Wednesday, March 05, 2008

Lost Theory

Edit: Well the most recent viewing of Lost leaves this theory pretty banged up, although, the part about Ben could still be true, but now I'm not as sure as I was about his character. We'll see what happens. As Jason said in one of the comments below, half the fun of watching this type of show is having theoretical conversations about the show.

I am a huge fan of the television show Lost and I have been developing a theory about the subject matter of the show. If you are not completely caught up on the show then you may want to stop reading here, for what I am about to type will obviously spoil your enjoyment of the show.

I want to lay out the two pieces of data from the show that are very conflicted, which have led me to my current theory. I call it the Wardrobe Theory.

First of all, there are conflicting stories about the actual airplane and the passengers of Oceanic 815. In seasons 1 & 2 we saw the airplane break apart, with pieces landing on the island and various people surviving the crash. However, the last two seasons we have heard that all of the passengers on Oceanic flight 815 in fact died, and recently we have seen news coverage of a fully intact plane, submerged, with all of the passengers dead inside.

This leaves us with two versions of what happened.

1. The entire plane went under water and all of the passengers onboard perished.
2. The plane broke apart and quite a few individuals survived.

At first glance, both of these versions of reality cannot be correct, but maybe they can be.

My proposal is that the island is a point of contact between two parallel worlds. We could call them world A and world B, and the island is some sort of wormhole or intersection between the two.

Following this theory, in world A the plane takes off in Australia and breaks apart over the island and passengers survive. In world B the airplane does not break apart but travels through the intersection of worlds to crash land in the ocean in world A.

The reason I call this the wardrobe theory is that one of the recent characters names Charlotte Staples Lewis is a play on the name Clive Staples Lewis, who is more affectionately known as C .S. Lewis, who of course, wrote the Lion, the Witch, and Wardrobe. In this book, the children find a wardrobe that allows them to go into another world, all the while no time in their home world ever passes.

This theory can explain why we have two different versions of the plane and fate of passengers.

This theory opens up the possibility of some sort of time fluctuation as well as Desmond's "consciousness" travel.

This theory may also explain why mothers are dying on the island. It could be that the island is actually a real location in world B and some condition in that world is hostile to pregnant women from world A.

This theory also posits a reasonable motivation for the 3 experts (Daniel, Charlotte, and Miles) to investigate the island and or world B. Daniel Faraday is there to uncover all the scientific information; Charlotte is there to investigate the humanity, and Miles the spirituality.

This theory also makes sense of the reference to Steven Hawking, who did a lot of study on wormholes. If you don't remember the reference, think of the jewelry lady who talks to Desmond about the determinacy of the future; her name was Ms. Hawking.

Furthermore, the entire show is filled with many other references to philosophers and scientists. Generally speaking, many of the scientists referenced in the show studied in the area of space-time continuum, and some scientists within the context of quantum mechanics posit many world theories. Philosophers, also engage in modal logic, which centers on possible world semantics. Though the two ideas (possible worlds and alternate worlds) are not synonymous, it is not a stretch to think the writers of the show have been in contact with these ideas.

Finally, I think that Ben is really the good guy or rather the lesser of two evils. In general, he is an important and powerful person, who is keeping this island a secret from those who would exploit it. For Ben, the end justifies the means, and so he is willing to lie, cheat, steal, and murder in order for the greater good to be accomplished. That is why he killed the Dharma people, why he is currently so slippery, and why he is having Sayid hunt other people down in the future.

I would love to see your ideas about this theory: where its weak spots are, what is doesn’t explain, or any other thoughts about it. I hope you are enjoying the show as much as I am.

Here is a link to a website that details some of the connections between the characters of the show and their real life referents.

8 comments:

TWH said...

Okay, I'll take the bait. I like your Wardrobe Theory. I've thought before that the island reminds me of the woods between the worlds in the Chronicles of Narnia. Remember the lamppost? Is the plane a type of lamppost? How do people get onto the island? Is it a critical mass of collective bad karma or something? After all, everyone is seriously messed up. They've all killed someone, caused someone's death, had a horrible relationship with important people in their lives, ruined their life or someone else's life or been wasted, strung out, guilt ridden, shame filled or something bad. All of them appear to be given chances to make things right or better or to make good without someone interfering or controlling (except maybe Ben and the others which is, of course, a big hole in that theory).

Mills Family said...

I've got to think about his....I have speculated something like this myself. This could also explain the time issue. That the time that those on the island are experiencing may not be true time. I also saw the CS Lewis connection....crazy good!
I also thinks this island may hold people back from reproducing because of this time issue....I'll get back to you.
Chantell

adam said...

hey jon...
i'm not a huge follower of Lost. I appreciate it and like it... it reminds me alot of MYST the old pc game. just an off the wall thought in my random encounters with the show...
Do you think they are OR ever will do the DALLAS thing: where the whole season is simply one person's dream/thought process and all the clues you're learning for the year (ex: 2 planes) were simply one person's imagination?
Just curious.

adam

Jason said...

Great theory. I also have a hunch that Ben is somewhat of a "good" guy, but the show does extremely well in making you flip-flop back and forth between his "good"-ness and "bad"-ness. I actually missed the C.S. Lewis reference, but that makes a lot of sense. I have also enjoyed the philosopher and scientist references, which point very strongly to the importance of their views for the story. One question I had when reading your story comes from the second episode of this season. Frank, the helicopter pilot, makes a comment that the pilot of the intact flight 815 on the ocean floor is not the same person as the original pilot. If the drowned body is different from the original pilot, how would that fit into your wormhole theory?

This show is so good mainly because it causes discussions like these. Thursday nights are definitely a highlight of my week.

Jonathan H said...

Jason, according to my theory the pilot found at the bottom of the ocean is from World B, but his body is found in World A. In world A, the possible pilots were Frank or Seth, but in World B there may have been a completely different pilot. It could be anybody.

Adam, I have wondered that, and if they pulled that at the end of the show I would be pretty disappointed. It seems like a lot to work through to end with a question about what was real...etc. With all of the references to quantum physics and such I would be surprised if they asked a question that was more of a Cartesian question than one of more modern philosophy.

After last night's episode, I really think Ben is the good guy protecting the island from Charles Widmore.

Brooks found a really neat theory called Mirror Moon Matter, which has some striking similarities to my own ideas.

It can be found here: http://mirrormattermoon.blogspot.com/

Glad you guys are enjoying the show as well as the conversation going on about it.

Jason said...

I just thought of the fact that in last week's episode Desmond was at Camp Millar. Camp Millar is also a location in Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials books, which revolve around the central idea that there are many parallel universes stacked on top of one another. There are a few "windows" between the universes that the characters travel in and out of. I think that also supports your theory really well.

Lucas said...

This would also explain why in the future scenes the "Oceanic 6" are always talking about "going back" and how they "don't belong here." They could be talking about going back to world A.

Anonymous said...

I don't think its that involved. In fact I think its very simple, there is just one thing we need to know and all will be reveled.

Adam