However, the series argues against Eren's nihilism through the coalition of the Alliance. Characters like Hange, Levi, Armin, and the remaining Scouts represent the struggle to break the cycle, even when the odds are mathematically impossible. Their refusal to accept Eren’s solution is a testament to the moral complexity of the show. The finale does not offer a clear-cut victory; the Alliance stops the Rumbling, but they cannot undo the damage, nor can they erase the hate that fueled it. The freedom they achieve is not the utopian freedom Eren sought, but a messy, painful freedom that requires living with the consequences of the past.
The Philosophy of AoT’s Ending – Freedom vs. Genocide attack on titan season 4 part 3
“He wanted freedom. He became the enemy. #AoTFinalSeason #AttackOnTitan #ErenJaeger” However, the series argues against Eren's nihilism through
Clips of the Rumbling, Eren’s Founding Titan, Mikasa crying, Armin screaming. The finale does not offer a clear-cut victory;
However, the series argues against Eren's nihilism through the coalition of the Alliance. Characters like Hange, Levi, Armin, and the remaining Scouts represent the struggle to break the cycle, even when the odds are mathematically impossible. Their refusal to accept Eren’s solution is a testament to the moral complexity of the show. The finale does not offer a clear-cut victory; the Alliance stops the Rumbling, but they cannot undo the damage, nor can they erase the hate that fueled it. The freedom they achieve is not the utopian freedom Eren sought, but a messy, painful freedom that requires living with the consequences of the past.
The Philosophy of AoT’s Ending – Freedom vs. Genocide
“He wanted freedom. He became the enemy. #AoTFinalSeason #AttackOnTitan #ErenJaeger”
Clips of the Rumbling, Eren’s Founding Titan, Mikasa crying, Armin screaming.