| Wilhelm | |
|---|---|
| Game series | Xenosaga |
| First game | Xenosaga Episode I: Der Wille zur Macht |
| Voiced by (English) | Richard Cansino (Episode I) Jason Spisak (Episode II, III) Vic Mignogna (anime) |
| Voiced by (Japanese) | Nobuyuki Hiyama |
| Information | |
| Height | 170 cm (5' 7") |
| Weight | 54 kg (119 lbs) |
A character/reference from the Xenosaga series. is a Console role-playing game for the PlayStation 2 and the first title in the Xenosaga series English is a West Germanic language originating in England and is the First language for most people in the United Kingdom, the United States Richard Cansino (Born August 10, 1953 in Los Angeles, California) is a voice actor Jason Spisak is an American voice actor in Animation and Video games. Victor Joseph Mignogna (Italian Name Vittorio Giuseppe Mignogna (born August 27 in Greensburg, Pennsylvania) is a prolific American Voice is a language spoken by over 130 million people in Japan and in Japanese emigrant communities is a popular Seiyū born in Hatsukaichi Hiroshima, Japan. He is currently affiliated with Arts Vision. --> TC --> is primarily a series of Science fiction Wilhelm (ヴィルヘルム Wiruherumu?) is the mysterious founder and CEO of the largest interplanetary conglomerate, Vector Industries in the videogame Xenosaga. --> TC --> is primarily a series of Science fiction --> TC --> is primarily a series of Science fiction He also served as the Executive Committee Director of the Galaxy Federation, up to a decade ago. He is a major antagonist of the Xenosaga series. --> TC --> is primarily a series of Science fiction
Contents |
As explained in the Episode III Perfect Guide, Wilhelm is the bringer of the Eternal Recurrence. Eternal return (also known as " eternal recurrence " is a concept which posits that the Universe has been recurring and will continue to recur in a He is described by the series' creators as the "transcendent man"[1]whose responsibility it is to revisit all the joys, pain, and travails experienced by all who have ever lived as a means of affirming the existence of the universe and preventing its psychic collapse. The Übermensch ( German; English: Overman, Superman) is a Concept in the Philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche. [2]
The cosmic collapse, a general dissipation of consciousness, was made inevitable by the resonation of chaos' force of anima with human will. Wilhelm is described as being naturally attuned to the flow of consciousness[3], which allows him to discern the onset of its dissipation and its ultimate consequence to all reality throughout all dimensions. Taking the role of Protector of Lower Dimensional Space, Wilhelm endeavors to bring about eternal recurrence as an alternative to absolute interdimensional collapse. For this purpose he sets into motion three organizations, two seemingly rival companies with divergent business interests and a religious institution by which to restrain the effect of chaos' social influence. (see Lemegeton) These are Vector Industries, Hyams Group, and the Ormus.
In preparation for the Eternal Recurrence, Wilhelm arranges for the discovery of the Zohar in the year 2060. The direct interaction between humans and UDO leads to a mass disappearance phenomenon, eventually forcing earth's inhabitants to flee en mass into space. To prevent Earth's total disappearance into imaginary space, Wilhelm compresses the planet to Planck scale dimensions. In Particle physics and Physical cosmology, the Planck scale is an Energy scale around 1 This gives Wilhelm de facto rulership over all human affairs, as humanity is forced to rely on his Vector Industries' technology to survive.
Before sealing away Earth, Wilhelm moves several relics integral to the process of eternal recurrence to the planet Michtam, and under the alias Heinlein convenes the existence of the Order of the Ormus with funding from Hyams Group. However, it is strongly hinted that Wilhelm established Ormus many ages before, in the time of an unidentified messianic figure, explicitly to shape the popular interpretation of the teachings of a messianic figure [4]), as revealed to him by chaos[5]. In the Perfect Guide, it is mentioned that Wilhelm was an emperor during the time period in which the Messiah lived. Although he persecuted the Messiah and his followers due to their proximity to Yeshua the Anima and their use of Lemegeton, he gradually infiltrated the following after the death of the Messiah. In this way, he founded Ormus, the organization that was a religion devoted to the memory of the Messiah on the surface, but was secretly meant to protect the written Lemegeton and the other Relics of God. However, he could not stop the dissipation of consciousness -- the constellation of the Gnostic rejection of reality -- which access to Lemegeton had engendered. To stop the dissipation from destroying everything, Wilhelm endeavors to undertake the "spinning" of the world from the shadows, with the ultimate aim of Eternal Recurrence, and vanishes from the scene of history. [6] However, for a span of 2000 years after the death of the Messiah, Rennes le Chateau and therefore the Anima Vessels and the body of Mary Magdalene had become sealed by an anti-Wilhelm force. Without Mary the Animus and the restored Anima, Eternal Recurrence could not be achieved.
At the end of Xenosaga: Pied Piper, Wilhelm makes his first moves toward eternal recurrence by recruiting as the first of his Testaments Eric Weber (aka Voyager) in exchange for Weber's continued existence. The Testaments are described as existing outside the physical realm, primarily as factors of perception that are simultaneously real and not real. In the Episode III game database, Wilhelm is described as the primary instrument of their manifestation, having created a phase distortion phenomena that convinces the conscious observer what they see is real, effectively giving life to the perceived in the observer's own mind and corresponding physical life by means of the principle of physical relativism.
In Episode I, Wilhelm formally begins his preparations to invoke Zarathustra. He carries out his intentions by proxy, dispatching his Testaments and the U-TIC Organization to prepare the Song of Nephilim, one of a seemingly irrelevant chain of events designed to culminate in Shion Uzuki's acquiescence to the operation of Zarathustra. A character/reference from the Xenosaga series is the female protagonist in the PlayStation 2 trilogy known as the Xenosaga He is often seen looking into the Compass of Order and Chaos, an object that is described in the Complete Guide as an aide to his natural ability to observe the flow of human consciousness. By observing the natural clashes between consciousnesses, Wilhelm predicts individual behaviors and correspondingly, sees into the future of humanity.
At the end of Xenosaga Episode II, there is a brief scene involving chaos and Wilhelm. is an RPG for the PlayStation 2 and the second title in the Xenosaga series chaos explains that he will not hold back, and Wilhelm seems delighted that chaos is finally "entering the stage. " Wilhelm then addresses chaos as "Yeshua". This act drew a variety of interpretations from fans, among them speculations that Wilhelm is the Gnostic Demiurge or Yaldabaoth, Satan, Samael, and the antichrist, as "Yeshua" is said to be Jesus's true name. For other uses see Antichrist (disambiguation In Christian eschatology, the Antichrist or anti-Christ means a person office Near the end of Xenosaga Episode III, Wilhelm reveals himself to be the true identity of "Heinlein", the leader of Ormus and Hyams. is an RPG for the PlayStation 2, and the third and final game in the primary Xenosaga trilogy The following is a list of major villains/antagonists in the Xenosaga series --> TC --> is primarily a series of Science fiction --> TC --> is primarily a series of Science fiction Throughout the entirety of the series he had been manipulating the U-TIC Organization, an Ormus front, and its leader Margulis, who up until that point had never actually seen Heinlein at all. --> TC --> is primarily a series of Science fiction The following is a list of major villains/antagonists in the Xenosaga series
As revealed in the Xenosaga Perfect Guide, Wilhelm's link to the collective storyline upon which Xenosaga is based laid in the subtitles of the Xenosaga games, Der Wille zur Macht (The Will to Power), Jenseits von Gut und Böse (Beyond Good and Evil) and Also Sprach Zarathustra (Thus Spoke Zarathustra). Beyond Good and Evil (German Jenseits von Gut und Böse) subtitled "Prelude to a Philosophy of the Future" ( Vorspiel einer Philosophie der Zukunft Thus Spoke Zarathustra (German Also sprach Zarathustra, sometimes translated Thus Spake Zarathustra) subtitled A Book for All and None These titles are shared with publications by Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche, whose middle name is shared by Wilhelm himself. Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (October 15 1844 August 25 1900 ( was a nineteenth-century German philosopher and classical philologist This link explains Wilhelm's role as the enigmatic manipulator of the events which unfold in Xenosaga. His name may also be a play on Kaiser Wilhelm II, the last German emperor who lived during World War I, and may refer to him being the last "ruler" of a group or nation, perhaps humanity in general. World War I (abbreviated WWI; also known as the First World War, the Great War, and the War to End All The Xenosaga Perfect Guide reveals Wilhelm was once an emperor in the time of the Messiah. It is unknown what he called himself at that time, but a reference to the Roman Emperor Nero is given in Xenosaga I, once by the character Jr, and again in the game's database, as the fifth emperor of Rome. Nero Claudius Caesar Augustus Germanicus ( December 15, 37 – June 9, 68) born Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus, also called Wilhelm himself says he has many names that define him, but only chaos knows his true name.
In Episode III it is revealed that Wilhelm's ultimate purpose is to use Zarathustra to cause the eternal recurrence. --> TC --> is primarily a series of Science fiction This would cause time to reverse. Long ago in ancient times, Wilhelm explains, the will of humanity resonated with chaos's power of Anima. This resulted in the dispersal of consciousnesses that reject each other, a phenomenon that led the universe towards destruction. Before the universe was completely destroyed, explained Wilhelm, chaos' failsafe would trigger and cause the destruction of the rejecting wills (Gnosis) by collapsing the lower physical domain in which humans live. --> TC --> is primarily a series of Science fiction This was delayed by Mary, who used her power of Animus to seal away the power of Anima into the twelve Anima Vessels, which must be reawakened to be used to their full potential. --> TC --> is primarily a series of Science fiction While separated from his Anima power, chaos' failsafe ability could not ignite.
However, as long as Anima existed, the consciousnesses of the universe would continue to disperse until the universe was slowly destroyed by collapse. Wilhelm chose eternal recurrence to avoid this. By using Zarathustra he planned to perpetually rewind time to the past, living in an eternal cycle. This prevented both the collapse through dispersal and the destruction of wills by the failsafe. But this meant living the same lives over and over again. According to the database, it was unknown exactly how many times Zarathustra had been used in the past, be it ten times or ten thousand, or more.
Wilhelm is described as the "protector of lower-dimensional space. " The operator of Zarathustra, he possesses a "temporal recurrence ability. " He is known to be an existence like chaos, and has been around since the beginning of the universe. Zarathustra was originally a Relic of God built by ancient peoples and orchestrated by Mary to invade the Higher Domain of God. It was known to have been powered by chaos' Anima power and controlled by Mary's Animus power. When their efforts ended in failure, Wilhelm took over, turning Zarathustra into a device for the purpose of Eternal Recurrence. Thus, it is likely that Wilhelm is meant to metaphorically represent Nietzsche himself. Nietzsche also described himself as "the bringer of eternal recurrence" in "Twilight of the Idols".
There is another possible explanation for Wilhelm's motives, as outlined in the post-game database. It mentions the possibility that Wilhelm was actually trying to force a revolution of human consciousness through the repeated use of Zarathustra. That is to say, he was training humanity (through the countless recurrences) to develop to the point that they could throw off the shackles of his control and pave their own way to the future. This seems to be supported by his lack of concern when the party threatens both himself and Zarathustra. This motive is also applied to Wilhelm in both the Xenosaga III Official Perfect Guide and the Xenosaga III Official Complete Guide. Although his body was destroyed due to prolonged direct exposure to the out-of-control energy of Zarathustra, Wilhelm still exists because he is the guardian of the lower domain universe. The Xenosaga Perfect Guide states that Wilhelm was responsible for the Elsa and the Dammerung arriving in the Lost Jerusalem galaxy (the Milky Way) after they escaped through the last transfer column held open by chaos. Even though he was rejected by the universe, he still exists for the sake of protecting it.
According to the Xenosaga Original Design Materials, Wilhelm is an enneagram type 5 personality. The ODM conception of a type 5 is marked determination to counter a pending threat to humanity and the world. In the series Wilhelm is portrayed as reclusive and cold, with outstanding negotiational ability and business prowess. He is interested in the psychological lives of others and demonstrates a superb understanding of analytic psychological concepts. Completely altruistic, he absolves himself of any thoughts for his own welfare. The future is ever on his mind: he is always arranging for an event of some sort in his official capacity as the leader of Hyams, Vector Industries, and Ormus, to complement his self-affirmed role as Protector of Lower Dimensional Space.
Wilhelm is an adept manipulator of perceptions and a master of illusion. He is demonstrated to be prescient to some degree of competence, and a strong leader who can inspire other's confidence. In Episode II, he implies in an aside to Kevin that he is risen above the considerations of normal men, which alone grants him the wisdom to determine what is absolutely true about reality. The consequences of this philosophy manifest as an amoralistic attitude described by the creators as "beyond good and evil", and a lack of respect or empathy for others and their views.