You are definitely right about the differences in those respects. I was highlighting the similarities they have in being lifeforms who essentially shrug off normal expectations due to their power/existence, like you said.LoganForkHands73 wrote: Thu Dec 22, 2022 3:01 pmHmm... there could be comparisons to consider there in terms of how their power makes them uninterested in interacting with human society, but I think the main difference is that behind all his bluster, Dr. Manhattan is a rather uncertain, unenlightened individual who doesn't have faith in where he's going in life until the very end of the story. He acts without any real drive of his own, mostly doing whatever anyone tells him, until he eventually feels so suffocated that he retreats from the world and comes to the conclusion that life isn't worth protecting. As he explains it, he's not God, just a puppet who can see the strings.ClutchBangstrip wrote: Wed Dec 21, 2022 8:02 pm I guess you can say, Goku and Dr. Manhattan are both "enlightened".
He's Sun Wukong and thusly like Dr. Manhattan in that he is not tethered to the social expectations and moralities of humanity because he is beyond it or at the very least, is constantly progressing beyond it. Dr. Manhattan treats man's concerns and expectations like they're insignificant, because they are to a being like him. Goku is the same way, he's just nicer/sillier about it.
Dr. Manhattan is also aware of this dynamic. In Goku's case, it just is what it is. Goku's never even thought about. But you do get the feeling that Goku thinks everyone else's concerns and expectations are overblown.Goku is the opposite, as soon as he discovers martial arts, he's set on that path for life. Nothing shakes him off it. We've all followed Goku for decades at this point, but I think it says a lot that after all this time, nobody really knows for sure what his personal "code" really entails, or if he even has one, because we never stay inside his head long enough to figure it out. All we know is, he could bravely fight to save the planet one minute, then jeopardise it for his own sporting entertainment the next, though he'll always try to do what he thinks is right when the chips are down. Compare that to Dr. Manhattan, where we see in detail his transition from complete listless apathy to becoming so invested in saving the world, even if it means letting a massive injustice go unpunished for the greater good of mankind. Goku is far too simpleminded to consider complex stuff like global politics. While he does care about the world, if he couldn't punch something to save the day, he'd be useless.Spoiler:
Imagine Goku in Dr. Manhattan's non-existent shoes at the end of Watchmen. "Nuclear Armageddon, is that a food?"![]()
They seem to behave in "questionable" ways, largely because the readers and/or other characters assume they're heroes, like man. And this is explicitly explored in Sun Wukong's tale. You kind of look like an asshole, but in the end your roads to solutions are not limited by your humanity, everything ends up working out in the end, and everyone's happy. Even for The Doc... In the very end.
Dr. Manhattan seems to ponder this or really think/agonize about everything and Goku simply doesn't. He's a happy "simple" guy, much like Sun Wukong.