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If he wants to find the Door, he may have to rewind his relationship with Dolores - and go from killing her father to helping Dolores save him. You know who loves staring at their own reflection? Everybody.” “You didn’t make me interested in you, you made me interested in me,” William says in the second episode of this season. William says that started by falling in - and out of - love with Dolores. The moment he “began” may refer to when he transformed from the young, idealistic white-hat William into the black-hat Debbie Downer with a taste for murder. When you look at those clues together, it’s clear that William needs to confront his past. This scene is similar to one from the season premiere, when the host version of kid Ford tells William to “find the door,” which “begins where you end, and ends where you began.” Kids say the darndest things in Westworld. “If you’re looking forward, you’re looking in the wrong direction,” says the daughter, channeling ghost-in-the-machine Ford. When the dust and blood and small bits of Craddock settle, Lawrence’s daughter approaches William and tells him that he still doesn’t understand the real game. The Man in Black and Lawrence head to Lawrence’s hometown, where they get held hostage by Major Craddock and the Confederados before William defuses the situation (well, metaphorically). “The man you’re based on? I wonder if there is any of him in you?” What Is Ford Trying to Tell William? “You don’t know who you are, do you?” Dolores tells Bernard in Episode 3. And the show has already alluded to Bernard having pieces of Arnold beyond his physical appearance. Ford likely used the same technology to copy Arnold’s body that was used to copy Delos’s body Delos died just a few years after Arnold, so the technology to capture Arnold’s mind may have already existed at the time of his death. If it isn’t Ford’s mind that Bernard pilfered, the next option might be even more intriguing: Arnold’s. In the pilot, Ford tells Bernard that humanity has peaked, and that one day, “perhaps we shall even resurrect the dead,” Ford says. They simply became music.” Perhaps his version of “becoming music” is continuing as a host-human hybrid, and he made Bernard preserve his consciousness somewhere in the park. Ford’s final words before he died were “Mozart, Beethoven, and Chopin never died. The most obvious conclusion is that it’s Ford’s mind on the control unit. If Bernard stole one of the control units, it may be because someone’s mind is on it. … and then we see him sneak it into his pocket. The first question that comes to mind: Is Delos the only person whose mind has been uploaded to a control unit? We see Bernard staring at a control unit in the lab … Screenshots via HBO The process didn’t work - he got stuck on what William called a “cognitive plateau” - but the implications of this technology upend much of what we know about the nature of Delos’s business. He died roughly three decades before the present timeline, but Delos scientists copied his mind onto a control unit (a host brain) and implanted it into a copy of his body so he could “live” forever. The fourth episode shows us James Delos’s journey from human to host (and him listening to “Play With Fire” off of the Rolling Stones album Out of Our Heads). Has Delos Uploaded Other Human Minds Into Hosts? But answers just lead to more questions, so grab a bucket and some protein bars and let’s dive into this week’s most pressing questions. Delos has spent years trying to resurrect the company founder, IMDb lied when the site called the Episode 3 mystery woman “Grace,” and we got definitive proof that Westworld bar owners need to hire bouncers. We didn’t get any Dolores or Maeve (or Shogun World) in the fourth episode of Westworld Season 2, “The Riddle of the Sphinx,” but a show that loves questions finally gave us some answers.