Akasri wrote:Xar:
Hurley was seeing dead people off the island. But whether that was his own mind, or the MIB I'm not real clear on.
We know that the dead people Hurley saw off the island were not just his own mind playing tricks on him: Jacob implicitly confirmed that Hurley was really seeing the dead when they traveled together in the taxi ("The Incident"), and earlier on, when Jack went to visit Hurley in the mental institution, Hurley gave Jack a message from Charlie saying Jack would be "visited soon", which occurred in the form of Christian. I would go so far as to say that by confirming to Hurley that he is not crazy and that he truly sees the dead, Jacob implied (to the audience, at the very least) that those off-Island visions were part of his plan, or anyway they were "benevolent", so to speak. At the very least, Jacob was confirming that Hurley was really seeing the dead, not an impersonator.
Now, as far as I remember, the only dead people who have been seen off-Island (and not in dreams) were seen in the flashforwards, and they were Charlie, Ana Lucia and Christian (interestingly enough, Christian appeared in a suit in this off-Island appearance, despite appearing in a disheveled state to the people on the Island).
Now if the first part of this theory is right, then it suggests that the Charlie, Ana Lucia and Christian who have appeared off-Island were truly what they appeared to be, and were not simply disguises of the MIB. And if
that is true, then this seems to suggest that the MIB has not or could not leave the Island, whereas Jacob could. Certainly, the fact that
he wants to go home
, as said in "LA X", seems to support the idea that
the MIB is restricted in some fashion
. It should also be noted that none of the dead appeared off-Island to Locke, as far as I remember - despite his supposed importance for the Island itself.
It's not plausible to imagine that everything we've seen thus far was the MIB's doing; we know Jacob
had some plan, knew what was going to happen (the wooden ankh with the names of those losties who reached the temple clinches it, I would guess), and may have voluntarily chosen to die in order to further it (even Ben wonders why Jacob didn't defend himself when he stabbed him, and MIB's suggestion - that Jacob "knew he was beaten" - sounds very much like a dangerous assumption on his part).
It would stand to reason to imagine that some elements of all we know fit into Jacob's plan, and others fit into the MIB's plan; and if the speculation above is true, then one could already start distinguishing between the two based on the concept that those dead who appeared off-Island were not the MIB, were truly what they said they were, and may actually have spoken on Jacob's behalf.
Zarathustra, despite the similarities between Jacob and the MIB on one side, and the two figures you mention, I chose to avoid mentioning them because frankly, I doubt the writers will plunge headfirst into a religious debate - especially one which could be so controversial and which would be likely to ruin the series for a lot of people. Although I have to say that the similarities seem to be striking - especially concerning the whole attitude about
sinning, repentance and forgiveness
which the MIB has. However, rather than
Old Testament vs New Testament
, one of my theories sees MIB as
some sort of angel-figure who is charged with watching over Jacob and/or the Island, but who has become disgruntled with his job over time and now wishes he could be done with the whole thing so he could go home. Unfortunately, being prevented from both simply leaving and from killing Jacob himself, he had to work through proxy. It would also fit with the "security system" concept.
I'll go so far as to say that the rest of that theory (but this is purely speculation on my part) is that
Jacob's presence on the Island or in human form was some sort of punishment for him, but that over time, he has matured and changed considerably, leading him to feel kinship for humans, whereas his "guardian" was disdainful of them.
This could explain why Jacob seems to especially rely on "flawed" characters such as Jack, Sawyer, Sayid, Hurley and Kate.