I know I’m repeating myself, but again, I’m not really trying to justify or defend the doctor’s actions with this, just pointing out the context and give the thing the nuance it deserves. I just don’t consider it a black and white issue, but a morally grey situation, and that scene with Seven at the end of the episode seems to confirm that the writers intended it to be read that way; he’s saving many lives, but he’s wondering if the end justified the means.
I agree with you that “he didn’t let him die” wouldn’t be a full defense in court. But at the same time I would also say that you're treating it as if intent is fully irrelevant, which in most courts it isn’t.
It is irrelevant in the ways you keep bringing it up. He hasn’t been accused of actually killing or even planning to. “There are worse things I could do” is not a justification.
Rejecting a claim that A implies B is not a claim that A is generally irrelevant, it just means it doesn’t support the conclusion you’re drawing.
The difference between intending to kill and threatening to harm while actually planning to prevent harm isn’t a “tribal” excuse, it’s a morally and legally recognized distinction. Most courts would take intent and proportionality very much into account to reach their verdict.
No, “He wouldn’t really have let him die” actually isn’t given much weight, because it’s entirely speculative (unless you have the right kind of connections and call them character witnesses). At most it’s considered in sentencing, which we haven’t gotten to and I don’t intend to get to.
I don’t really know what to tell you other than that’s basically what the entire episode is about; it’s all on the screen: They show us how the doctor arrives on the planet and learns about their system of treating and preventing treatment of patients based on an immoral idea of individual “worth to society”. He’s confronted with a cynical, calculated, bureaucratized system of medical discrimination that condemns people to suffer and die based on what a computer program is saying. One that is also shown to be faulty through the story of Tebbis. That is the dehumanization taking place in the episode.
There you go again, attacking the computer as a villain. It’s a damn tool, it just implements the directives of people. The focus is on the justifiability of Doc’s methods, not the guilt of his targets.
The doctor tries reasoning at first and exhausts all diplomatic avenues.
Good for him. That’s when he’s supposed to stop. When ethical and legal actions don’t accomplish the goal, unethical and illegal actions are still unethical and illegal. “I tried asking nicely” is not a defense.
He tries to trick the system to still be able and treat those in need. And then he uses a non-lethal, targeted tactic to force a change that would save lives. He’s targeting the person directly responsible for implementing these immoral and deadly policies. That’s how the episode presents the premise, not much in the way of speculation necessary. They portray the doctor’s actions as surprising, extreme and morally questionable, but make sure to underscore that his intent is a good one and his actions probably justified.
Let me ask you this, though: Under what moral framework is it just that a medication that could save the very life of a person is instead administered to someone else to prevent their “arterial aging“ (which I take to mean it’s not administered as a life-saving measure)?
Chellik tells the doctor resources are scarce in their society, and that might be so. But doesn’t the fact that you know it’s administered as an anti-aging drug instead of saving lives tell you that it’s an immoral system that the doctor (or anyone in that society) is in their rights to fight against?
Feel free to judge their system as immoral. Does being part of an immoral system mean they have no rights at all? “They’re
immoral, I can do what I want” is not a defense. At least, it shouldn’t be.
Note the Doctor doesn’t dispute the right of the society to consider the impact on society in their allocation of medicine. He argues that their calculation is flawed because it doesn’t weight speculation and fact equally. His argument is that you never know what Tebbis might achieve if he gets a chance. That saving the lives of a thousand people with a 1-in-1000 chance of becoming major contributors is worth as much to that society as extending the lives of 100 known contributors. I doubt his math adds up, but it’s not my job to do the math, it’s not the Doctor’s job to do the math, and it’s certainly not the Doctor’s job to poison Chellik for getting the math wrong.
This society chose a different way to allocate meds. Maybe you consider their system immoral. The question I’m asking is whether moral disapproval justifies the means the Doctor uses to fight it.
My only question here is whether the Doctor’s actions are right or wrong. You keep responding by telling me about the guilt of people on the other side. That’s only relevant if you’re justifying the Doctor’s actions as appropriate in the name of punishing the guilty.
So would you say in the Mengele example it would be justified to poison Mengele to extort him to cease torture?
I agree that both situations are not the same, but I still feel they are similar enough and in both situations I feel extreme measures might be justified to achieve a greater good. Chellik is not literally torturing the patients under his supervision, but he’s condemning them to their death when he sends them home. He even takes responsibility for this in the text, saying “They brought me here to make the hard choices they don't want to make.”
They’re not even close to the same. What the Doctor does here is exactly what Mengele is infamous for. Chellik’s actions aren’t even close.
How so? In the abstract, if there is an immoral policy, why does it make that policy more or less immoral if it’s implemented by a monarch vs. a democratic vote?
If you’re talking about violence in the name of revolution, it makes all the difference. The only way to effect a revolution against a democratic government reflecting majority will is for a minority to take control and impose their own sense of right and wrong. Is that what you’re advocating?
The question isn’t whether the policy is moral or immoral, the question is whether the Doctor’s violence and extortion are justified. Or are those the same question?
And in “Justice” he didn’t stop there, but ends up completely ignoring the locals’ laws and customs and enforces his will anyway, under the implied threat of superior technology and force. How does that help us?
Huh? He does quite the opposite. It’s the Edo who keep pointing out that Picard could just take Wesley by force, and Picard who keeps saying he won’t do that because of the Prime Directive. In the end he succeeds by convincing the Edo god with moral reasoning.
That usually suggests some kind of meaningful plan to effect change. Doc just stole medicine for one group of Red Level patients. It will be replaced, probably at the expense of other Red Level patients.
You know, there have been cases here of people getting violent in hospitals because they weren’t getting the care they thought they were entitled do. They’re not usually hailed as revolutionaries.
If it were a revolution, it would be Leninist, or French. It usually ends up with “kill the rich,” and when it starts out with this kind of violence, ending up there is a given.
And while it is one thing to advocate for violent revolution to redistribute from the rich to the masses, it is another to cite leading such a rebellion as a justification for the Doctor. Is that what he’s trying to do, inspire a Leninist uprising? “Rise up! You are entitled to medicine! Take it by violence!”?
Can we remember that he is a Doctor? The oath says ”Do no harm,” not “Do no harm unless he’s a bad guy and has access to medicine you need.” There’s a reason lethal injections don’t use doctors: you can’t do harm, even if you think the target is a terrible person and killing him sends a message that is good for society.