This makes Strange the most adult of the Marvel heroes. His stories are not about revenge or justice; they are about stewardship . He represents the existential realization that the universe is indifferent, chaotic, and filled with horrors from beyond the veil. The only defense against this cosmic nihilism is discipline . Strange meditates. He studies. He prepares. He is the anti-Tony Stark: Stark builds suits to fix problems; Strange bends his own ego to accommodate problems.
This phase is critical because it establishes the exact flaw that the mystic arts will exploit. Strange’s rationalism is fragile; it depends entirely on his agency. When his hands shake uncontrollably, he can no longer perform surgery. He exhausts Western medicine, then spends his fortune on experimental treatments. The moment he seeks out the Ancient One in the Himalayas, he is not seeking enlightenment; he is seeking a cure. He is a desperate man, not a believer. This desperation is the door. Lee and Ditky cleverly invert the typical hero’s journey: Strange does not choose the adventure; the adventure (the collapse of his reality) chooses him. Doctor Strange
Doctor Strange endures because his origin never truly ends. Every new magical threat (the Empirikul, Nightmare, or the return of Dormammu) requires him to learn a new language, a new sacrifice, or a new humility. He is the perpetual student. The “long paper” on Doctor Strange is ultimately a paper on the human condition: we are all, like Strange, beings of limited perception trying to navigate a reality far stranger than we can accept. This makes Strange the most adult of the Marvel heroes