Dr. Manhattan (John Osterman) was a physicist who, after being completely vaporized in 1959 by an intrinsic field subtractor machine, rebuilt himself from scratch with a body that operates on physics principles rather than biology. His blue glow is Cherenkov radiation, and he experiences time non-linearly, perceiving past, present, and future simultaneously like a watchmaker seeing all parts of a watch at once. Unlike humans who require food, oxygen, and experience pain, his engineered body has no biological needs. His only weakness is tachyons, which can disrupt his perception of time. He can transfer his powers to others through organic material and even disguise himself as a normal human, though he struggles with emotional detachment due to the absence of physical sensations that anchor human emotional experience.
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11 Insane Physiological Facts About Dr ManhattanAjouté :
Dr. Manhattan, a physicist, was born as a human, but an accident occurred in the year 1959 when he stepped into the wrong chamber and got vaporized. [music] Then he rebuilt himself from scratch and became a living god. I mean, he can exist in multiple places at the same time, experience the past, present, and future at the same [music] time, and can even rearrange matter, no less than a god. Also, he's blue and always glowing.
But you know what I'm curious about is what is he biologically? Like, what's [music] happening inside that body and why is he not human anymore? So, I have 11 physiological facts for you. [music] Let's go. Who is Dr. Manhattan? So, John Osterman was born in 1929 in Germany, and he was initially going to follow his father's trade in watchmaking. But his plans changed when Hiroshima happened.
His father threw his old pocket watch, which John was working on at that moment, out the window as he understood that nuclear physics was the future.
This was the moment that set everything in motion. Following his father's insistence, John went to Princeton and got his PhD in atomic physics. He ended up working on something called an intrinsic field subtractor at a government research facility in Gila Flats. So, the logic behind the machine was basically to strip the force holding things together, like removing the intrinsic field from matter. And when that happens, the object completely disintegrates. But one day John went back to one of those chambers to retrieve his then girlfriend Janey Slater's watch that he'd repaired and left in his lab coat. But unfortunately, the door closed behind him and he got locked inside. The countdown couldn't be stopped. The machine activated and he was destroyed to the point that every single atom in his body was torn apart.
And this was the origin of Dr. Manhattan, unlike any other fictional character. What happened to his human body? After the accident, something strange started happening over the following months at Gila Flats. People started reporting things one by one starting from seeing a ghostly presence, then the appearance of a fully formed a nervous system just floating there. Then slowly they saw the muscle and then the [music] skin. Mind you, he wasn't healing because that happens when a body fixes itself using its existing biological systems, but John's body had been completely destroyed. He started building his body the way his father built watches, and that means Dr. Manhattan walks around [music] in a designed body. Now, his physique is perfect as he built it on his own from the ground up. His every single feature is his own choice and not some biological accident. We're all stuck with the genetics we're handed, but Dr. Manhattan looked at human bodies and thought of doing something different.
Why is he blue and glowing? Visually, that blue glow is so iconic and it's uncanny that there's a real-world physics explanation for it. If you've ever seen pictures of a nuclear reactor's cooling pool, that eerie blue glow that surrounds it is called the Cherenkov radiation. It happens when charged particles move through a medium like water faster than the speed of light in that medium, and it's almost certainly what Dr. Manhattan emits.
Basically, he's a living nuclear event who's constantly radiating energy at dangerous levels to the people around him. That's why people who were close to John in the comics developed cancer, including his ex-girlfriend Janie Slater and an old friend Wally Weaver. He's horrified [music] by the thought of whether he's slowly killing everyone around him with radiation exposure, and the media runs with it, too. But the real truth in the comics is far more sinister. It was Adrian Veidt, as an Ozymandias, who infected Janie, Wally, and the others with a high doses of radiation in order to force Manhattan off Earth and clear the path for his own plan. So the cancer wasn't caused by Manhattan at all, but he was manipulated into thinking he's at fault, and he banishes himself to Mars. How does he experience time differently from everyone else? I want to answer this as clearly as I can because he doesn't experience time the way we do. For us, the past is gone, the present is happening, and the future has not yet come, so time is linear and it goes in one direction, but all three exist simultaneously for Doctor Manhattan.
He's experiencing his childhood, [music] his death, and everything in between all at once. Issue four, Watchmaker, is based around his non-linear perception and is the best explanation for this.
The metaphor it uses is perfect. When a watchmaker looks at a watch, he sees all the parts at once and understands the whole mechanism together. For Doctor Manhattan, the concept [music] of time is the same. He sees all of it, always.
This might sound like a superpower, but it's more like a prison. Imagine not being able to make a choice because you already know what choice you're going to make, so you can't really look forward to anything because you're already experiencing it. Obviously, you would feel caged rather than being thankful for this gift. It's also one of the main reasons why he keeps growing distant from humanity. What does his body actually run on? I'll give you a comparison that might help land how Doctor Manhattan is different from every other living being. Ours or any biological body is basically very complicated as it needs food, oxygen, can feel pain and tiredness, but Doctor Manhattan needs none of that. His body doesn't have any needs because he isn't a biological organism and is like a physics phenomena that has taken the structure of a human being. His ability to alter the structure of reality is his physiology. When he becomes a huge size in Vietnam, which you see both in the comic and the 2009 film, he's actually designing himself in real time. He can even split himself into multiple versions and exist in different places at the same time. There's a scene in the comics in issue three where Laurie realizes that she's been spending intimate time with one version of Jon while another version of him has been working in the lab on his research the whole time. She's, of course, devastated and he can't even understand why that's upsetting. For us, being here right now means we're not somewhere else and that's the basis for human connection.
But, Doctor Manhattan doesn't experience presence the way we do. The difference lies in the fact that his body's engineered unlike our bodies which have evolved. What's his one real weakness?
There's exactly one thing that can genuinely blind someone like him who has an omniscient perception of time and its tachyons, which are a kind of particle theoretically that if they exist would move faster and backwards through cause and effect as normally cause comes before effect. Doctor Manhattan seems to see the future following the same logic, but tachyons move against his flow and completely disrupt his perception. His other abilities like telekinesis remain unaffected, but his foresight specifically goes dark due to tachyons.
Ozymandias [music] figures this out in the comics and fills the environment with tachyon particles without Manhattan's awareness about his plan.
Imagine, even Manhattan got blindsided as it interferes with his perception just like static on a radio frequency.
So, the one thing that can stop his near omniscience is to corrupt his signal.
So, you basically don't overpower his perception of time, just make the signal too noisy to read. Why is he slowly losing his humanity? People always see Doctor Manhattan's emotional detachment as a personality flaw as if he's cold and just doesn't care. But, I think Alan Moore was indicating that his emotional and physical detachment was more or less the same process. Physical sensations like hunger, fatigue, pain, warmth, touch make us human, but Doctor Manhattan doesn't have any of that. The physical anchors of human emotional life are missing from his life. So, it's not like he stops trying, his body just doesn't let him feel any emotions like we do. It's just impossible for him psychologically. And his partner Laurie faces the brunt of it saying that being with him was like being alone. But, it's tragic that he still wants to connect but doesn't have the hardware to feel any connection. Can he hide as a normal human? The HBO Watchmen series reveals a new side of Doctor Manhattan and shows that he can disguise himself as another person. Meanwhile, he's always visible in the comics and the 2009 film. Like there was no hiding him. But in the series, he could hide his blue glow and pass as a normal human being and he could do this for years. So, in the show, we get to know that he'd been living on Earth, specifically Tulsa, Oklahoma, the whole time disguised as Cal Abar, Angela Abar's husband. And his own memories were suppressed, which was his idea again. Though it was actually Ozymandias who designed the memory suppressing device, which Manhattan then chose to use. He wanted to experience something close to a normal human life, even if it was for a short while. So, when Angela Abar breaks open Cal's head and removes the metallic ring-like device hidden inside, the real Doctor Manhattan comes back and his disguise finally breaks apart. If you think about it psychologically, the god who everyone assumed was easily identifiable was someone's kind, well-mannered husband and was standing right next to them, but nobody noticed. Can he transfer his powers to someone else? This is the most important physiological revelation about him and is shown outside of comics in the eighth episode of the series, A God Walks into a Bar. Doctor Manhattan first meets Angela at a bar in Saigon, Vietnam and tells her, "I suppose I could transfer my atomic components into some sort of organic material. If someone were to consume it, they would inherit my powers." He gives her an example by saying that he could transfer his abilities into an egg and whoever consumed it would inherit his powers.
This means his powers aren't limited to his body, but they can be transferred and passed through living matter. It makes sense when you think about how he reconstructed himself, [music] like a kind of operating system which can be copied and installed elsewhere. So, at the end of the series, Angela finds a single unbroken egg and eats it after Manhattan is destroyed. She wanted to test whether he left his powers inside it for her, but the show ends and we don't get to see whether he did. I'm glad they left it to our imagination considering he could see the future but couldn't stop loving someone anyway. Is he actually omnipotent? I think calling Dr. Manhattan omnipotent is not quite right. Yeah, he has the power to alter reality and reshape the world, but even he has a limits. Tachyon's, as you know, can block his perception of time and his emotional detachment. I feel is a huge disadvantage because it reduces his motivation to care, which is even more disturbing. In the Doomsday Clock series, they show that even his power has limits when he encounters a celestial forces. But, his biggest weakness is that he engages less and less the further he drifts from humanity emotionally. So, the real Dr. Manhattan is not a god, but just a physicist who has rebuilt himself to appear like a god, but still is confined within rules.
>> [music] >> Without emotions, infinite power can only take you so far. Could any of this actually happen? Now, if it was us who got exposed to the intrinsic field subtractor, we would be so dead.
Obviously, complete disintegration's not something common people like you and me can survive. There's not even a specific explanation yet for how physics will allow a destroyed organism to reconstruct itself from nothing. All of Dr. Manhattan's abilities have violate the laws of thermodynamics, causality, biology, and every scientific theory.
[music] But, that's what Dr. Manhattan is, a thought experiment Alan Moore disguised as a superhero. He's the answer to the unsettling question of what happens to a human being when you remove the physical constraints of being human. Just a very lonely physicist who can still feel the ghost of what it was like to love someone but can't quite reach it anymore. The body is gone along with the person. So, that's everything that's happening inside that blue glowing body. Jon Osterman is truly one of the most tragic characters ever written who started as someone who loved deeply but then could no longer be recognized as human. Let me know in the comments which fact you found most interesting. And if you enjoyed this, hit that like button, subscribe, and ring the notification bell. I'll see you in the next one. Stay safe and as always, stay marvelous.
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