Also, since there were no standing armies before the Clone Wars, the Republic could have decided not to maintain a standing army afterward, a point suggested by the demilitarization of the New Republic following the Galactic Civil War. They would probably put the army on a stand-down, at least temporarily. My best guess is that they would have to either find a way to eliminate the clones' Order 66 programming or any other "questionable" orders. They would probably become equally suspicious of the Kaminoans, who programmed the clones in the first place. The Jedi already knew that the clones were compromised, even if they didn't know the full extent, and would likely learn the whole truth once they investigated everything. It is difficult to know what the Jedi and the Senate would do with the Grand Army of the Republic once the Clone Wars ended. The Bad Batch shows the Empire swiftly decommissioned the clone army and replaced them with stormtroopers shortly after the end of the Clone Wars. The Jedi Council would have quickly discovered their location and proceeded to Mustafar to capture them, forcing them to deactivate their droid armies, ending the Clone Wars. The ensuing investigation of his death or capture by the Jedi by the Senate would have revealed irrefutable proof of Order 66’s existence (RIP Fives), along with all of Palpatine's schemes and machinations for decades, including the plans for the Death Star and his involvement in instigating the Clone Wars.īy the time Palpatine was either dead or imprisoned, the prominent Separatist leaders, Count Dooku and General Grievous were dead, leaving only the Separatist Council at their redoubt on Mustafar. Dead or imprisoned, Palpatine would not have been able to initiate Order 66. Once Palpatine defeats Mace, with Anakin's assistance, one of Palpatine's first courses of action was to initiate Order 66, leading to the final destruction of the Jedi Order, beginning the Jedi Purge. Order 66 & Palpatine's Plans for the Galaxy RELATED: Why Making Anakin A Force Ghost Was A Bad Ideaġ. Starting from this point, what might have happened next if Anakin had chosen to let Mace kill Palpatine instead? After much internal deliberation and fear of losing Padme, Anakin blocked Windu's strike at Palpatine, cutting off Mace's lightsaber hand in the process, allowing Palpatine to attack Mace with Force Lightning, hurling him out of the window. Instead, he arrived to witness Mace trying to strike down a frightened and beaten-looking Chancellor Palpatine. However, the final turn came in Revenge of the Sith, when he rushed to Palpatine's Senate chambers as the Jedi, led by Mace Windu, attempted to arrest him. Starting in Attack of the Clones, Anakin took many steps down the path to the dark side. The concept of the pathological fear of death requires further study and refinement in the area of its descriptive demarcation, psychogenesis, and clinical application.But what if Anakin didn't fall to the dark side? How would that have changed the trajectory of the Star Wars galaxy? What exactly would it have changed? This article attempts to explore how things might have turned out differently in a few critical areas if Anakin had not succumbed to Palpatine's temptations and fallen to the dark side of the Force. Finally, the article has briefly dealt with the relevance of the pathological fear of death for diagnostic assessment and psychotherapy of patients with panic disorder and hypochondriasis. A relationship between panic disorder and hypochondriasis has been examined in the light of the pathological fear of death that they often share. A role of the cognitive abnormalities in the genesis of the pathological fear of death has been examined in the panic attacks and hypochondriasis, while a developmentally determined, pervasive mistrust in the bodily functioning and bodily worth has been stressed as a factor that crucially predisposes to the pathological fear of death in hypochondriasis, and to the respective type of hypochondriasis as well. The additional contributing factors have also been taken into consideration: a defect in the defensive and symbolic representation of death, and a general collapse of defensive functioning, with regression to a state of infantile helplessness and revival of the infantile death cognitions. In an attempt to account for the origin of the pathological fear of death, most weight has been given to developmental and structural abnormalities in the regulation and control of the primary and disruptive forms of anxiety. The article has presented a concept of the pathological fear of death as a categorically defined phenomenon and outlined its distinguishing features.
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