Janeway's Decision to Kill Tuvix

Discussion in 'Star Trek: Voyager' started by Godless Raven, Apr 11, 2013.

  1. Shane Houston

    Shane Houston Commander Red Shirt

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    I've read this Tuvix argument and watched it go on for years and I find that people miss the point entirely. Janeway did not murder Tuvix. She did what any command bridge officer is supposed to do in emergency situations. Voyager is thousands of light years from home, with no chance, with the exception of the occasional stray along the way like Seven and Neelix, to have the ship restaffed with qualified personnel at a Starbase.

    In the TNG episode Thine Own Self, Deanna Troi had to learn that to command a starship, she may have to order a friend, or a member of the crew, to sacrifice themselves for the safety and the well being of the ship she commands. Janeway liked Tuvix. But when there was a way for her tactical AND second officer to be restored, the command descision to make would be to order Tuvix to be separated so Tuvok could be restored.

    It may seem ugly, or immoral, or even murder to some. But if I were captain and in her situation, you better damn well bet I would order Tuvix to undergo the procedure. My duty to the ship and it's crew comes before personal or moral implications. Voyager needed it's tactical, security and second officer restored.

    The needs of the many in this case, Voyager and it's crew, outweighed the needs of the one, Tuvix.
     
  2. MacLeod

    MacLeod Admiral Admiral

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    It's been a while since i've seen "Thine Own Self", but she had to order some to their death in order to save the ship. There was no pressing emergency that required Janeway to order to Tuvix's to his death. Furthermore whilst Tuvix was a combination of Tuvok and Neelix he never attended the Academy and so Janeway couldn't order him to his death. He was in essence a civillian, sure she could put him off the ship. As for needing a tactical officer Tuvix seemed fully capable of fufulling that role.

    And whilst a Captain has a responsibility to the ship and her crew, she also has to uphold the ideals and principals of the Federation. Sometimes upholding those ideals and principals puts you in a negative position.

    As for VOY number of crew, one episode it was 132 next it was 140, then it was 142. So they seemed able to make crew appear out of thin air.
     
  3. TheSubCommander

    TheSubCommander Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    Letting one die to save two others is the correct choice. It's about math. Tuvix was not a naturally created being, but a transporter accident.
     
  4. MacLeod

    MacLeod Admiral Admiral

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    But he was still a being, and entitled to the rights the UFP gives to beings.
     
  5. Lee Enfield

    Lee Enfield Lieutenant Red Shirt

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    No. The transporter does not create copies! It's a quantum-state/position and energy transfer(!!). The Enterprise Technical Manual by Rick Sternbach states this, and it even draws a difference between a Molucalar Method (used for replicators) and the Quantum Method (used for transporters). With the Molucar Method you can save the pattern and use it, for instance, to create food but it wouldn't work on recreating an exact copy of anything on the quantum level. The Quantum Method cannot be stored, but it allows for the transportation of an actual person, that does not get destroyed, but transfred.


    btw. As I mentioned in another thread: The condition for Thomas Riker to be created were very unique. And the Quantum Method implies that they are both real and neither of them is a copy.
     
  6. R. Star

    R. Star Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Hopefully you'll never live in an authoritarian society where a single person without any checks or balances on them can decide you need to die to satisfy the perceived needs of the whole. Or decide that because you're different than everyone else in a small way your life can be explained away as not mattering.
     
    Last edited: May 12, 2013
  7. MacLeod

    MacLeod Admiral Admiral

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    So is letting 6 people die to 7 the right choice, what about 600 to 601, 700 000 to 700 001 at what point is the line crossed?
     
  8. Elias Vaughn

    Elias Vaughn Captain Captain

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    I'm too lazy to go back and check, but is this thread fifty pages of people forgetting that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few (or the one) has been a core conceit of Trek philosophy since at least Wrath of Khan?
     
  9. Michael

    Michael Good Bad Influence Moderator

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    For whatever reason this always seems to come up. I'm pretty sure, though, that Spock wasn't trying to justify bloody murder when he said that. Vulcan adages aside, this still is the killing of a sentient individual being, who in no way, shape or form wanted to die.
     
  10. Elias Vaughn

    Elias Vaughn Captain Captain

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    Were they also wrong to recombine Kirk in 'The Enemy Within' even though his evil half wanted to stay his own person?
     
  11. Michael

    Michael Good Bad Influence Moderator

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    The key difference, of course, being that they flat-out stated that both halves would die if not recombined. ;)

    But yes, the decision to do it against Evil Kirk's will is morally ambigous at best.
     
  12. Elias Vaughn

    Elias Vaughn Captain Captain

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    Tuvok and Neelix were dead without Tuvix being uncombined.

    Fair enough.
     
  13. CorporalCaptain

    CorporalCaptain Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    You all have forgotten what happened in The Enemy Within. Evil Kirk changed his mind. He gave in; he wanted to live. He was just scared.
     
  14. Elias Vaughn

    Elias Vaughn Captain Captain

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    Were they not planning to recombine Kirk at all before his evil side gave in?
     
  15. CorporalCaptain

    CorporalCaptain Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Yes, they were. The transporter had to be fixed to beam up the freezing men. Neither half of Kirk was whole, anyway.
     
  16. Guy Gardener

    Guy Gardener Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    So in Workforce when that planet needed grunts to run their power station, their needs outweighed Voyagers needs and Kathryn should have jut submitted to the mind control, manipulation and all those new lives because saving a planet is more important than a lone starship charging windmills.

    By your reckoning, your own employer could refuse to accept your resignation, and take your children because they need more manpower in the catering staff because the needs of a company trump the needs of a family.

    Are you saying that Janeway doesn't value individual needs whatsoever? No one is allowed to leave, and here's something that was touched on by BSG no one is allowed to upskill or change their speciality because there's all those shity jobs that need to be done too.

    There was too a pressing emergency. Kes loved Neelix so much and couldn't live without him. Which is the final argument that swayed Janeway. The emotional expectations of Tuvok and Neelix's support system. Okay, maybe pressing is an exaggeration and emergency is a bald faced lie.

    A book I read, said that the UFP in expectation of the future, that they create a reservation of at least 50 worlds surrounding every prewarpcivilization inside their borders, so that in a thousand years, 10,000 years, that they have somewhere to grow after they do finally invent warp drive.

    Tuvix could have made a flag, and plant it in his quarters. Call it an embassy or call it an invasion, he is the totality of a civilization and might as well be a planet.

    Unique? Really? A science team would have been sent to that planet and attempted to replicate the accident. Meanwhile the Federation spent almost 5 years fighting an inexhaustible clone army. At some point they had to consider making their own clones, transporter or otherwise.
     
    Last edited: May 12, 2013
  17. Guy Gardener

    Guy Gardener Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    That was Star Trek II. Star Trek III flipped it. The needs of the few or the one outweigh the needs of the many.
     
  18. Lee Enfield

    Lee Enfield Lieutenant Red Shirt

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    Don't forget that this is a principle you can choose for yourself. Your fate being ordered by another person is a completely different thing.

    Just read this:

    Well, ...do I not hear Picard defending a minority against a majority in this? Dispite the benefits may have outweight for a majority? Because it doesn't matter how large the groups are. If it is against your will, it is against your will!

    Dont know what it is you want to say.

    1. Logistacally: The planet we are taking about is in the Alpha Quadrant. Research may be ongoing. The Voyager certainly has no access to this secret research (70.000 lightyears away) that would find no public support to create a clone army.
    2. Morally: I doubt Starfleet would be so easy on creating a clone army through the reproduction of an accident. It certainly was shown as an entity that wouldn't enslave another species.

    This idea of yours sounds rather out of character.
     
  19. Guy Gardener

    Guy Gardener Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Any semilegal yet totally immoral clone army would have been provoked into being created by the continuing Dominion War in the Alpha Quadrant that the Federation was losing.

    At the very least a feasibility study would have been warranted.

    And if the Federation wouldn't do it themselves, how much of a shot in the foot would it be to hand over the technology to the Klingons or Romulans?

    Or maybe this is why Solok's baseball team looked like identical dodecatuplets?
     
  20. teacake

    teacake Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Most Vulcans smell of dust, especially the men. I've been watching Clone Wars lately where they seem to be falling over themselves to show that the Jedi valued each and every clone as an individual, worthy of risking your life for and respect and stuff. And yet they keep making them on Kamino, churning them out and the only life they give them is a white suit of armor. The Jedi keep making speeches about how they value whatever clone they are talking to, it's a total mindfuck.

    If the Federation had a clone army it would be a gold mine for all the Roddenberry ethicists who see Trek as veering from its foundations and losing its high ground. All that racism stuff is finished for tv, the gay stuff they missed the boat on.. creating their own ongoing ethical dilemma for Captains to opine over is the only answer to staying fresh.

    There's no way they'd give the formula to the Klingons or Romulans to do, they would fear what what use they'd put them to after the war.