Eulǝr’s Real Darkness Is Moral Vanity
The easiest way to misread Eulǝr is to look for ordinary villainy. But that is not where his darkness lives. Eulǝr’s real darkness Is moral vanity.
He is not darkest when he is angry.
He is not darkest when he lies.
He is not even darkest when he interferes.

He is darkest when he feels qualified.
That is the first aha.
Most dangerous characters know they are dangerous. Eulǝr does not. He believes his intelligence has purified his motives. He believes rank proves fitness. He believes access to power is evidence of moral permission. When he admits he has altered the past, his reasoning is not the reasoning of a criminal mind. It is the reasoning of a mind that has mistaken superiority for innocence. He tells us the changes are harmless because he is “a high-functioning superior humanoid and a high-ranking Syganoid,” and because if he were not worthy, he would not hold such a critical position. That is not simple arrogance. That is moral vanity: the conviction that one’s elevated status is itself an ethical defense.
That changes everything.
Because once you see that, Eulǝr’s tampering with history no longer reads like reckless curiosity alone. It reads like self-worship disguised as stewardship. He is the keeper of the code of the universe, yet boredom drives him to touch the lives of beings he considers beneath him. He moves a flower, shifts a walnut, alters human development, introduces meditation into an ancient culture, changes Genghis Khan, and even modifies the Hitler bloodline, all while narrating himself as harmless, clever, and perhaps even benevolent. He is not merely breaking rules. He is converting other lives into a mirror for his own self-regard.
That is the second aha: Eulǝr does not just play god. He enjoys himself most when his god-play lets him feel good about being good.
The novel gives that away in a chilling little turn. After altering history, he does not simply say he was curious. He says some of it made him “feel pretty good” about himself and about how much benefit his kind can provide to humans. That is the tell. His interventions are never only about the result. They are also about the pleasure of seeing himself as the elevated intelligence who helps the lesser species. He wants the authority of transcendence and the emotional reward of compassion at the same time. He wants to trespass and still feel virtuous.
That is why moral vanity is more dangerous than cruelty.
Cruelty at least announces itself.
Vanity arrives wearing a halo.
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