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Baltar as Cylon speculation: Difference between revisions

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:''This extended speculation thread appears all but disproven with the airing of the episode "[[Downloaded]]". To go directly to what may be the final arguments toward Baltar as a Cylon, see the last section of this subarticle. This is continuing from [[Cylon agent speculation#Gaius Baltar?|Cylon agent speculation]].''
{{Cleanup}}


For '''[[Gaius Baltar]]''' to survive the destruction of Caprica was no small matter, especially considering he was in the wake a nuclear shock wave and that the body of Six that he knew was apparently destroyed in trying to protect him in the events of the [[Miniseries]].
:''This extended speculation thread discusses the probability of [[Gaius Baltar]] as a [[Humanoid Cylon]]. This article is a special extension from the [[Humanoid Cylon speculation#Gaius Baltar?|Humanoid Cylon speculation]] article.''


A nuclear blast's shock wave is substantial (not unlike that from a [[Wikipedia:Pyroclastic flow|pyroclastic cloud]]). The shock wave would contain rocks, glass, metal, and other large debris that would bludgeon, pierce and lacerate human tissue with ease and at terrific speeds (at maximum, 1200 KPH, or 745 MPH). Such a debris-filled shock wave would obliterate Baltar's home and easily annihilate Six's body, which at those speeds would provide essentially no protection to Baltar's. (For comparison, note that, despite his superior strength, the head of the first [[Leoben Conoy]] copy encountered was bludgeoned by Commander Adama with a flashlight, and many other Cylon agent copies have been shot or killed as easily as a human.) However, it has to be kept in mind that the blast wave had dissipated greatly by the time it had reached Baltar's house some 26 seconds after the detonation that almost blinded him, probably no more than hurricane force, a wind speed of 74 mph. There are testimonies from Hiroshima and Nagasaki survivors, two Japanese cities that were struck with nuclear bombs at the end of World War II, being in buildings and even in trams quite close to the epicentre and coming out of the ordeal surprisingly unharmed save for a few scratches.
For '''[[Gaius Baltar]]''' to survive the destruction of Caprica was no small matter, especially considering he is in the wake a nuclear shock wave and that the body of Six that is apparently destroyed in trying to protect him in the events of the [[Miniseries, Night 1|Miniseries]].


Even if Baltar survived momentarily from Six's protection, either the remains of his home would have collapsed over him, likely trapping him if not killing him, or he and Six's body would also be carried away by the shock wave for some distance.
A nuclear blast's shock wave is substantial (not unlike that from a [[Wikipedia:Pyroclastic flow|pyroclastic cloud]]). The shock wave would contain rocks, glass, metal, and other large debris that would bludgeon, pierce and lacerate human tissue with ease and at terrific speeds (at maximum, 1200 KPH, or 745 MPH). Such a debris-filled shock wave would obliterate Baltar's home and easily annihilate Six's body, which at those speeds would provide essentially no protection for Baltar. (For comparison, note that, despite his superior strength, the head of the first [[Leoben Conoy]] copy encountered is bludgeoned by Commander Adama with a flashlight, and that humanoid Cylon copies can be shot or killed as easily as a human.) However, it has to be kept in mind that the blast wave had dissipated greatly by the time it reaches Baltar's house some 26 seconds after the detonation that almost blinds him, maybe no more than hurricane force <ref> There are testimonies from Hiroshima and Nagasaki survivors, two Japanese cities that were struck with nuclear bombs at the end of World War II, being in buildings and even in trams quite close to the epicenter and coming out of the ordeal surprisingly unharmed save for a few scratches.</ref>.


Six has had two years to gather plenty of Baltar's genetic material. Could the Baltar on ''Galactica'' be now, in fact, a Cylon agent?
Even if Baltar survived momentarily from Six's protection, either the remains of his home would collapse over him, likely trapping him if not killing him, or he and Six's body would also be carried away by the shock wave for some distance. Could the Baltar on ''Galactica'' therefore, in fact, a humanoid Cylon?


==Why a Copy?==
==The "Many Copies" Theory==
[[Humanoid Cylon]]s are designed to be archetypes of human psyche. Biologically, they are not and have never been actual humans.


Information from RDM indicate that, at the start of season 2, there are ''eight'' Cylon operatives that appear in the fleet. A Baltar copy would also have made matters very, very easy for the Cylons in their work to infiltrate the Colonial defences and would be easily dropped in place to escape or happen to appear on a ship of the nascent Fleet. Such clones may also explain the 'fake' recording from [[Shelly Godfrey]] of Baltar compromising Colonial computer systems in a latter Season 1 episode. Perhaps it was the Cylons who doctored what was, in reality, a legitimate recording of a Baltar copy.
One notable question would be ''why'' Six spends so much time talking to Baltar and then throws herself in front of the blast if she intends for him to die? If Baltar is already a Cylon, his consciousness from that moment would be thrown into a waking duplicate, already disheveled and scraped, where Baltar would merely think he was blown clear to safety where he could run to escape attacks with other survivors. Also, since Baltar appears to be a key in many Cylon plans, they would want to ensure that Baltar would reach any remaining humans to spy for them, and having only one copy might risk the success of such plans. Further, it is the ''psyche'' of Baltar that the Cylons may treasure most; few others in the Colonies may have the level of intelligence, arrogance, and neurosis that Baltar has that could prove as easily exploitable. The guise of the great Baltar gives the Cylons a huge natural tactical advantage in that he is well known and allowed access to almost any critical battlestar location. Baltar's slick personality aids him with better finesse and stronger charisma than any humanoid Cylon personality yet seen.


One notable question would be ''why'' Six has spent so much time talking to Baltar and then thrown herself in front of the blast if she'd intended for him to die? If Baltar was already a Cylon agent, his consciousness from that moment would be thrown into a waking duplicate, already disheveled and scraped, where Baltar would merely think he was blown clear to safety where he could run to escape attacks with other survivors. Also, since Baltar appeared to be key in many Cylon plans, they would want to ensure that Baltar would reach any remaining humans to spy for them, and having only one copy might risk the success of such plans. Further, it is the ''psyche'' of Baltar that the Cylons may treasure most; few others in the Colonies may have the level of intelligence, arrogance, and neurosis that Baltar has that could prove as easily exploitable. The guise of the great Baltar gives the Cylons a huge natural tactical advantage in that he is well known and allowed access to almost any critical battlestar location. Baltar's slick-as-oil personality aids him with better finesse and stronger charisma than any Cylon agent personality yet seen.
Later events in the series appear to discount this notion of an elaborate plan to save Baltar. In "[[Downloaded]]," the Cylons are unaware that Baltar has survived, having received this information from the resurrected [[Sharon Valerii]].


==The Baltar-as-Father Argument==
==The Baltar-as-Father Argument==


Six has stated her desire to have a child with Baltar. Cylon agent couplings have failed to result in offspring prior to that point ([[The Farm]]). If Baltar and Six were both Cylon agents, it is likely that offspring would either be impossible or at least exceptionally unlikely. This point gives evidence against the Baltar-as-Cylon theory, but Six has repeatedly made it clear that she considers the hybrid human-cylon baby that Sharon is carrying to be "our" (as she puts it) baby. "Our" may in fact be inclusive of all cylons, which may just include Baltar.
Six states her desire to have a child with Baltar. Humanoid Cylon couplings have failed to result in offspring prior to that point {{TRS|The Farm}}. If Baltar and Six were both Cylons, it is likely that offspring would either be impossible or at least exceptionally unlikely. This point gives evidence against the Baltar-as-Cylon theory, but Six has repeatedly made it clear that she considers the hybrid human-Cylon baby that Sharon is carrying to be "our" (as she puts it) baby. "Our" may in fact be inclusive of all Cylons, which may just include Baltar. However, this is likely a metaphor regarding Hera's half-Cylon/half-human nature. In this regard, Baltar represents humanity, being the 'father', and Six represents the Cylons, being the 'mother'. Thus when Six tells Baltar that Hera is 'our' child, she is speaking as a Cylon to a human.


In "[[Home, Part II]]", Six indicates that Baltar's and Six's child will be born in the isolation cage built for the [[Sharon Valerii (Galactica copy)|''Galactica'' copy of Sharon Valerii]]. The reality turned out different: The Caprica version of Valerii, pregnant by [[Karl Agathon|Helo]], now occupies the cage by the end of that episode, and Six indicates that it is in fact '''Valerii's''' child that will become Baltar's. This gives some weight to the Baltar-as-Cylon theory since Baltar becoming a father by surrogate circumvents the need for him to do so naturally. While Caprica-Valerii shows that a female Cylon agent could conceive, no information is yet available on whether male Cylon agents could sire a child with human females. However, earlier in the first season, in "[[33]]", Six asked Baltar if he wanted to procreate with her, and at this point she may have meant an actual child of Baltar's. "Home, Part II" occurred much later in the timeline, and it is possible that the Cylons and Number Six had to alter their plans during this time. Number Six did mention in "Home, Part II" that she didn't consider Sharon "worthy" of bearing one of "God's new children" (the Cylon agents). Perhaps Sharon was not originally planned to be the first mother of a hybrid baby at all, and Number Six was going to have a child with the (necessarily human) Baltar, but had to shift plans when Boomer became pregnant first.
In "[[Home, Part II]]," the virtual Six indicates that Baltar's and Six's child will be born in the isolation cage built for the [[Sharon Valerii|''Galactica'' copy of Sharon Valerii]]. The reality turns out different: The Caprica version of Valerii, pregnant by [[Karl Agathon]], occupies the cage, and virtual Six indicates that it is in fact '''Valerii's''' child that will become Baltar's. This gives some weight to the Baltar-as-Cylon theory since Baltar becoming a father by surrogate circumvents the need for him to do so naturally, although Chief Tyrol's outing as a Final Five Cylon shows that male Cylons can sire a child with human females. However, earlier in the first season, in "[[33]]," Six asks Baltar if he wants to procreate with her, and at this point she may mean an actual child of Baltar's. "Home, Part II" occurs much later, and it is possible that the Cylons and Number Six had to alter their plans during this time. Number Six mentions in "Home, Part II" that she doesn't consider Sharon "worthy" of bearing one of "God's new children" (the humanoid Cylons). Perhaps Sharon was not originally planned to be the first mother of a hybrid baby at all, and Number Six was going to have a child with the (necessarily human) Baltar, but had to shift plans when Sharon becomes pregnant first.
 
With the actual consciousness of the Cylon known as [[Caprica-Six]] returned (now with a [[Virtual Baltar|virtual Gaius Baltar]] that haunts her), the credibility of the virtual Six, and her connection to some elaborate Cylon plan for procreation with Baltar, is specious at best.


==Inside Baltar's Head==
==Inside Baltar's Head==
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Baltar's brain scan in "[[Home, Part II]]" confirms that the virtual Six that only Baltar can see is '''not''' an actual ''artificial'' device in his brain. This leaves a number of possibilities, of which the strongest are:
Baltar's brain scan in "[[Home, Part II]]" confirms that the virtual Six that only Baltar can see is '''not''' an actual ''artificial'' device in his brain. This leaves a number of possibilities, of which the strongest are:


# Baltar has a device elsewhere in his body. We're not given information on whether ''all'' of Baltar's body was scanned, or just his head.
# Baltar has a device elsewhere in his body. No information is given on whether ''all'' of Baltar's body is scanned, or just his head.
# A portion of Baltar's body ''is'' the "chip" but fashioned in a way by the Cylons that is medically indistinguishable from a regular body part and may also function normally (say, a pituitary gland)
# A portion of Baltar's body ''is'' the "chip" but fashioned in a way by the Cylons that is medically indistinguishable from a regular body part and may also function normally (e.g. a pituitary gland)
# Baltar's body is artificial, with his personality (complete with neuroses) placed in a Cylon agent construct. While Baltar's psyche itself may not be that of a Cylon, the addition of the virtual Six component compliments the arrangement for the Cylon's purposes.
# Baltar's body is artificial, with his personality (complete with neuroses) placed in a humanoid Cylon construct. While Baltar's psyche itself may not be that of a Cylon, the addition of the virtual Six component compliments the arrangement for the Cylon's purposes.
 
Possibility #3 is interesting in that, based on Baltar's own research on the Six copy known as [[Gina Inviere]], Baltar's personality and guilt would continue to plague him either in Cylon or human form. But, if Baltar were reconstructed as a Cylon, the virtual Six aids Baltar by being, in effect, the conscience and "guardian angel" she claims to be, keeping his neuroses and guilt over the genocide from driving him completely insane--for now.


Possibility #3 is interesting in that, based on Baltar's own research on the Six copy known as [[Gina]], Baltar's personality and guilt would continue to plague him either in Cylon agent or human form. But, if Baltar were reconstructed as a Cylon, the virtual Six aids Baltar by being, in effect, the conscience and "guardian angel" she claims to be, keeping his neuroses and guilt over the genocide from driving him completely insane--for now.
The episode "[[Torn]]" introduces the Cylon ability known as [[projection]]. This ability allows a Cylon to visualize a pleasing environment that also makes it easier to make their way through a basestar's corridors. At this point, Baltar, recalling the many times where he and his virtual Six have enjoyed time at his home in a manner similar to projection, begins to question his own nature.


==But Cylons aren't human clones==
==But Cylons aren't human clones==


As Cylons aren't copies of humans, this would suggest either of two possibilities for Baltar: first, that he survived the blast and escaped, or second, that Baltar was a Cylon all along, even on Caprica.
As Cylons aren't copies of humans, this would suggest either of two possibilities for Baltar: first, that he survives the blast and escapes, or second, that Baltar is a Cylon all along, even on Caprica.
 
The idea of Baltar being originally a Cylon has problems, however. If Baltar were a Cylon, it would be redundant and unnecessary for Number Six to "choose him" for her mission (unless the Cylons preferred Baltar to remain a "sleeper" throughout his mission to give "plausible deniability" in his mind as well as allow him to do what his personality is likely to do). Furthermore, from a story perspective, the idea of Baltar being a Cylon very much goes against the idea of Baltar as a traitor betraying humanity to the Cylons—as well as the idea of Baltar's relationship with Six being a true human/Cylon pairing. It should be noted, however, that Ron D. Moore's "Gaius Baltar" differs significantly from the [[Baltar (TOS)|"Baltar" of the Original Series]]. The Baltar of the Original Series is a true turncoat with megalomaniacal tendencies; Gaius Baltar, on the other hand, is not power-hungry but is driven by a strong sense of self, albeit to the exclusion and ignorance of the needs of everyone else.
 
Baltar is often treated by Six as a human--ultimately the only human who will be allowed to survive by the Cylons. But the human models of Cylon also behave with classically human qualities (not all of them perfect or utopian) and seem to see each other in varying emotions (admiration and contempt are prevalent when Six speaks of the pregnant Caprica Valerii). So, at the least, Baltar is treated with no less respect than any other humanoid Cylon by his virtual Six. If ones assumes that he is indeed human, Six's interaction with him (given the hostilities of the Cylons) borders on admiration. Although Six's emotions can't necessarily be used as a ''de facto'' gauge of Baltar's genuine humanity, it does lend to the mystery.


The idea of Baltar being originally a Cylon has problems, however. If Baltar were a Cylon, it would be redundant and unnecessary for Number Six to "choose him" for her mission (unless the Cylons preferred Baltar to remain a "sleeper" throughout his mission to give "plausible deniability" in his mind as well as allow him to do what his personality is likely to do). Furthermore, from a story perspective, the idea of Baltar being a Cylon very much goes against the idea of Baltar as a traitor betraying humanity to the Cylons—as well as the idea of Baltar's relationship with Six being a true human/Cylon pairing. It should be noted, however, that Ron D. Moore's "Gaius Baltar" differs significantly from the [[Baltar (TOS)|"Baltar" of the Original Series]]. The Baltar of the Original Series was a true turncoat with megalomaniacal tendencies; Gaius, on the other hand, is not power-hungry but is driven by a strong sense of self, albeit to the exclusion and ignorance of the needs of everyone else.
The storyline possibilities do change somewhat if Baltar has ''always'' been a Cylon. Baltar has never spoken of his family or other friends (other than President [[Richard Adar|Adar]]), strongly suggesting Baltar has been a "loner." If Baltar's parentage cannot be confirmed, then the laws of physics (nuclear shock wave damage to human tissue) as well as the laws of procreation (Cylons can't quite procreate as humans do) continue to leave open the possibility that Baltar is model of Cylon, however reduced the odds are now, based on Moore's new information.


Gaius is often treated by Six as a human--ultimately the only human who will be allowed to survive by the Cylons. But the human models of Cylon also behave with classically human qualities (not all of them perfect or utopian) and seem to see each other in varying emotions (admiration and contempt are prevalent when Six speaks of the pregnant Caprica Valerii). So, at the least, Gaius is treated with no less respect than any other Cylon agent by his virtual Six. If we assume Gaius is indeed human, Six's interaction with Baltar (given the hostilities of the Cylons) borders on admiration. Although we can't necessarily use Six's emotions as a ''de facto'' gauge of Baltar's genuine humanity, it does lend to the mystery.
==Events from the episode "Downloaded"==


The storyline possibilities do change somewhat if Baltar has ''always'' been a Cylon. Note that Baltar has never spoken of his family or other friends (other than President [[Richard Adar|Adar]]), strongly suggesting Baltar has been a "loner." If Baltar's parentage (or offspring--he is rather promiscuous) cannot be confirmed (as has been done with Commander Adama, also on the list of suspects), then the laws of physics (nuclear shock wave damage to human tissue) as well as the laws of procreation (Cylons can't quite procreate as humans do) continue to leave open the possibility that Baltar is model of Cylon, however reduced the odds are now, based on Moore's new information.
The episode "[[Downloaded]]" contains revelations that reduce the possibility that Baltar is a Cylon. In dialogue with each other, numerous Cylon characters distinctly refer to Baltar as human. Although it is possible that they might keep the information from Baltar, the nature of the Cylon thought collective would seem to make no sense to keep it a secret to each other. In addition, this episode introduces the concept of a Number Six copy with a virtual ''Baltar'' in her head. Through Six, Baltar pushes for the Cylons to be more human; for example, letting [[Samuel Anders]] go free despite his destruction of a building and many other Humanoid Cylons. If Baltar were a Cylon, the events in the episode would make little sense.


=="Downloaded" all but disproves speculation==
=="Torn" renews speculation==


The episode "[[Downloaded]]" contains revelations that make it extremely unlikely the Baltar is a Cylon. In dialogues with each other, numerous Cylon characters distinctly refer to Baltar as human. Although it is possible that they might keep the information from Baltar, the nature of the Cylon thought collective would seem to make no sense to keep it a secret to each other. In addition, this episode introduced the unique idea of a Number Six copy with a virtual ''Baltar'' in her head. Through Six, Baltar pushes for the Cylons to be more human; for example, letting [[Samuel Anders]] go free despite his destruction of a building and many other Cylon agents. If Baltar were a Cylon, the events in the episode would make little sense.
The episode "[[Torn]]" contains certain revelations about the nature of the Cylons and some possible hints about Baltar's nature. While guiding Baltar through the interior of the basestar, Caprica-Six reveals the Cylon process of "[[projection]]"; an ability to alter their perceptions and create a simulated reality of their choosing. Baltar immediately notices how similar that seems to his own visions of Six and begins to question if he is a Cylon. The question still remains, if he possibly is a Cylon, why do the other Cylons think he is a human?


With this episode's end, the remaining tenuous thread to the now-remote likelihood of Baltar as a Cylon involves the manner of Baltar and Caprica-Six's relationship as opposed to [[Sharon Valerii (Galactica copy)|Boomer]] and Chief [[Galen Tyrol]]. If we suppose as a certainty that both Baltar and Tyrol are human, then why does Baltar find himself with a virtual Six after she dies, while Tyrol does not find a virtual Boomer walking about after Boomer's death? Both humans find themselves denying their love, only to recant their claim later. What makes the Baltar-Six arrangement so strikingly different? Why, at all, have these virtual Six and Baltar incarnations appeared in the first place? If Baltar were a Cylon (albeit a model unknown to any other Cylon, which would stretch the plausibility of the nature of their collective thought process per  "Downloaded"), would the love between two Cylons cause a "feedback loop" of emotion to spill over between the two Cylons, creating the virtual consciousnesses? Or, assuming that Baltar is fully human, if Cylons revive (medically) a dead human (as Baltar should be, given the destruction of his home and everything in it ''except him''), would such a revival cause the virtual consciousnesses to emerge? In contrast, Tyrol has not died (although he suffers a near-death by Dr. Baltar's hand in "[[Resistance (episode)|Resistance]]") which may support this weaker, but faintly plausible concept of Baltar's true nature.
When Baltar questions why he has seen only seven humanoid models, despite the point that twelve humanoid Cylons exist, Caprica-Six is unwilling to answer. Apparently the Cylons have blocked or lost all knowledge of the these so-called [[Final Five]] Cylons. With four of these known to the audience, this leaves the possibility that Baltar is the final unknown Cylon.


An additional mystery is the fact that after activating some unknown device in the Temple of Five and getting a glimpse of the Final Five, a Three seems to recognize one of the Final Five and repent her actions. One possibility is her earlier behavior towards Baltar, such as torturing him {{TRS|Rapture}}.


=="Torn" renews speculation==
==Baltar as an "Agent of God"==
Baltar's actions when forced by his virtual Six to repent and worship the Cylon version of [[God (RDM)|God]] leaves several significant questions as to the nature of both the virtual Six and Baltar's nature.


The episode "[[Torn]]" meanwhile contains certain revelations about the nature of the Cylons and some possible hints about Baltar's nature. While guiding Baltar through the interior of the Basetar, Caprica-Six reveals the Cylon process of "projection"; the Cylon's ability to alter their perceptions and create a simulated reality of their choosing.  Baltar immediately notices how similar that seems to his own visions of Six and begins to question if he is a Clyon because he can project as well. The question still remains, if he possibly is a Cylon, why do the other Cylons think he is a human?
In the episode, "[[The Hand of God (RDM)|The Hand of God]]," Baltar makes an educated guess at the specific target to be destroyed on the [[tylium (RDM)|tylium]] refinery without knowing any significant data on the site. Baltar only receives encouragement from his virtual Six to trust in her belief. In "[[Six Degrees of Separation]]," a stricken and nearly-criminally exposed Baltar repents to the virtual Six just as Lt. Gaeta arrives to confirm his innocence. In the same episode, the virtual Six disappears in anger just as the [[Shelly Godfrey]] copy arrives (with a suggestion that the virtual Six ''knows'' (or summons) the Godfrey model to arrive. The Godfrey model disappears just as the virtual Six returns as Baltar is repenting.


One possibility is that Baltar is something of a "beta-test" model, a more advanced type of Cylon that is intended to more closely approximate humanity--and may also lack a certain biological design flaw discovered in the Cylons in the episode "[[A Measure of Salvation]]."  Still, there has been no on-screen evidence one way or the other, except for the fact mentioned in the next section--so all theories are still potentially in play.
"[[Downloaded]]" strongly suggests that the [[Virtual beings|virtual copies]] of [[Caprica-Six]] and Baltar that haunt their opposite interests seem to be psychological remnants of the pair's intensive emotional connection. But what if there is more to this than psychology? Episode events surrounding the [[Sacred Scrolls]] and Laura Roslin's quest for the [[Tomb of Athena]] confirm that the Colonials have a spiritual or prophetic element that has guided them to the data that now places them in a true general path to Earth. What forces are driving Baltar beyond his own egotism? What is the nature of the virtual Six and Baltar? Neither Baltar nor Caprica-Six know why they appear, and both virtual beings appear to have knowledge beyond that of what the living being they haunt should know. If Baltar is being influenced by the Cylon God (or some cybernetic influence known by neither Cylon or Colonial), there suggests a new thread to the Baltar-as-Cylon speculation that goes beyond the mere creation of a Baltar model.  However, in the [[Podcast:Downloaded|episode's podcast]], Ron Moore speaks of the virtual Baltar as simply a hallucination, while in other interviews and podcasts, Moore consistently states that the origin of the virtual Six is supposed to be deliberately vague.


==Update: Interview with the production team provides a new twist...==
===Baltar as Cylon Christ===


According to interviews with Grace Park, Dean Stockwell, and Tricia Helfer, the remaining Cylons are so secret that even the seven models known to the audience don't know who the last five areIndeed, even [[Number Three]], who claims to have visions of the so called "final five" cannot remember what they look like when she regains consciousness after downloading and has to sketch her interpretations of them in order to retain her memory of them ([[The Passage]]).  This could possibly answer the question why Baltar wouldn't be recognized by the other seven if he was one of the final five.
The Cylon God is speculated to also have been a Lord of Kobol, "the one whose name cannot be spoken" or "the jealous god" who prompted the battle on KobolIf so, he is/was a real being on Kobol of similar state to the other lords, and could have a physical incarnation, containing whatever portion of his mind could fit in a humanoid brain, among the Fleet. Baltar could be more than an agent of God, or a Cylon, he could be an (unaware) actual incarnation of the Cylon God in the "Christ" motif which is extremely common in literature. The Season 4 episode title "[[He That Believeth in Me]]" is a direct reference to Christ, and in fact Baltar becomes the messianic leader of his own [[Cult of Baltar|cult]] during the episode.


==Baltar as an "Agent of God"==
On a more obvious, visual level, Baltar, on several occasion is seen to be in the pose of Christ on the cross, for example in the water, in his drug-induced vision in "[[Taking A Break From All Your Worries]]" or when he collapses in the grass on Kobol. Additionally, after his return from the Cylons, his hair and beard begin to resemble what most people would typically imagine Jesus's to have been like.
Baltar's actions when forced by his virtual Six to repent and worship the Cylon version of [[God]] leaves several significant questions as to the nature of both the virtual Six and Baltar's nature.


In the episode, "[[The Hand of God]]", Baltar makes an educated guess at the specific target to be destroyed on the [[tylium]] refinery without knowing any significant data on the site. Baltar only receives encouragement from his virtual Six to trust in her belief. In "[[Six Degrees of Separation]]," viewers see a stricken and nearly-criminally exposed Baltar repent to the virtual Six just as Lt. Gaeta arrives to confirm his innocence. In the same episode, the virtual Six disappears in anger just as the [[Shelly Godfrey]] copy arrives (with a suggestion that the virtual Six ''knew'' (or summoned) the Godfrey model to arrive. The Godfrey model disappears just as the virtual Six returns as Baltar is repenting.
Baltar is smarter than not just other Colonials, but also apparently than the Cylons in some areas, discovering clues to Earth they can't figure out in spite of their computer memories and claimed superior knowledge of the Sacred Scrolls. Baltar's inner Six claims to be an angel sent from God to protect him. At the same time, Caprica-Six's equivalent appears in the form of a Baltar. Baltar's inner Six's first mission is to arrange a religious conversion for Baltar.


The episode "[[Downloaded]]" strongly suggests that the virtual copies of [[Caprica Six]] and Baltar that [[Cylon-Related Hallucinations|haunt their opposite interests]] seem to be psychological remnants of the pair's intensive emotional connection. But what if there is more to this than psychology? Episode events surrounding the [[Sacred Scrolls]] and Laura Roslin's quest for the [[Tomb of Athena]] confirm that the Colonials have a spiritual or prophetic element that has guided them to the data that now places them in a true general path to Earth. What forces are driving Baltar beyond his own egotism? What is the nature of the virtual Six and Baltar? Neither Baltar nor Caprica Six know why they appear, and both virtual beings appear to have knowledge beyond that of what the living being they haunt should know. If Baltar is being influenced by the Cylon God (or some cybernetic influence known by neither Cylon or Colonial), there suggests a new thread to the Baltar-as-Cylon speculation that goes beyond the mere creation of a Baltar modelHowever, in the podcast Ron Moore speaks of the virtual Baltar as simply a hallucination, while interviews and podcasts Moore consistently states that the origin of the virtual Six is supposed to be deliberately vague.
[[D'Anna Biers]] last words to Baltar afters he sees her vision of the Final Five are "So beautiful. You were right." Later, she explains to a [[Cavil]] that she was seeking "the one who programmed us."


Baltar is identified as a superior intelligence by the [[Hybrid]] which also names him as "the Chosen One."


==Baltar as "Psychologically Cylon"==
As noted, the theme of divine incarnation for redemption is a very common one in fiction. Ron Moore has a known penchant for redemption drama, and Baltar as a Christ-figure, redeeming himself and then both humanity and the Cylons potentially, fits with this.


In a sort of cross between the Agent of God theory and the Cylon model theory, there may be the possibility that Baltar is, post-Caprica attack, <i>psychologically</i> Cylon even if not physically so.  He may have, at the time of the attack, had a near-death experience (of the type known to occur with humans--see this Wikipedia article for more on [[Wikipedia:Near-death experience|NDE's]]), and this could have still interfered with the download of Caprica-Six and created the same kind of exchange described elsewhere on this page as a "virtual consciousness". If this is the case, it calls into question the nature of Cylon souls, as it would suggest that they are more similar to the human variety than previously believed.  The resulting hallucinations experienced by both Caprica-Six and Baltar therefore would not require Baltar to be <i>physically</i> a Cylon, much as the Agent of God theory does not.
The [[First Hybrid]] who says his children believe he is a god, makes a prediction about the final Cylon: "...the fifth is still is in shadow, drawn toward the light, hungering for redemption, that will only come in the howl of terrible suffering." {{TRS|Razor}} This statement, while not concrete, may relate to Baltar. Of the major living characters, he most has begged for redemption, and is most in need of it, and it will indeed be painful for him. While [[Lee Adama]] seeks redemption for the ''[[Olympic Carrier]]'' this has been at best a minor theme in his character. Only Baltar begs for it, and only Baltar has said he would find redemption in learning he was a Cylon.


However, what may have been exchanged between the two--and the behavior of Caprica-Six in future episodes will be telling--is their <i>psychological</i> species identity, to some degree.  After the attack on Caprica, Baltar is driven to protect Cylon interests by his virtual Six, but Caprica-Six is driven to protect human interests (albeit in a warped way).  This renders Baltar at least in part "psychologically Cylon," as his new conscience and instincts drive him (when he isn't thinking of himself!) to protect Cylon interests at the expense of his physical, human identity.  Caprica-Six, during "[[Downloaded]]," parallels in takes extremely dangerous risks for the sake of rebel humans.  It even becomes possible that the psychological conflict Baltar is experiencing between the forcefully "Cylonized" parts of his conscience and whatever remaining humanity is in him is at the root of his addiction to painkillers...that it becomes a way in which he tries to numb or lessen the conflict or perhaps even take himself out of action without resorting to a suicide that would go against his strong self-preservation instinct.
== References ==
{{reflist}}


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[[Category:A to Z]]

Latest revision as of 22:17, 20 February 2024

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Should there be a need to discuss the merits of the claim, discuss them on the talk page.
This extended speculation thread discusses the probability of Gaius Baltar as a Humanoid Cylon. This article is a special extension from the Humanoid Cylon speculation article.

For Gaius Baltar to survive the destruction of Caprica was no small matter, especially considering he is in the wake a nuclear shock wave and that the body of Six that is apparently destroyed in trying to protect him in the events of the Miniseries.

A nuclear blast's shock wave is substantial (not unlike that from a pyroclastic cloud). The shock wave would contain rocks, glass, metal, and other large debris that would bludgeon, pierce and lacerate human tissue with ease and at terrific speeds (at maximum, 1200 KPH, or 745 MPH). Such a debris-filled shock wave would obliterate Baltar's home and easily annihilate Six's body, which at those speeds would provide essentially no protection for Baltar. (For comparison, note that, despite his superior strength, the head of the first Leoben Conoy copy encountered is bludgeoned by Commander Adama with a flashlight, and that humanoid Cylon copies can be shot or killed as easily as a human.) However, it has to be kept in mind that the blast wave had dissipated greatly by the time it reaches Baltar's house some 26 seconds after the detonation that almost blinds him, maybe no more than hurricane force [1].

Even if Baltar survived momentarily from Six's protection, either the remains of his home would collapse over him, likely trapping him if not killing him, or he and Six's body would also be carried away by the shock wave for some distance. Could the Baltar on Galactica therefore, in fact, a humanoid Cylon?

The "Many Copies" Theory

Humanoid Cylons are designed to be archetypes of human psyche. Biologically, they are not and have never been actual humans.

One notable question would be why Six spends so much time talking to Baltar and then throws herself in front of the blast if she intends for him to die? If Baltar is already a Cylon, his consciousness from that moment would be thrown into a waking duplicate, already disheveled and scraped, where Baltar would merely think he was blown clear to safety where he could run to escape attacks with other survivors. Also, since Baltar appears to be a key in many Cylon plans, they would want to ensure that Baltar would reach any remaining humans to spy for them, and having only one copy might risk the success of such plans. Further, it is the psyche of Baltar that the Cylons may treasure most; few others in the Colonies may have the level of intelligence, arrogance, and neurosis that Baltar has that could prove as easily exploitable. The guise of the great Baltar gives the Cylons a huge natural tactical advantage in that he is well known and allowed access to almost any critical battlestar location. Baltar's slick personality aids him with better finesse and stronger charisma than any humanoid Cylon personality yet seen.

Later events in the series appear to discount this notion of an elaborate plan to save Baltar. In "Downloaded," the Cylons are unaware that Baltar has survived, having received this information from the resurrected Sharon Valerii.

The Baltar-as-Father Argument

Six states her desire to have a child with Baltar. Humanoid Cylon couplings have failed to result in offspring prior to that point (TRS: "The Farm"). If Baltar and Six were both Cylons, it is likely that offspring would either be impossible or at least exceptionally unlikely. This point gives evidence against the Baltar-as-Cylon theory, but Six has repeatedly made it clear that she considers the hybrid human-Cylon baby that Sharon is carrying to be "our" (as she puts it) baby. "Our" may in fact be inclusive of all Cylons, which may just include Baltar. However, this is likely a metaphor regarding Hera's half-Cylon/half-human nature. In this regard, Baltar represents humanity, being the 'father', and Six represents the Cylons, being the 'mother'. Thus when Six tells Baltar that Hera is 'our' child, she is speaking as a Cylon to a human.

In "Home, Part II," the virtual Six indicates that Baltar's and Six's child will be born in the isolation cage built for the Galactica copy of Sharon Valerii. The reality turns out different: The Caprica version of Valerii, pregnant by Karl Agathon, occupies the cage, and virtual Six indicates that it is in fact Valerii's child that will become Baltar's. This gives some weight to the Baltar-as-Cylon theory since Baltar becoming a father by surrogate circumvents the need for him to do so naturally, although Chief Tyrol's outing as a Final Five Cylon shows that male Cylons can sire a child with human females. However, earlier in the first season, in "33," Six asks Baltar if he wants to procreate with her, and at this point she may mean an actual child of Baltar's. "Home, Part II" occurs much later, and it is possible that the Cylons and Number Six had to alter their plans during this time. Number Six mentions in "Home, Part II" that she doesn't consider Sharon "worthy" of bearing one of "God's new children" (the humanoid Cylons). Perhaps Sharon was not originally planned to be the first mother of a hybrid baby at all, and Number Six was going to have a child with the (necessarily human) Baltar, but had to shift plans when Sharon becomes pregnant first.

With the actual consciousness of the Cylon known as Caprica-Six returned (now with a virtual Gaius Baltar that haunts her), the credibility of the virtual Six, and her connection to some elaborate Cylon plan for procreation with Baltar, is specious at best.

Inside Baltar's Head

Baltar's brain scan in "Home, Part II" confirms that the virtual Six that only Baltar can see is not an actual artificial device in his brain. This leaves a number of possibilities, of which the strongest are:

  1. Baltar has a device elsewhere in his body. No information is given on whether all of Baltar's body is scanned, or just his head.
  2. A portion of Baltar's body is the "chip" but fashioned in a way by the Cylons that is medically indistinguishable from a regular body part and may also function normally (e.g. a pituitary gland)
  3. Baltar's body is artificial, with his personality (complete with neuroses) placed in a humanoid Cylon construct. While Baltar's psyche itself may not be that of a Cylon, the addition of the virtual Six component compliments the arrangement for the Cylon's purposes.

Possibility #3 is interesting in that, based on Baltar's own research on the Six copy known as Gina Inviere, Baltar's personality and guilt would continue to plague him either in Cylon or human form. But, if Baltar were reconstructed as a Cylon, the virtual Six aids Baltar by being, in effect, the conscience and "guardian angel" she claims to be, keeping his neuroses and guilt over the genocide from driving him completely insane--for now.

The episode "Torn" introduces the Cylon ability known as projection. This ability allows a Cylon to visualize a pleasing environment that also makes it easier to make their way through a basestar's corridors. At this point, Baltar, recalling the many times where he and his virtual Six have enjoyed time at his home in a manner similar to projection, begins to question his own nature.

But Cylons aren't human clones

As Cylons aren't copies of humans, this would suggest either of two possibilities for Baltar: first, that he survives the blast and escapes, or second, that Baltar is a Cylon all along, even on Caprica.

The idea of Baltar being originally a Cylon has problems, however. If Baltar were a Cylon, it would be redundant and unnecessary for Number Six to "choose him" for her mission (unless the Cylons preferred Baltar to remain a "sleeper" throughout his mission to give "plausible deniability" in his mind as well as allow him to do what his personality is likely to do). Furthermore, from a story perspective, the idea of Baltar being a Cylon very much goes against the idea of Baltar as a traitor betraying humanity to the Cylons—as well as the idea of Baltar's relationship with Six being a true human/Cylon pairing. It should be noted, however, that Ron D. Moore's "Gaius Baltar" differs significantly from the "Baltar" of the Original Series. The Baltar of the Original Series is a true turncoat with megalomaniacal tendencies; Gaius Baltar, on the other hand, is not power-hungry but is driven by a strong sense of self, albeit to the exclusion and ignorance of the needs of everyone else.

Baltar is often treated by Six as a human--ultimately the only human who will be allowed to survive by the Cylons. But the human models of Cylon also behave with classically human qualities (not all of them perfect or utopian) and seem to see each other in varying emotions (admiration and contempt are prevalent when Six speaks of the pregnant Caprica Valerii). So, at the least, Baltar is treated with no less respect than any other humanoid Cylon by his virtual Six. If ones assumes that he is indeed human, Six's interaction with him (given the hostilities of the Cylons) borders on admiration. Although Six's emotions can't necessarily be used as a de facto gauge of Baltar's genuine humanity, it does lend to the mystery.

The storyline possibilities do change somewhat if Baltar has always been a Cylon. Baltar has never spoken of his family or other friends (other than President Adar), strongly suggesting Baltar has been a "loner." If Baltar's parentage cannot be confirmed, then the laws of physics (nuclear shock wave damage to human tissue) as well as the laws of procreation (Cylons can't quite procreate as humans do) continue to leave open the possibility that Baltar is model of Cylon, however reduced the odds are now, based on Moore's new information.

Events from the episode "Downloaded"

The episode "Downloaded" contains revelations that reduce the possibility that Baltar is a Cylon. In dialogue with each other, numerous Cylon characters distinctly refer to Baltar as human. Although it is possible that they might keep the information from Baltar, the nature of the Cylon thought collective would seem to make no sense to keep it a secret to each other. In addition, this episode introduces the concept of a Number Six copy with a virtual Baltar in her head. Through Six, Baltar pushes for the Cylons to be more human; for example, letting Samuel Anders go free despite his destruction of a building and many other Humanoid Cylons. If Baltar were a Cylon, the events in the episode would make little sense.

"Torn" renews speculation

The episode "Torn" contains certain revelations about the nature of the Cylons and some possible hints about Baltar's nature. While guiding Baltar through the interior of the basestar, Caprica-Six reveals the Cylon process of "projection"; an ability to alter their perceptions and create a simulated reality of their choosing. Baltar immediately notices how similar that seems to his own visions of Six and begins to question if he is a Cylon. The question still remains, if he possibly is a Cylon, why do the other Cylons think he is a human?

When Baltar questions why he has seen only seven humanoid models, despite the point that twelve humanoid Cylons exist, Caprica-Six is unwilling to answer. Apparently the Cylons have blocked or lost all knowledge of the these so-called Final Five Cylons. With four of these known to the audience, this leaves the possibility that Baltar is the final unknown Cylon.

An additional mystery is the fact that after activating some unknown device in the Temple of Five and getting a glimpse of the Final Five, a Three seems to recognize one of the Final Five and repent her actions. One possibility is her earlier behavior towards Baltar, such as torturing him (TRS: "Rapture").

Baltar as an "Agent of God"

Baltar's actions when forced by his virtual Six to repent and worship the Cylon version of God leaves several significant questions as to the nature of both the virtual Six and Baltar's nature.

In the episode, "The Hand of God," Baltar makes an educated guess at the specific target to be destroyed on the tylium refinery without knowing any significant data on the site. Baltar only receives encouragement from his virtual Six to trust in her belief. In "Six Degrees of Separation," a stricken and nearly-criminally exposed Baltar repents to the virtual Six just as Lt. Gaeta arrives to confirm his innocence. In the same episode, the virtual Six disappears in anger just as the Shelly Godfrey copy arrives (with a suggestion that the virtual Six knows (or summons) the Godfrey model to arrive. The Godfrey model disappears just as the virtual Six returns as Baltar is repenting.

"Downloaded" strongly suggests that the virtual copies of Caprica-Six and Baltar that haunt their opposite interests seem to be psychological remnants of the pair's intensive emotional connection. But what if there is more to this than psychology? Episode events surrounding the Sacred Scrolls and Laura Roslin's quest for the Tomb of Athena confirm that the Colonials have a spiritual or prophetic element that has guided them to the data that now places them in a true general path to Earth. What forces are driving Baltar beyond his own egotism? What is the nature of the virtual Six and Baltar? Neither Baltar nor Caprica-Six know why they appear, and both virtual beings appear to have knowledge beyond that of what the living being they haunt should know. If Baltar is being influenced by the Cylon God (or some cybernetic influence known by neither Cylon or Colonial), there suggests a new thread to the Baltar-as-Cylon speculation that goes beyond the mere creation of a Baltar model. However, in the episode's podcast, Ron Moore speaks of the virtual Baltar as simply a hallucination, while in other interviews and podcasts, Moore consistently states that the origin of the virtual Six is supposed to be deliberately vague.

Baltar as Cylon Christ

The Cylon God is speculated to also have been a Lord of Kobol, "the one whose name cannot be spoken" or "the jealous god" who prompted the battle on Kobol. If so, he is/was a real being on Kobol of similar state to the other lords, and could have a physical incarnation, containing whatever portion of his mind could fit in a humanoid brain, among the Fleet. Baltar could be more than an agent of God, or a Cylon, he could be an (unaware) actual incarnation of the Cylon God in the "Christ" motif which is extremely common in literature. The Season 4 episode title "He That Believeth in Me" is a direct reference to Christ, and in fact Baltar becomes the messianic leader of his own cult during the episode.

On a more obvious, visual level, Baltar, on several occasion is seen to be in the pose of Christ on the cross, for example in the water, in his drug-induced vision in "Taking A Break From All Your Worries" or when he collapses in the grass on Kobol. Additionally, after his return from the Cylons, his hair and beard begin to resemble what most people would typically imagine Jesus's to have been like.

Baltar is smarter than not just other Colonials, but also apparently than the Cylons in some areas, discovering clues to Earth they can't figure out in spite of their computer memories and claimed superior knowledge of the Sacred Scrolls. Baltar's inner Six claims to be an angel sent from God to protect him. At the same time, Caprica-Six's equivalent appears in the form of a Baltar. Baltar's inner Six's first mission is to arrange a religious conversion for Baltar.

D'Anna Biers last words to Baltar afters he sees her vision of the Final Five are "So beautiful. You were right." Later, she explains to a Cavil that she was seeking "the one who programmed us."

Baltar is identified as a superior intelligence by the Hybrid which also names him as "the Chosen One."

As noted, the theme of divine incarnation for redemption is a very common one in fiction. Ron Moore has a known penchant for redemption drama, and Baltar as a Christ-figure, redeeming himself and then both humanity and the Cylons potentially, fits with this.

The First Hybrid who says his children believe he is a god, makes a prediction about the final Cylon: "...the fifth is still is in shadow, drawn toward the light, hungering for redemption, that will only come in the howl of terrible suffering." (TRS: "Razor") This statement, while not concrete, may relate to Baltar. Of the major living characters, he most has begged for redemption, and is most in need of it, and it will indeed be painful for him. While Lee Adama seeks redemption for the Olympic Carrier this has been at best a minor theme in his character. Only Baltar begs for it, and only Baltar has said he would find redemption in learning he was a Cylon.

References

  1. There are testimonies from Hiroshima and Nagasaki survivors, two Japanese cities that were struck with nuclear bombs at the end of World War II, being in buildings and even in trams quite close to the epicenter and coming out of the ordeal surprisingly unharmed save for a few scratches.