fdsasdf_p
Well-Known Member
- Apr 24, 2021
- 1,173
- 5,270
I can see where you're coming from. It's how everyone defines "sacrifice", which further entangles with "What was Nodoka's remaining goal when she whispered to Sensei in that timeline?" and "What really prompted Ami to kill Nodoka?".This is why I don't see her actions as a sacrifice.
One can view all her actions during this Halloween as "still experimenting, finally getting some results but it's something bad, but eventually accepting where her actions would lead her to like an objective scientist". This portrays Nodoka as her usual archetype, a mad scientist with actions all powered by interests in learning instead of helping others, but also with an acute mindset to accept what comes after once she flies too close to the sun. What this train of thoughts would paint Nodoka as is that her being killed in that timeline was solely due to her own pursuit in science and nothing more, regardless of whether her action "helped" Sensei and/or the time fuckery business or not. This will be her main disqualifier to claim the title "sacrifice". Or rather, she sacrificed for her own science, the kind of sacrifice we don't give a shit about. Under this lens, she at best might be considered as a martyr for Kyoko, but to say she sacrificed for Sensei would be a stretch.
On the other hand, one can also view Nodoka's final action and assume that she, at that point, was no longer pursuing science (because she finally successfully figured out something but she didn't like what she found) and really was there to help/rescue Sensei, even if that wasn't what landed her in that timeline. The key point here is to think about "Will Nodoka still die if she didn't whisper those exact words to Sensei?" and "Does getting killed right in front of Sensei a part of her goal?". If those whispered words were Ami's trigger and Nodoka knew that beforehand, this implies that Nodoka valued what her final action would bring more than her life. Of course, a counter point can still be made here that we can't really discern what Nodoka's final motive is, and claiming that she wanted to help Sensei at the end instead of anything scientific is merely wishful thinking. I'd agree on that 100% if she only asked Sensei to stop herself from researching without asking Sensei to avoid rooftop or leaving Kumon-mi at all costs. In addition, the second question, "Does getting killed right in front of Sensei a part of her goal?", stems from a suspicion of mine that Nodoka might've let herself killed right in front of Sensei incidentally right before he was about to "consider settling down in this timeline for real", potentially serving as a very violent awakening. This might address your question of "Why Nodoka didn't just go outside to talk to Sensei", and these altogether will be her main qualifiers to claim the title "sacrifice", as this train of thought associates her death with her final actions, which we assume that it wasn't merely research-based.
I also acknowledge that assigning anything good onto this smartass is pretty difficult when her track record is that ugly; even her idea of "being of help to others" might be something only she herself agrees and nobody else does. But, I'd like to think that at her final moments, her reunion with Sensei was genuine, and she did try to disclose something vital to not just herself. Whether these link to her death and thus count as sacrificing for others is entirely up to you.
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