Again, you are using faulty logic.
I feel that it is logically safe, or at least plausible, that “mommy”,
whether that be some irrelevant mother that Jack took Angel from or his
wife at the time, would be “gone” at that point.
It is plausible, but not logically safe. Again, that is assuming facts that have not been made evident. If we consider that same ECHO only, then the fate of Angel’s mom is a toss up, open to speculation.
However, in the other ECHO, we have Moorin mentioning Jack’s wife at a time when Jack already has significant influence in Hyperion. Jack’s influence is established by the fact that Mister Blake, a VP of the company, is answering to him. This could only have happened between TPS and BL2. Prior to then, Jack had no real power to commit murder of an employee and easily get away with it. Jack did have some influence during TPS, due to his “Pandora hunch” that seemingly impressed the Board of Directors. Mind you, Tassiter never really trusted Jack nor given him any sense of respect. Tassiter is only overruled when the BoD do so, and even then Tassiter is reluctant to comply.
By having established when that ECHO took place, it would seem pretty improbable that a tech at that time would mention Jack’s wife if she supposedly disappeared before Angel was locked up, which would have been years before that time.
That assumes that Jack’s wife and Angel’s mother are one and the same. Personally, I tend to use Occam’s Razor when considering too many speculations. To my knowledge, no one outside of this thread has even considered that Angel’s mom and Jack’s wife could be two different people. I only bring it up because I wanted to be complete in my reasoning, and acknowledging a possible, though unlikely, scenario had done that.
Now of course, if we consider this idea that Angel’s mom and Jack’s wife are two different people, then that opens a whole new realm of possibilities. In that sense, there are two large unknowns that would further complicate any theories that have been discussed so far. And from there, everything would be mere speculation, anything would be plausible, but nothing would be rendered “logically safe.”
(he could very well have the same influence that he had at pre-sequel
at this time because Tassiter seems to show the same level of respect
towards him at both instances),
Tassiter never showed any kind of respect toward Jack. Anything that follows the above premise is pretty much nil.
Also since the final Jack ECHO happened at the end of Pre-Sequel, with the Moorin conversation logically happening some time before that, the Moorin conversation would have likely happened either during of before the events of the pre-sequel,
No, the Moorin conversation would not have happened before or during TPS. The “final Jack ECHO” happened after TPS, not just at the end. Yes, we do witness the scene where Jack strangles Tassiter, however, it is never implied exactly how longer after TPS it takes place. Jack would have needed to fix his face, “encourage” the other directors into giving up their shares, and make sure his takeover of Hyperion extended way beyond the Helios space station.
However, as far as speculation goes, The Moorin echo doesn’t
definitively say that the Angel project was started before the wife
disappeared, as what Moorin said about the wife only indicates that the
wife suggested that Angel was too dangerous before the time where she
disappeared, which obviously could’ve happened at any time.
True, but if the wife/mother disappeared 10-15 years ago, then it would definitely be a suspension of belief that Moorin would recall an event thaat far back.
At the end of the day, we’re speculating potential back-story from about
half a page of dialogue. Given that we basically have nothing to work
with, there are about a billion timelines that can still follow the
structure set by the ECHOs and fit in the realm of possibility.
You may be speculating, but I am still using reason to route out fallacies and Jack’s lies that some have already taken to be a fact. Adding more speculative ideas is fun and all, but it does little when trying to think critically and reason logically.