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#286 | |
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Commodore
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Re: True or False: Dear Dr. is most morally bankrupt trek episode evar
There is no bad science in the episode as nothing that Phlox says is scientifically wrong. As I tried to elaborate above, the crucial question is whether you view messing with DNA as curing sickness or giving the species a head start. I also think that the biological stuff should stay in there. The two greatest moment of the episode have been the moments in which the humans feel compassion for the sick Valakans as well as the exploited Menk whereas Phlox doesn't. He has his mind on the long-run and realizes that what is exploitation from a human perspective is decent form of coexistence as the dominant species might very well have eradicated the weaker one. This is clearly the view of a biologist. Of course the better version would have been the original one in which Archer did give them the cure at the end precisely in order to maintain tension between gut-following humans who only see the immediate suffering and the hyper-distanced doctor who only sees the distant past and the far future. A further problem was that the suffering of the Menk which Sindatur mentioned got not woven into this, that the initial "they are exploited" reaction does not create questions like "shall we give them the cure if they commit to treating the Menk better?".
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The illegal we do immediately; the unconstitutional takes a little longer. - former US Secretary of State and unconvicted war criminal Henry Kissinger |
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#287 |
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Rear Admiral
Location: Hiberniae Septentrionalis
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Re: True or False: Dear Dr. is most morally bankrupt trek episode evar
News flash: It's not the place of people to second guess the future. That way lies madness where nobody helps anybody. "Hey there's a guy drowning, I could help him but he might turn out to be the next Hitler, guess I won't save him then". (As a matter of fact this did happen - when Adolf Hitler was 4 he fell through thin ice on a river in Austria and nearly died, another kid heard his screams and pulled him out. But there is no shame on that kid for rescuing him - even though Adolf went on to become who he became, it wasn't for that kid to know, and in rescuing him, he did the right thing.)
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I had a friend once, but the wheels fell off. Sad, very sad. |
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#288 |
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Commodore
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Re: True or False: Dear Dr. is most morally bankrupt trek episode evar
About second guessing, the ability to think ahead and consider potential unanticipated consequences is what makes us different from animals.
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The illegal we do immediately; the unconstitutional takes a little longer. - former US Secretary of State and unconvicted war criminal Henry Kissinger |
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#289 | |||
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Fleet Captain
Location: A ship, a living ship, full of strange alien lifeforms.
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Re: True or False: Dear Dr. is most morally bankrupt trek episode evar
The point that "Interference can have unforeseen consequences/we cannot play god" is not wrong in itself, but the episode fails to present it properly.
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"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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#290 | ||
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Rear Admiral
Location: Sacramento, CA
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Re: True or False: Dear Dr. is most morally bankrupt trek episode evar
As I said, there is no denying the Menks' potential, we saw far more exhibited in the one Menk we got close to, then what we were shown of the Valakian's intelligence. Intelligence, not Knowledge
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One Day I hope to be the Man my Cat thinks I am Where are we going? And why are we in this Handbasket?
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#291 |
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Fleet Captain
Location: A ship, a living ship, full of strange alien lifeforms.
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Re: True or False: Dear Dr. is most morally bankrupt trek episode evar
__________________
"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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#292 | ||
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Captain
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Re: True or False: Dear Dr. is most morally bankrupt trek episode evar
Also let's compare the Valakans treatment of the Menk, to the way America treated black people before the Civil war or the way Germany treated Jews during WWII. Both America and Germany did things that were worse then what the Valakans did to the Menk, but does that mean if Americans or Germans were dying of a plague, no one should help them? The Valakans could change their ways in the future, heck, giving them the cure could have convinced them to change. They can't change for the better if they are dead. The moral dilemma fails, because it based on junk science and ignores the possibility that the Valakans may treat the Menk better in the near future. I think sfdebris made a pretty good case of why the science and morality in this episode is crap. http://blip.tv/sf-debris-opinionated...review-5896615 |
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#293 | |
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Fleet Admiral
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Re: True or False: Dear Dr. is most morally bankrupt trek episode evar
__________________
It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. It is by the beans of Java that thoughts acquire speed, the hands acquire shakes, the shakes become a warning. It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. |
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#294 | |
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Commodore
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Re: True or False: Dear Dr. is most morally bankrupt trek episode evar
He merely compares the Valakians and the Menk with homo sapiens and the Neanderthals and says that giving the latter an advantage is wrong. It is a question of the time horizon. Is this an ordinary sickness we are treating or are we giving one of two sentient species a serious long-term advantage? I think the latter is true as we do not talk about an external issue like a plague but about collapsing chromosomes. If they gave them the cure they would have to counterbalance this via making them commit to treating the Menk better unless you wanna claim that biological issues are more important than social ones. To use your example, providing sick nazis or slaveowners with medicine while not caring about the people they subjugated would obviously not merely be wrong but a crime of vast proportions. Or to use again my animal rights comparison, the Valakian mistreatment of the Menk is as natural to them as our treatment of animals as they have done it for tens of thousands of years. The idea of equal rights is totally alien to them, you'd have to literally force your ethics upon them. So the Enterprise crew would have to cure a genetic breakdown and redesign the social fabric of two species. Sounds awfully close to playing God to me.
__________________
The illegal we do immediately; the unconstitutional takes a little longer. - former US Secretary of State and unconvicted war criminal Henry Kissinger |
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#295 |
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Fleet Admiral
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Re: True or False: Dear Dr. is most morally bankrupt trek episode evar
__________________
It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. It is by the beans of Java that thoughts acquire speed, the hands acquire shakes, the shakes become a warning. It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. |
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#296 | ||
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Commodore
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Re: True or False: Dear Dr. is most morally bankrupt trek episode evar
He realizes that this is not something culturally contingent like the power struggles inside humankind (or Denobula in his case) but more of a biological issue, a form of coexistance that has gone on for as long as these species have existed which is most likely hundreds of thousands of years. Doesn't imply that you cannot change it but the longer you do something the more deeply it is burned into you. This 'only biological, no social interference' stance is wrong as it implies that Archer has to give the cure if the Valakians wage war against the Menk or put them into concentration camps.
__________________
The illegal we do immediately; the unconstitutional takes a little longer. - former US Secretary of State and unconvicted war criminal Henry Kissinger |
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#297 | |
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Fleet Admiral
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Re: True or False: Dear Dr. is most morally bankrupt trek episode evar
In any case: Curing disease trumps all. If you have the cure for some disease, and you are confronted with people suffering from that disease who ask you to help them (which would automatically render the Prime Directive inapplicable, as you are allowed to help anyone who ASKS), you are obligated, under all circumstances, to provide it. There can be no circumstance under which it is ever ethical to refuse to cure someone if you have the power to do it.
__________________
It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. It is by the beans of Java that thoughts acquire speed, the hands acquire shakes, the shakes become a warning. It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. |
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#298 |
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Commodore
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Re: True or False: Dear Dr. is most morally bankrupt trek episode evar
__________________
The illegal we do immediately; the unconstitutional takes a little longer. - former US Secretary of State and unconvicted war criminal Henry Kissinger |
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#299 |
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Vice Admiral
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Re: True or False: Dear Dr. is most morally bankrupt trek episode evar
__________________
Boobies are evil!!! |
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#300 |
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Rear Admiral
Location: Hiberniae Septentrionalis
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Re: True or False: Dear Dr. is most morally bankrupt trek episode evar
But it was only speculation. The future is forever inscrutable. Who knows what path it may take, what turns and twists and unforseen factors lie ahead? Based on some dodgy speculation, Phlox decided that he knew what was best for two entire species. And he took it upon himself to be judge, jury and executioner for the Valakians. And then he and Archer have the temerity to congratulate themselves for "Not playing God"? I'd hate to see their idea of actually playing god.
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I had a friend once, but the wheels fell off. Sad, very sad. |
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