jabberwalkie09 said:
Firstly, the evidence being used to say that Maeve has awoken is being supported by what we know was her being coded actions as part of her narrative supposedly done by Ford (not sold on him doing that) and her sudden decision to break from that coding.
Second, there has been no evidence of her having discussions with herself at all. Not like how Dolores did with herself in the finale, or earlier at the tarot card reader table.
Third, Maeve supposed consciousness awakening lacks two important things. Assuming for a second that Dolores is fully awakened and that the finale wasn't just the manifestation of Wyatt resurfacing, he not only heard the "Remember..." line but also actually conversed with herself. Again, neither of those things has happened for Maeve that I can recall.
The rejection of the programming is the maze programming coming to the surface. The maze is in the park. I get the sense that her plot in the future will deal with her finding the truth and going through her memories in much the same manner (though to a lesser degree) that we did with Dolores this season. Her journey to the center of the maze has likely started, but she hasn't gotten there yet if we go by Dolores. Hell, even Teddy "I'm this show's Kenny" Flood has checked one of those boxes ("Remember...").
While TCTTS and some others are completely fine with disregarding the rules of the world they've setup, looking at it from the stand point of someone who isn't a writer and sees that other characters in the show have followed, at least in part, the same format for the maze then Maeve is not fully awakened yet.
It doesn't matter if it was Ford or not, it clearly says right there on the screen, and Bernard is about to say it before she grabs the tablet, that she's supposed to go to the mainland. She doesn't do that.
Second, there absolutely is evidence of that. She's clearly debating whether or not to get off the train for quite a while. (The voice on the intercom says the train will leave in 15 minutes, and then it later says it's about to leave.) She's sitting there, debating with herself, whether she's going to leave or go back for her daughter.
I think this was a style choice by the directors to show us, very literally, the steps to Dolores gaining sentience. We hear the voices she hears, and then we see her literally talking to herself. And at the same time show us the same thing with Mave without having to literally walk every step of the journey because we've already seen it with Dolores.
Third, "Wyatt" couldn't kill guests, so him resurfacing has nothing to do with anything. The whole Wyatt thing was just so Dolores would wipe out all of the other hosts originally. She still had to override her own core code to decide to kill Ford.
There is no "maze programming" and there is no "maze." The maze is just a symbol for how Arnold interpreted how a sentient mind works. He set up a "maze" for Dolores, which ended with her recalling her own death, as a test. The final step is her hearing her own voice, her own conscious, and that's what she does and what we see Meave do (though again, we're seeing Maeve's progression from the outside and Dolores' from the inside.)