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BY: Matthew Bortolin
Through Anakin's experience we can see that life is a vast web of cause and effect, conditioning all aspects of the universe. When we look at where we are right now we cannot say we got here all by ourselves. Whether in a prison or a penthouse, our upbringing, our education, even our nationality, all helped create our present location, status, personality, and state of mind. We cannot stand outside the network of cause and effect that is life. Rather, we are part of and conditioned by the perpetual movement of life.
Without the Emperor and his entire Sith legacy there would have been no threat to the Republic. There would have been no trade embargo of Naboo, no crisis in the Senate, no secession movement, no Clone Wars, and no destruction of the Jedi Order. Without the trade embargo of Naboo it is unlikely Anakin Skywalker would have ever found his way to the Jedi Temple, met Palpatine, and turned to the dark side. He had never turned to the dark side he would not have battled his son. His son, in fact, would have never been born had he not met Padmé. And their meeting was contingent on the trade embargo of Naboo. Anakin needed the trade embargo, needed the Clone Wars, and needed his son to put him in the position to save the galaxy. Had conditions not come together in such a way for Anakin he may never have destroyed the Emperor in Return of the Jedi.
Seen from this perspective, Vader's act of killing the Emperor began long before Luke was born. It began before Anakin was born and even before Palpatine was born. Each of their lives and actions played a crucial role in setting up Anakin's heroic act, but were all conditioned by their interaction with the world-and here conditioned by means nothing more than "influencing and becoming part of." All actions, all thoughts are conditioned by what has come before them and what is occurring simultaneously with them. I have described this as cause and effect-but that is not entirely accurate.
"Cause and effect" suggests a beginning and an end, with one thing clearly the cause and another clearly the effect, but the movement of life is continuous, without start and stop. The phrase cause and effect is also inadequate to describe life's intricate nexus of conditionality because it indicates only a single chain of events. Life, however, is not a two-dimensional line; it is multi-dimensional and conditioned from all directions. Everything has an impact on everything else. Consequently, life is, in a sense, guided by the interaction of conditions. Yet this gives only a partial, and overmechanized, picture of life, for there is another fact we need to consider: human will and action.
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