She was his second in command at work for years. It's hard to believe that in all of history no one else has ever made their own choice before. The question remains, however: Is Katie a solid right-hand woman to Forest, just as Kenton is his right-hand man? And now, she's the one in charge.Or has she always viewed herself as Forest's second? But, Stewart seemed to think so. The project's changed forever, and she lost the person she was deeply 'in like' with. For all his quirky charm, he seems very human, vulnerably so. Rather than take Lily home, Kenton tries to kidnap her and spirit her off to places unknown, but he’s apparently not prepared for her to take the wheel and cause an accident… seems like he probably should have been. The team continues extrapolating outwards from the dead mouse until the project includes a recreation of the machine itself, of Forest watching through the window, and of the team beyond them; this is the beginning of the machine’s world, or even.Episode 6 did a great deal to sort all this out. Her lack of belief in a higher power only further convinced her that she's right.I don't know what I am anymore.

Well, more or less literally, it means they're playing God. In this scenario, Kenton is the tank and Jamie is the dissident. Lily, meanwhile, remains either an agent of chaos or an agent of balance to the whole thing; whatever part she has yet to play, it’s bound to be an interesting one.Episode 7 confirms that, in this world at least, Kenton and Jamie are very much mortal. If the show had left it there, the finale would've been a bit underwhelming, but at least it would've made sense.However, Stewart still enacted the emergency protocol the system predicted he would, and Lily and Forest still fell to their deaths. However, Forest also fires Lyndon after what feels like a big break in the research, but which he sees as them undermining his actual research. She's a computer simulation.Katie compared Lily's choice to the original sin. It was about some elements and some implications of quantum physics, to do with interpretations of some strange things, like particles having super positions and one of those interpretations relating to many worlds. The series stars Nick Offerman as an enigmatic tech SEO, overseeing a group called "Devs." But I am scared we might be magicians.Katie also asserts that “In 48 hours, Lily will die.

If Lily committed the original sin, then who is she sinning against? She believed she had the ability to choose her own path, and that no matter what Forest and Katie told her, she could prove them wrong.

Panic ensues.What does that mean? (It may be worth mentioning that Katie is often reflected in one of the gold columns in this scene while Forest is seen in the “real” world.)

Created by Alex Garland. Our entry point into the world of Devsis Sergei, a gifted programmer who finds himself in way over his head as he gains access to the highly secure and secretive Devs program within the company he works for, Amaya. The series explores themes related to free will and determinism, as well as Silicon Valley.
But what could've been a great lesson on free will versus determinism ended up being a convoluted mess.DEVS has never been able to stick to one side of its central debate.Is every action pre-determined by an outside force?


Or is she actually in charge of more than we’re being led to believe?In Episode 4, there’s a discussion of the Devs facility being built on a known active fault line, a fact that disturbs Stewart since the building’s EM fields could fail in an earthquake, causing the mostly glass building to fall and shatter with them inside it. Until she ditches the variables and hears, clearly for the first time, a projection of ancient Aramaic language being spoken 2,000 years ago: “It’s Jesus talking.” The success came by swapping in,We also see the intermediate stage of the Devs device as it virtually reconstructs sugar cubes, dead mice, clocks, bird skulls, and conch shells perfectly, down to the molecular level at least. His xenophobic paranoia proved to be correct since Sergei turned out to be a Russian spy tasked with recording whatever was going on in the Devs program. He chose to rejoin his daughter and wife with no hesitation.Of course, that might have been his only option, but Katie's the one left with heartbreak. Again, if he knows they’re in a simulation, that would explain why these things don’t matter to him right now.As this theory relates to the end of Episode 2, the “backward projection” project, are they trying to basically pull up a screengrab from an earlier experience from the simulation?