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Spock’s Command Decision In Galileo Seven

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During this episode the possibility of 3 crew members being left behind on the planet is discussed. This got me to thinking : hypothetically, if it really came down to Spock deciding who would remain, who exactly do you think he would have chosen? Logically, of course…
 
He would say that whatever happens, he would be one of those remaining. As for the others, whoever stood the greatest chance of being able to get back to the ship would go, no matter who it is.

Yes. I also assumed that Spock would be the first to volunteer to remain behind. I’m sure McCoy would give him an argument about that. Since Gaetano and Latimer were already dead, I think that only one person would have to stay.
 
I totally disagree, Spock would have been logical in his decision and it is not logical for the most valuable member of the Galileo crew to stay behind. It would not have been Spock, McCoy or Scott staying while some ensigns took off back to the Enterprise; it's not logical. Now Kirk, he would certainly stay!

Side note, in one of the early drafts, they were actually drawing straws to determined who stayed, which was mentioned in passing as a possibility in the filmed version. Also, it was originally Kirk who piloted the shuttlecraft with Spock remaining on the Enterprise.
 
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When Spock was pinned by the boulder, he ordered McCoy and Boma to lift off without him. He was certain that if they came to rescue him that everyone would perish. That was self-sacrifice on his part, the sign of a good officer.

galileo-seven-br-560.jpg
 
Spock definitely would have picked himself to stay with Latimer and either Boma or Gaetano (whoever is heavier). Logically Spock would have thought himself and the ones he picked would have the best chance of staying alive on the planet until rescued and the ones in the shuttle the best chance to reach help. Scotty would have been the logical choice to fly the shuttle back along with the others.

Whether we agree with Spock's choice... that's a different matter :)
 
Yeoman Barrows was so superfluous, she was literally replaced in the next episode.
 
When Spock was pinned by the boulder, he ordered McCoy and Boma to lift off without him. He was certain that if they came to rescue him that everyone would perish. That was self-sacrifice on his part, the sign of a good officer.

galileo-seven-br-560.jpg
But the two scenarios are totally different, Spock was trapped by the boulder. All things being equal, I just don't see Spock doing something illogical but Blssdwif makes a good point about the most probable people who could survive until rescue. In the episode, however, they seemed to imply that whoever stayed behind would not be able to survive.
 
Yeoman Barrows was so superfluous, she was literally replaced in the next episode.
She (and many of the first season yeomen who followed) were character replacements for Gace Lee Whitney's Rand, whose final appearance (in production order) was the episode immediately preceding this one. No idea if Rand had anything more to do than Barrows.
 
She (and many of the first season yeomen who followed) were character replacements for Gace Lee Whitney's Rand, whose final appearance (in production order) was the episode immediately preceding this one. No idea if Rand had anything more to do than Barrows.
Rand was in the early outlines and teleplays of the script. Her part was changed to Mears after Whitney's unceremonious departure on September 8th, 1966
 
I totally disagree, Spock would have been logical in his decision and it is not logical for the most valuable member of the Galileo crew to stay behind. It would not have been Spock, McCoy or Scott staying while some ensigns took off back to the Enterprise; it's not logical. Now Kirk, he would certainly stay!

Side note, in one of the early drafts, they were actually drawing straws to determined who stayed, which was mentioned in passing as a possibility in the filmed version. Also, it was originally Kirk who piloted the shuttlecraft with Spock remaining on the Enterprise.
I think in this case Spock's human half would win and he would stay on the planet.
 
I think it depends on how you define 'most valuable'. When it comes to flying a shuttle, why is Spock more or less valuable than the others? Scotty is the engineer, Boma is a scientist, and everyone on board is trained to fly and fix the shuttle.

Spock has a better chance of surviving on the planet than the others and is heavier due to his physiology. It might be deemed more logical for him stay.
 
Why didn't he just set the phasers to stun and shoot the damned things?
Or better yet, disintegrate the pluckers? (At least once.) I don't recall whether phasers had been used to disintegrate at that time.
Yeoman Barrows was so superfluous, she was literally replaced in the next episode.
As were approximately 13 others. After Thompson bought the tetrahondral farm, no more yeomans ever beamed down on TOS. That makes perfect sense as Thompson's only report was immediately confirmed by Spock. Her other four lines were ''Captain!'', ''Captain....'', or superfluous questions to the Captain or Kelinda.
 
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