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#46 | |
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Rear Admiral
Location: in a figment of a mediocre mind's imagination
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Re: Why do so many people rag on "Dear doctor"
no, that's not what happened. A decision not to get involved would have meant not working on a cure at all and leaving the area. They WITHELD a cure that they already HAD-That's a decision by omission, no different than having a bottle full of water and denying it to a man dying of thirst on the street, or denying a life preserver that you're carrying to a drowning man in the waters below. And then Archer tried to rationalize denying a cure on the basis of picking a species that Phlox felt "deserved to live more" was somehow NOT playing God, when really his decision was the very definition of "playing God." |
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#47 | |||||||
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Writer
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Re: Why do so many people rag on "Dear doctor"
(Just to clarify, the mythology of the "Roswell UFO crash" didn't arise until the late '70s and early '80s. When it actually happened in 1947, "flying disc" was just a term people used to mean "unknown round thing in the sky," and hadn't yet taken on the "alien spaceship" connotation, so there was no contradiction when the military said they recovered a "flying disc" one day and identified it as a weather balloon the next day. So it was a minor, forgotten incident. But decades later, a UFO researcher dug up the report and imposed her latter-day assumptions about what the term "flying disc" meant, and thus mistakenly concluded that the military had admitted finding an alien vessel and then covered it up. Hence a new myth was born.)
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Christopher L. Bennett Homepage -- Includes purchasing links for Only Superhuman, on sale now! Updated 12/30/12 with annotations for the novel. Written Worlds -- My blog |
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#48 | |
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Fleet Captain
Location: A ship, a living ship, full of strange alien lifeforms.
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Re: Why do so many people rag on "Dear doctor"
__________________
"Quite possibly, the five Jem'Hadar could turn Data into a collection of four spasming limbs, one helpless torso, and one head that shouts insults at them like the Black Knight from the Monty Python sketch." -Timo Saloniemi |
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#49 | |||
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Rear Admiral
Location: 里耶卡
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Re: Why do so many people rag on "Dear doctor"
In order to suspend disbelief in this case, we need to assume that the theory of evolution in Star Trek, and the one in real life are not one and the same. It's almost like saying that Humans of Star Trek breathe methane gas instead of oxygen, and we're fine with it.
Yes, I do. I'm a hardline skeptic by nature, but I don't dismiss parapsychology lightly. I guess I may have read too much Erich Von Daniken garbage as a kid.
But this? Phlox was exposed as an ethically bankrupt dilettante, and Archer was an irresponsible schmuck for not seeking second opinion. There's no ambiguity here. There's no dilemma. There's just ignorance.
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No religious or family tradition can stand in the way of change. |
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#50 |
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Commodore
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Re: Why do so many people rag on "Dear doctor"
__________________
Honk if you love silence http://www.jespah.com (includes fanfiction with most ratings). TU Publishing Adult Trek Anthology |
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#51 | |
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Rear Admiral
Location: 里耶卡
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Re: Why do so many people rag on "Dear doctor"
__________________
No religious or family tradition can stand in the way of change. |
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#52 |
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Captain
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Re: Why do so many people rag on "Dear doctor"
They also turned the prime directive from a political non-interference principle that it was in every episode except Pen Pals and Homeward to a smug 'Callous bastard' rule. They made the prime directive into the one part of it that isn't a good idea. As for humanoid aliens. A) The Chase explains that. B) How do we know we didn't evolve the human from just because it happens to be the most efficient form for an intelligent being on an Earthlike planet? For all we know the humanoid form is a genetic imperative. Now, sexually compatible, yeah that's stupid. |
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#53 |
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Vice Admiral
Location: In pre-production
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Re: Why do so many people rag on "Dear doctor"
The more I read objections to the episode, the better I think it is.
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John |
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#54 |
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Captain
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Re: Why do so many people rag on "Dear doctor"
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#55 | ||
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Rear Admiral
Location: in a figment of a mediocre mind's imagination
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Re: Why do so many people rag on "Dear doctor"
yep. Considering the end decision, nothing was going to salvage the episode, but if they'd actually portrayed it with ambiguity, like maybe we're supposed to think Archer made the wrong call, that would have been interesting. Actually, the original ending would have been more interesting and much better in the sense it would have at least let Archer off the hook. Instead, as you write, there's no ambiguity. We're clearly meant to think that the right decision was made, and Archer is well on the way to realizing the wisdom of a future PD. It's absolutely terrible instead of just mostly terrible. |
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#56 | |
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Lieutenant Commander
Location: Location? What is this?
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Re: Why do so many people rag on "Dear doctor"
The fact that they chose not to share the cure didn't really bother me story-wise. In fact, I found it rather interesting (though I didn't agree with the decision). But I can certainly understand why some would be bothered by it.Now it would have been far more interesting to me if Phlox stayed completely silent about the fact that he found a cure, and then the episode could have ended on a deliberately dark note. He almost didn't tell Archer about it anyway. It would have been better to me if the writers took that one step further. Ah we'll. I thought the episode was okay overall. I didn't love it, but I don't hate it so much that I'll stop watching altogether. I have enjoyed reading all of your thoughts! |
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#57 |
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Commander
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Re: Why do so many people rag on "Dear doctor"
I think this episode was locked into conflict with what we know would eventually happen in the ST lineage as opposed to how it would have been handled if there was no precedent canonical ST.
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"I see no reason to enlighten you." - Tuvok, ST: Voyager. |
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#58 |
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Commodore
Location: Asheville, NC
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Re: Why do so many people rag on "Dear doctor"
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#59 |
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Lieutenant Commander
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Re: Why do so many people rag on "Dear doctor"
But worfs brother prevented it. Personally while I disagree with the prime directives harsher uses... I do like seeing it employed, as it creates conflict, between their professional ethics, and conventional morality. |
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#60 |
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Commodore
Location: Asheville, NC
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Re: Why do so many people rag on "Dear doctor"
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The fact that they chose not to share the cure didn't really bother me story-wise. In fact, I found it rather interesting (though I didn't agree with the decision). But I can certainly understand why some would be bothered by it.




