Well, yes he did believe Anakin was the Chosen One. This is why he felt (along with Obi Wan) personally responsible for Anakin in RotS. When he found out Vader was redeemed, he probably would have been very happy to know that foood triumphed over evil again.
When Anakin fell to the dark side and became Darth Vader, Yoda was saddened, but firmly believed he was beyond redemption and forgiveness, and ordered Obi-Wan to hunt down and kill him. Even as a Force spirit, Yoda continued to believe that Vader was irredeemable and there was no good left in him.
Indeed, Anakin returned to the light side and his true self when he killed the emperor. He fulfilled the prophecy of bringing balance to the force. In the eyes of his son Luke, and the force ghosts of Obi-Wan and Yoda, he had been redeemed. Anakin's redemption is not really about a balance of good and evil acts.
In The Phantom Menace, Yoda says to young Anakin Skywalker, “Fear is the path to the Dark Side. Fear leads to anger. Anger leads to hate. Hate …
Qui-Gon is the key to Force ghost knowledge
Yoda didn't specifically know how this would go down, or to what degree Anakin would cause it to happen, but he was playing a much longer game by Revenge of the Sith, and that's at least, in part, explained by Yoda's Force connection with Qui-Gon's spirit.
The Jedi from the Star Wars prequels, including Master Yoda, did not understand Anakin Skywalker's Chosen One prophecy for these essential reasons. The Jedi of the Star Wars prequel era clearly did not understand the famous Chosen One prophecy.
We go for the more simple answer, further considering the details of the question itself. If Anakin didn't go into that chamber as the Jedi confronted Palpatine, then Mace Windu would have defeated Palpatine, killing him. If you remember, Mace had him. He was ready to kill him.
It's quite clear that Obi-Wan Kenobi and Yoda lost hope in Anakin, they saw no chance of redemption, as Obi-Wan said to Luke in Return of the Jedi ”He's more machine now than man.” Obi-Wan and Yoda saw no hope of Anakin being redeemed; this is further proved by both of them constantly urging Luke to confront and kill ...
Anakin's unhealthy link between his love and attachment is perfectly explained in Clone Wars: Overlords. He admits “The only love I feel in my heart is haunted by what would happen should (if) I let go.” Anakin is never happy, not even with Padmé, because he is constantly afraid what will happen to him if he loses her.
Abstract. Anakin Skywalker, one of the main characters in the "Star Wars" films, meets the criteria for borderline personality disorder (BPD).
The canonical comic Star Wars: Darth Vader #7 confirms the younglings' deaths caused Anakin grief, self-loathing, hatred and pain, fueling his descent even further into the dark side.
In short: He felt Luke wasn't ready. Yoda was the grandmaster of the fallen prequel-era Jedi Order and trained Jedi for centuries, with students typically beginning as young children. He saw too much of Anakin in the young adult, and he didn't want to end up training the successor to Vader.
One of the main reasons why Yoda would've won against Anakin is simply because he was far better trained than him. Yoda could see the moves his opponents were going to make before they made them; therefore, battling against Anakin would've put him at a far heavier advantage.
Although the decision to turn to the Dark Side was Anakin's alone, the choice did not come from thin air. His natural prone to impulsivity and emotion without the support systems he needed in place made it easier for Anakin to stumble down a path of darkness.
Anakin does not have even the slightest bit of remorse. By the end, he feels nothing but anger. Although he feels regret for killing Padme, he still helps the evil Emperor. The film ends with Anakins standing side by side with the man on whose behalf he has committed all his crimes.
Anakin admits to Obi-Wan that he has been arrogant and unappreciative of his training, and apologizes to his master. Obi-Wan assures Anakin that he is proud of him, telling him that he has become a "far greater Jedi than I could ever hope to be."
Yes, when Darth Vader turned back to Anakin Skywalker and sacrifice himself to save his son, he dies and Obi-Wan uses the force to connect with Anakin's spirit. In that time Anakin apologizes to Obi-Wan, desperately asking him to forgive him for everything he has done to him and everybody over the years.
First and foremost, Obi-Wan didn't want to have to confront and try to kill Anakin, we see this all the way until their final conflict in their duel where Obi-Wan pleads with Anakin to not make him do what he knows he'll have to do if Anakin tries to attack from the low-ground.
Obi-wan regrets are layered. He regrets training Anakin and him regrets failing to train Anakin. He regrets hurting Anakin and he regrets not dying there.
Did Padme ever cheat on Anakin? No. As explained above, Padme did not cheat on Anakin with either Obi-Wan Kenobi or Rush Clovis.
It took some time, but Star Wars has officially explained why Qui-Gon Jinn was the only Jedi who could have saved Anakin Skywalker - because only Qui-Gon learned the truth about the Dark Side that Obi-Wan, Mace Windu, and even Yoda never realized.
because his Padawan Ahsoka. never became a knight. She left the order when she was still a padawan. This is why Anakin was denied the rank of master.
Star Wars reveals Emperor Palpatine learned Luke Skywalker is Darth Vader's son during The Empire Strikes Back. After Anakin Skywalker turned to the dark side and became Vader, his children were hidden to keep them save from the clutches of the Emperor.
Although Anakin Skywalker brought the Force back into balance, the Jedi Order was decimated by his actions as Darth Vader, leaving Luke Skywalker as the last of the Jedi.” The site also offers a direct quote from Luke Skywalker himself – “For many years, there was balance, and then I saw…
throughout many of the Legends storylines, Vader sought to hunt down every last Jedi. while Palpatine was no longer concerned with the Jedi. Order, in his eyes, Yoda and the Jedi no longer posed a threat to his role. during the early years of the Empire, Palpatine only sent Vader to hunt survivors.