Scenario: TNG Homeward.
So a planetary atmosphere is breaking up, there's no way to stop it, and there's the choice to (1) save either one village by placing an atmospheric shield, (2) shipping the population of said village to another planet (like it happened in the TNG ep) or (3) letting the species die out, nominally because the prime directive requires so (by following the interpretation Picard uses).
So let's assume, there's really no way out of this one, of saving the planetary population at large. No wooing of a female Q (or Trelane), no confounding an omnipotent supercomputer in its own logic until it shortcircuits, no reprogramming the 'scenario', etc., etc., etc.; we simply have to accept that saving all cannot be done, no matter how much we'd like to.
What would Kirk have done ?
Additionally, say that he'd choose the resolution Picard chose, how would he have dealt with any dissidents like Nicolai aboard ?
So a planetary atmosphere is breaking up, there's no way to stop it, and there's the choice to (1) save either one village by placing an atmospheric shield, (2) shipping the population of said village to another planet (like it happened in the TNG ep) or (3) letting the species die out, nominally because the prime directive requires so (by following the interpretation Picard uses).
So let's assume, there's really no way out of this one, of saving the planetary population at large. No wooing of a female Q (or Trelane), no confounding an omnipotent supercomputer in its own logic until it shortcircuits, no reprogramming the 'scenario', etc., etc., etc.; we simply have to accept that saving all cannot be done, no matter how much we'd like to.
What would Kirk have done ?
Additionally, say that he'd choose the resolution Picard chose, how would he have dealt with any dissidents like Nicolai aboard ?
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