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Should Tyler be charged with Dr. Culber's murder?

Should Tyler be charged with Dr. Culber's murder?

  • Yes

    Votes: 27 37.5%
  • No

    Votes: 45 62.5%

  • Total voters
    72
Having read this debate back and forth endlessly, I feel compelled to put in my own two cents for whatever it’s worth.


I went back to the scene with L’Rell and transcribed her exact words [next paragraph]. There seems no doubt whatsoever that Tyler was a real person, and this Tyler that we now see is also a real person, although perhaps not the original, more like a cloned twin. Of course what L’Rell says could be complete lies, but they’re all we have, and I think we are meant to accept them as fact.


“The one you call Tyler was captured in battle at the binary stars. We harvested his DNA, reconstructed his consciousness and rebuilt his memory. We modified Voq into a shell that appears human. We grafted his psyche into Tyler’s and in so doing Voq has given his body and soul for our ideology. If he suffers for that choice, so be it.”


I had always assumed that the real Tyler’s body was dead, except for part or all of his brain that went into Voq’s modified body. However, if all that was harvested was his DNA, and his memories of being tortured are false ones reflecting Voq’s real torture, then the original Tyler may still be living somewhere as a prisoner of the Klingons. They might have had reason to keep him alive as a backup of sorts if needed.


The human skin, organs, face etc. that surround Voq’s diminished bones may have simply been grown from Tyler’s DNA, not ripped from his living body. How this could have been done in the space of a couple of weeks defies logic, but then so does the whole concept. However, we’ve seen such things that defy logic many times in Trek before. Sometimes we have to make a conscious decision to accept things as described in order to enjoy the show. I think this is one of those times.


By saying that they “grafted his [Voq’s] psyche into Tyler’s,” there’s the suggestion to me that the physical brain that Voq/Tyler shared was human and belonged to Tyler. Voq was probably the “overlying” consciousness that Dr. Culbert was picking up on, while Tyler’s was the main one. L’Rell probably assumed that Voq’s superior Klingon psyche would be strong enough to overwhelm Tyler permanently once she woke him up. Instead, it became a battle for supremacy that Tyler was unaware was even going on until it was too late.


Circling back to the original question, if we accept, as we always have in the past, that someone whose mind was temporarily overwhelmed or replaced by spores, another entity, the Borg, whatever, is not responsible for what was done during that time, I think we owe the same forgiveness to Tyler,


I actually would see no bar, given Star Trek’s past history, in returning Ash to duty if it could be proven without doubt that all Voq’s active consciousness were driven out. We’ve seen basically the same thing happen before. In the case of Picard, he was actually returned to captaincy when it was feared for awhile that he still might have had some susceptibility to the Borg.


In this case, given that the original Tyler might still be alive, the fact that the twin Tyler may be uniquely qualified to be a bridge to the Klingons, and that the twin Tyler might have some sort of wish to sacrifice himself to prove his loyalty to Burnham, I can see several possible ways this could play out, including his death.


I can even see the twin Tyler character as ultimately becoming the “torn between two worlds” character that we always seem to have in Trek: Spock, Data, T’Pol, Seven, Odo? We’ve thought that was meant to be Burnham, but in fact Tyler seems a better candidate: human DNA over a Klingon skeleton; a fully human mind, Ash Tyler, but perhaps newly born, a clone, [maybe that’s why he sometimes seems to be weak]; still having all Voq’s memories and thus insight and sympathy for the Klingons.


I’m not really understanding the lack of sympathy for Tyler given that he was a Starfleet officer who was used against his will, as we’ve seen (and forgiven) so very many times before. I was glad to see Tilly support him though I agree with many others that it would have been more poignant if she were the only one to do so for now.
 
Having read this debate back and forth endlessly, I feel compelled to put in my own two cents for whatever it’s worth.


I went back to the scene with L’Rell and transcribed her exact words [next paragraph]. There seems no doubt whatsoever that Tyler was a real person, and this Tyler that we now see is also a real person, although perhaps not the original, more like a cloned twin. Of course what L’Rell says could be complete lies, but they’re all we have, and I think we are meant to accept them as fact.


“The one you call Tyler was captured in battle at the binary stars. We harvested his DNA, reconstructed his consciousness and rebuilt his memory. We modified Voq into a shell that appears human. We grafted his psyche into Tyler’s and in so doing Voq has given his body and soul for our ideology. If he suffers for that choice, so be it.”


I had always assumed that the real Tyler’s body was dead, except for part or all of his brain that went into Voq’s modified body. However, if all that was harvested was his DNA, and his memories of being tortured are false ones reflecting Voq’s real torture, then the original Tyler may still be living somewhere as a prisoner of the Klingons. They might have had reason to keep him alive as a backup of sorts if needed.


The human skin, organs, face etc. that surround Voq’s diminished bones may have simply been grown from Tyler’s DNA, not ripped from his living body. How this could have been done in the space of a couple of weeks defies logic, but then so does the whole concept. However, we’ve seen such things that defy logic many times in Trek before. Sometimes we have to make a conscious decision to accept things as described in order to enjoy the show. I think this is one of those times.


By saying that they “grafted his [Voq’s] psyche into Tyler’s,” there’s the suggestion to me that the physical brain that Voq/Tyler shared was human and belonged to Tyler. Voq was probably the “overlying” consciousness that Dr. Culbert was picking up on, while Tyler’s was the main one. L’Rell probably assumed that Voq’s superior Klingon psyche would be strong enough to overwhelm Tyler permanently once she woke him up. Instead, it became a battle for supremacy that Tyler was unaware was even going on until it was too late.


Circling back to the original question, if we accept, as we always have in the past, that someone whose mind was temporarily overwhelmed or replaced by spores, another entity, the Borg, whatever, is not responsible for what was done during that time, I think we owe the same forgiveness to Tyler,


I actually would see no bar, given Star Trek’s past history, in returning Ash to duty if it could be proven without doubt that all Voq’s active consciousness were driven out. We’ve seen basically the same thing happen before. In the case of Picard, he was actually returned to captaincy when it was feared for awhile that he still might have had some susceptibility to the Borg.


In this case, given that the original Tyler might still be alive, the fact that the twin Tyler may be uniquely qualified to be a bridge to the Klingons, and that the twin Tyler might have some sort of wish to sacrifice himself to prove his loyalty to Burnham, I can see several possible ways this could play out, including his death.


I can even see the twin Tyler character as ultimately becoming the “torn between two worlds” character that we always seem to have in Trek: Spock, Data, T’Pol, Seven, Odo? We’ve thought that was meant to be Burnham, but in fact Tyler seems a better candidate: human DNA over a Klingon skeleton; a fully human mind, Ash Tyler, but perhaps newly born, a clone, [maybe that’s why he sometimes seems to be weak]; still having all Voq’s memories and thus insight and sympathy for the Klingons.


I’m not really understanding the lack of sympathy for Tyler given that he was a Starfleet officer who was used against his will, as we’ve seen (and forgiven) so very many times before. I was glad to see Tilly support him though I agree with many others that it would have been more poignant if she were the only one to do so for now.

Thread won
 
Hell he got a pass for being Locutus and that was a biggie.

Star Trek treats assimilation as a disease, Picard was cured so back to the office he goes. In the real world he should be in a psych ward for a long time. Maybe 24th century humans have tough, augmented psyche, they get over severe trauma over a cup for Earl grey.
 
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Having read this debate back and forth endlessly, I feel compelled to put in my own two cents for whatever it’s worth.


I went back to the scene with L’Rell and transcribed her exact words [next paragraph]. There seems no doubt whatsoever that Tyler was a real person, and this Tyler that we now see is also a real person, although perhaps not the original, more like a cloned twin. Of course what L’Rell says could be complete lies, but they’re all we have, and I think we are meant to accept them as fact.


“The one you call Tyler was captured in battle at the binary stars. We harvested his DNA, reconstructed his consciousness and rebuilt his memory. We modified Voq into a shell that appears human. We grafted his psyche into Tyler’s and in so doing Voq has given his body and soul for our ideology. If he suffers for that choice, so be it.”


I had always assumed that the real Tyler’s body was dead, except for part or all of his brain that went into Voq’s modified body. However, if all that was harvested was his DNA, and his memories of being tortured are false ones reflecting Voq’s real torture, then the original Tyler may still be living somewhere as a prisoner of the Klingons. They might have had reason to keep him alive as a backup of sorts if needed.


The human skin, organs, face etc. that surround Voq’s diminished bones may have simply been grown from Tyler’s DNA, not ripped from his living body. How this could have been done in the space of a couple of weeks defies logic, but then so does the whole concept. However, we’ve seen such things that defy logic many times in Trek before. Sometimes we have to make a conscious decision to accept things as described in order to enjoy the show. I think this is one of those times.


By saying that they “grafted his [Voq’s] psyche into Tyler’s,” there’s the suggestion to me that the physical brain that Voq/Tyler shared was human and belonged to Tyler. Voq was probably the “overlying” consciousness that Dr. Culbert was picking up on, while Tyler’s was the main one. L’Rell probably assumed that Voq’s superior Klingon psyche would be strong enough to overwhelm Tyler permanently once she woke him up. Instead, it became a battle for supremacy that Tyler was unaware was even going on until it was too late.


Circling back to the original question, if we accept, as we always have in the past, that someone whose mind was temporarily overwhelmed or replaced by spores, another entity, the Borg, whatever, is not responsible for what was done during that time, I think we owe the same forgiveness to Tyler,


I actually would see no bar, given Star Trek’s past history, in returning Ash to duty if it could be proven without doubt that all Voq’s active consciousness were driven out. We’ve seen basically the same thing happen before. In the case of Picard, he was actually returned to captaincy when it was feared for awhile that he still might have had some susceptibility to the Borg.


In this case, given that the original Tyler might still be alive, the fact that the twin Tyler may be uniquely qualified to be a bridge to the Klingons, and that the twin Tyler might have some sort of wish to sacrifice himself to prove his loyalty to Burnham, I can see several possible ways this could play out, including his death.


I can even see the twin Tyler character as ultimately becoming the “torn between two worlds” character that we always seem to have in Trek: Spock, Data, T’Pol, Seven, Odo? We’ve thought that was meant to be Burnham, but in fact Tyler seems a better candidate: human DNA over a Klingon skeleton; a fully human mind, Ash Tyler, but perhaps newly born, a clone, [maybe that’s why he sometimes seems to be weak]; still having all Voq’s memories and thus insight and sympathy for the Klingons.


I’m not really understanding the lack of sympathy for Tyler given that he was a Starfleet officer who was used against his will, as we’ve seen (and forgiven) so very many times before. I was glad to see Tilly support him though I agree with many others that it would have been more poignant if she were the only one to do so for now.

Excellent post skylark, I agree with Spot261. I just can't help but think how convoluted the procedure done on Voq was. They could have just brainwashed Tyler and placed him as a Manchurian candidate onboard Discovery. In effect, the result would have been the same. Trigger words used to initiate assassination of Burnham or Lorca, of course they would have to figure out a way to deliver them, since they had no way of knowing in advance that L'Rell would have been taken to Discovery.
 
Star Trek treats assimilation as a disease, Picard was cured so back to the office he goes. In the real world he should be in a psych ward for a long time. Maybe 24th century humans have tough, augmented psyche, they get over severe trauma over a cup for Earl grey.
Picard was put back service too quickly. That's a big part of the sub-plot of FC. It wasn't really resolved though.
 
Excellent post skylark, I agree with Spot261. I just can't help but think how convoluted the procedure done on Voq was. They could have just brainwashed Tyler and placed him as a Manchurian candidate onboard Discovery. In effect, the result would have been the same. Trigger words used to initiate assassination of Burnham or Lorca, of course they would have to figure out a way to deliver them, since they had no way of knowing in advance that L'Rell would have been taken to Discovery.
Oh, I agree with you 100%. The whole concept as laid out was and is one of the most absurd that I've ever seen; and I've been a sci-fi and Trek fan for many years. They could have brainwashed original Tyler, or could have gone one step further and somehow hocus-pocused Voq's "psyche" into Tyler's brain or transplanted Voq's brain into Tyler's body. Done and done. Instead we have grinding down Voq's bones without anesthesia, somehow wrapping him in Tyler's externals, having Tyler's brain and/or psyche then put into the combo body.

I guess we can wave the Tyler/Voq combo away as them needing Tyler's psyche to be able to carry out the deception to begin with. And we could say that by keeping the "bare bones" of Voq as the vehicle, Voq was somehow "remaining Klingon." How could L'Rell possibly be sure she could get access to Voq later on to trigger him? She couldn't that I can see.The whole thing is a big mess.

I was just trying to take L'Rell's exact words as presented in the show, and see where they lead us. I can't get it to make any logical sense, and I stopped trying early on. I do believe that taking her at her word, we're dealing not with two personalities, but two separate entities or beings, Tyler and Voq, each struggling for control of the body. When Voq seized control, Tyler was essentially blacked out and not a participant in, or even witness to, the events, thus having zero moral liability. If we can believe what we saw, the criminal Voq is now dead and beyond Starfleet's punishment. As Trek has shown us time and time again, the body itself is immaterial; it is the mind, soul, being, whatever that controls it that matters.
 
There is no such definition. Regeneration can occur even in single celled organisms.

He was dead, radiation cell death. You and you alone claimed it was rejuvenation. This was not what was said on screen. It said reneration, of dead cells. Which is cloning.

Do you think people suffering from amnesia no longer have a mind?

You are moving your goalpost here. Mind and brain are not the same thing. He was not someone with a split personality. He was two whole, complete minds, shoved into a single brain.

It is a stretch, sure, but ultimately a body is made of matter, it is a machine. It is fundamentally impossible that broken things could be fixed, albeit the method here is certainly questionable.

He was not Damaged, he was dead. Do you have any idea what radiation does to a body to kill it that fast? There was nothing left to "fix" maybe you could clone some cells from his clothing ( as they did change his clothing), but you are not fixing radiation dead cells short of magic.
 
It said reneration, of dead cells.
Yes.
Which is cloning.
No.

You are moving your goalpost here. Mind and brain are not the same thing. He was not someone with a split personality. He was two whole, complete minds, shoved into a single brain.
You said memories are the mind. I claim they're not. Amnesiac people have minds. Genesis Spock had a mind.

Though if you (erroneously) think that memories are the mind, then it makes sense that you think Tyler and Voq were two separate minds as there were two separate sets of memories... Except they started to bleed over and no Tyvoq has both sets of memories... So even by your bizarre definition Voq is not dead because his memories remain...

He was not Damaged, he was dead. Do you have any idea what radiation does to a body to kill it that fast? There was nothing left to "fix" maybe you could clone some cells from his clothing ( as they did change his clothing), but you are not fixing radiation dead cells short of magic.
He was not vapourised. His body suffered sufficient damage that his vital functions ceased. And even though the Federation tech at the time did not have means to repair that damage, it doesn't mean it was fundamentally irreparable. Genesis wave or borg nanobots can do stuff that McCoy can't.
 
I went back to the scene with L’Rell and transcribed her exact words [next paragraph]. There seems no doubt whatsoever that Tyler was a real person, and this Tyler that we now see is also a real person, although perhaps not the original, more like a cloned twin. Of course what L’Rell says could be complete lies, but they’re all we have, and I think we are meant to accept them as fact.


“The one you call Tyler was captured in battle at the binary stars. We harvested his DNA, reconstructed his consciousness and rebuilt his memory. We modified Voq into a shell that appears human. We grafted his psyche into Tyler’s and in so doing Voq has given his body and soul for our ideology. If he suffers for that choice, so be it.”
I interpreted this so, that they somehow read Tyler's mind (via mind scanner, probably) and the rebuilt the memories and personality in Voq's brain. As convoluted as this is, it is not impossible. Personality and memories are ultimately just neuron structures, and you can duplicate those structures.

By saying that they “grafted his [Voq’s] psyche into Tyler’s,” there’s the suggestion to me that the physical brain that Voq/Tyler shared was human and belonged to Tyler.
The original brain must be Voq's otherwise this whole gruesome process makes even less sense than it otherwise would. They already had Tyler brain in Tyler body as they had the original Tyler. Presumably to L'Rell it was important that ultimately it was 'really' Voq, albeit disguised as human.
 
I was just trying to take L'Rell's exact words as presented in the show, and see where they lead us. I can't get it to make any logical sense, and I stopped trying early on. I do believe that taking her at her word, we're dealing not with two personalities, but two separate entities or beings, Tyler and Voq, each struggling for control of the body. When Voq seized control, Tyler was essentially blacked out and not a participant in, or even witness to, the events, thus having zero moral liability. If we can believe what we saw, the criminal Voq is now dead and beyond Starfleet's punishment. As Trek has shown us time and time again, the body itself is immaterial; it is the mind, soul, being, whatever that controls it that matters.

What you're describing with the blackouts is similar to what actually happens to people that have split personalities, one personality takes control the others are submerged, maybe not even witnessing or conscious of what the body is doing, in spite of this if one of those personalities committed murder, they would arrest and charge the legal person, not the split personality-how would they even do that? So, even if the other "personalities" had no participation, they would be charged and imprisoned with the "personality" that is responsible since they occupy the same body. This was kind of my point, but Star Trek is a different universe, so who knows what kinds of laws they have for crimes committed during alien possession.
 

Yes it is. They re not bringing dead cells back to life.

You said memories are the mind. I claim they're not. Amnesiac people have minds. Genesis Spock had a mind.

He did not have Spock I's mind. Later, after some memories got transfused from soul back up, he had some. But he never had them all. Spock II was just a clone with some memories implanted.

Though if you (erroneously) think that memories are the mind, then it makes sense that you think Tyler and Voq were two separate minds as there were two separate sets of memories... Except they started to bleed over and no Tyvoq has both sets of memories... So even by your bizarre definition Voq is not dead because his memories remain...

Memories are self and persona. They are mind. Someone lacking key memories will often not ct as the used to act. This is well established in real life. Its not like on TV, the new mind will lack the memories of the old, they will not have the same foundation so will be another person. I recall one study from Psychology class of a person who lost 10 years due to an injury. People said they did not act the same, they were strange and more or less reset to who they had been 10 years before.

All your mind is is memories and experiences that shape "You"

He was not vapourised. His body suffered sufficient damage that his vital functions ceased. And even though the Federation tech at the time did not have means to repair that damage, it doesn't mean it was fundamentally irreparable. Genesis wave or borg nanobots can do stuff that McCoy can't.

His cells where turned to jelly. This is what radiation does to kill that fast, they broke apart. You can't fix that and on screen they pure up said this. You quoted it. So you can accept it cloned him or used magic.
 
They re not bringing dead cells back to life.
Maybe they are? Dead cell is just a tiny broken machine. But let's drop this tangent. Truth is that regeneration does not have exact definition and Genesis effect doesn't make much sense to begin with, so it is pointless to argue what it can and cannot do. Besides, it has nothing to do with the topic.

Memories are self and persona. They are mind. Someone lacking key memories will often not ct as the used to act. This is well established in real life. Its not like on TV, the new mind will lack the memories of the old, they will not have the same foundation so will be another person.
Literally another person? Because if you really think that then we are operating with pretty different definitions here. I will tomorrow have different set of memories than I have today, is tomorrow me a different person than today me?

I recall one study from Psychology class of a person who lost 10 years due to an injury. People said they did not act the same, they were strange and more or less reset to who they had been 10 years before.
Yet they literally weren't a different person.
 
What you're describing with the blackouts is similar to what actually happens to people that have split personalities, one personality takes control the others are submerged, maybe not even witnessing or conscious of what the body is doing, in spite of this if one of those personalities committed murder, they would arrest and charge the legal person, not the split personality-how would they even do that? So, even if the other "personalities" had no participation, they would be charged and imprisoned with the "personality" that is responsible since they occupy the same body. This was kind of my point, but Star Trek is a different universe, so who knows what kinds of laws they have for crimes committed during alien possession.
Yeah. Split personalities are a real thing, and what is happening with Tyvoq can adequately described by that condition. Even though the condition itself was induced by exotic means, there is really no reason to think that the resulting state would be anything more than a split personality disorder.
 
I interpreted this so, that they somehow read Tyler's mind (via mind scanner, probably) and the rebuilt the memories and personality in Voq's brain. As convoluted as this is, it is not impossible. Personality and memories are ultimately just neuron structures, and you can duplicate those structures.


The original brain must be Voq's otherwise this whole gruesome process makes even less sense than it otherwise would. They already had Tyler brain in Tyler body as they had the original Tyler. Presumably to L'Rell it was important that ultimately it was 'really' Voq, albeit disguised as human.
Well, I agree that this could be argued many different ways. It's far from clear to me. Maybe that was the writers' intentions - to have people arguing about it. The whole gruesome mess makes no real sense to me either way, whether I use your interpretation or mine.

L'Rell saying "we reconstructed his consciousness" suggests to me that a real Tyler is in there with Voq, either the original transferred in, or a duplicate of the original that has Tyler's personality and memories. To me, my consciousness is "me." Even if it is a duplicate or a clone, it doesn't make this Tyler any less "real." He would still not be Voq or an altered personality of Voq.

To me, it doesn't make sense for her to say "we grafted Voq's psyche into Tyler's" if there is not both a Voq psyche and a Tyler psyche in the mix. Instead, it should be something like "we grafted Tyler's memories into Voq's psyche." Whether or not the physical brain is Voq or Tyler is not something I have a strong opinion about either way, though I lean toward it being at least a clone of Tyler's.

As far as being undetectable, it makes more sense if it's Voq's psyche deposited into a human brain. I don't think L'Rell would care that much whether the physical brain was Voq's as long as the essence that made him himself was contained there. She sure had no compunctions about torturing him, cutting up his bones, excising all or parts of his organs, and destroying his face forever. I should think losing the face would be much harder than losing the physical brain. After all, this is Trek. His essence can be transferred into a metal ball, and he's still Voq. She said he would have to give up "everything" and that might have included his physical brain. As I said before it makes no sense at all that they even kept his Klingon bones and muscles, unless maybe they were supposed to be much stronger and therefore more useful in completing his mission.

It seems to me the whole drama and poignancy is in the fact that two enemies are trapped in one head, struggling for primacy. The writers even have Saru state as much outright. If there is just one being in there all along, with some stolen memories, it loses practically all of its dramatic punch for me.

I suppose the drama could be in the Klingon falling in love with his enemy Burnham, but I don't think that's what happened. Don't think it could have happened. If it was only Voq with some Tyler memories implanted, Voq should have been pulling the strings all along, which didn't really seem to be the case. Can't believe I've run on so long with this. There's just not enough real information out there for now for either of us to say for sure. I feel sure there's no way I can convince you of my theory, especially since it's only a theory to me, not something I'm prepared to defend aggressively. And I can't really buy into your theory either, because mine is the one that provides me with the greatest drama and interest in the character.

You've given me food for thought though. What do you believe the harvested DNA was used for?
 
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