultimate Self and whose motivations are wholly in line with Skaia's (he wants to keep existing, he wants to keep "the story" going, and so he'll set out to create another SBURB session! How convenient for Skaia). The situation is grim if you take Rose's old self's perspective here.