Ok, seriously, I don't know if you would still call her an oppressor. But if someone can say with conviction she made the wrong decision, why couldn't someone also say with conviction she made the wrong decision if she chose opposite? There's really nothing to stop them.
My opinion is, once again, based on 30 years in healthcare, primarily oncology, where yes, we do deal with medical ethics. It's also long been a fascination of mine.
The Doctor was absolutely right. The individual has the right to refuse a procedure. That's how I can have such conviction.
I agree the individual should have the right to refuse the procedure.
I can't help but think of the ways that trek has presented other trek duplication accidents. Would the "Evil" Kirk from the first season of TOS had the right to refuse? Just wondering.
Wonder if Will/Tom Riker can be thrown into this situation at all. Probably not.
This is all very thought provoking.
First hospital job I had, we had a mom whose uterus ruptured in labor, threatening both her life and the baby's. An emergency c-section was done, the infant was saved. However, there was no way to save the mother.
It happens.
Edited to add: Technically, the surgeon could have done a hysterectomy and not saved the fetus. And that might have prevented the complication that killed the mom. However, we don't kill viable infants to save a mother. Not at full term, and certainly not after they're born.
And just what did those doctors tell that woman's children, that is was more important to have a living infant than the mother who would teach them, protect them, and teach them how to love by giving them her love. There is no excuse for that situation.
I do know some religions would make this choice, and I know that those that practice that religion believe down to the bottom of their hearts that this would be the right thing to do.
However it isn't. When a doctor makes the choice between either a living mother or a living infant, the choice should fall to the living mother. A stillborn child is a loss and sad in the extreme, but a dead parent is tragic and can result in the loss either emotionally or physically of her other offspring.
The “needs of the many” is not an easy choice and may seem to override the individual, but it is sometimes necessary.
Brit
When you can't save everyone, is the choice to do the least harm equivalent to saving the most lives?
Welcome to prerevolutionary France.
When you can't save everyone, is the choice to do the least harm equivalent to saving the most lives?
Oh, let's remark now that some people are better-er and more valuable than others that they should be assigned a score out of 100 and be rewardeed and privileged in accordance with that score for being less pathetic than others like Kim unable to flit past a the threshold of an embarrassing 30... Y'see nellix would be a a solid 15 but Tuvok is clearly an unparalleled 62, but een though you'd think tuvix would actually be a 77, he isn't because Neelix equally detracts as he negates from Tuvok that Tuvix is really a 47,
Bwa-hahahahah!
I totally did not see that coming.
Killing Tuvix was the right decision. He was originally just a transporter accident. If Tuvok and Neelix had had a choice they would have chosen to exist as two individuals. And what about Tuvok's wife and children?
Janeway was a murderer pure and simple. Neelix and Tuvok were "killed" through an accident, killing Tuvix was intentional, ergo Janeway made an ethically bad decision. In any case further research could have been conducted to preserve Tuvix and duplicate the patterns of Tuvok and Neelix immanent in Tuvix through the transporters, rather than killing Tuvix off.
No, Dukat had 7 children by his wife (Unless you count the non-canon Terok Nor books, whereHolobrothling was old hat from Quarks well before Voyager was a glint in the milkma'ns eye.
Miral was born int he AQ, and Naomi was conceived in the AQ.
I believe it's generous to categorize Miral as a DQ kiddy since she didn't peek out of her mommy till they were half hour from earth at warp 6.
Off the top of my head?
Sisko had a kid and knocked up Cassidy.
Rom and Lita were talking about kids.
I adore thinking about Kieko in her 40s. Extraordinarily well prepared.
Worf knocked up Jadzia and Keh'Ler.
Data had a little girl called Lal who a monkey called Riker seduced.
There was a male ensign on DS9 who was budding and pregnant years before Tucker got lucky.
Kira carried one of the O'Briens babies.
Odo raised both a Jem'Hadar and a changeling from infancy.
Kieko taught a school room full of children described as both starfleet and/or bajoran/local.
Troi had an over night space baby in the season two première.
Lwaxana got Odo to marry her supplanting the kids natural pappy to save a wink she was carrying from being dragged off by another babydaddy.
Gul Dukat had 9 kids in season 4, but that was before the halfling showed up, or he started Jim Jonesing his groupies on Empok Nor, and that's if you don't count him as Kira's secret step father which makes all the times he tried to get a leg over and full her oven up with buns all the more distressing than space Hitler hitting on a space Jew.
Picard had numerous virtual children and grandchildren in both the Inner Light and Generations.
your reasoning is a bit strange. maybe better this here: you and your wife visit a fertility clinic because she can't get pregnant, but by a mix up, she's eventually impregnated not with your sperm, but the one of an unknown man. you both are aware of the accident.My kid is the result of a faulty condom. He shouldn't be here or alive. I tell him this and he calls me a bastard. We get along fine, but it's shear indulgence on his mothers part that we're playing along with this human error's belief in his right to liberty and happiness, but if I was to correct the original mistake by threading his flat head into a tightening condom, holding tight onto one end, pulling, till he's smothered dead... Am I murderer or just correcting the karmic balance in the universe?
Janeway was a murderer pure and simple. Neelix and Tuvok were "killed" through an accident, killing Tuvix was intentional, ergo Janeway made an ethically bad decision. In any case further research could have been conducted to preserve Tuvix and duplicate the patterns of Tuvok and Neelix immanent in Tuvix through the transporters, rather than killing Tuvix off.
Nope. Tuvok and Neelix weren't dead. The dead don't come back. (Well, at least not without Seven's nanoprobes but that comes later). Here you had two crewmen trapped in the body of a third personality. Janeway did the right thing. It wasn't the easy thing but I'll bet if any of us were trapped in someone else we'd want out too.
Janeway was a murderer pure and simple. Neelix and Tuvok were "killed" through an accident, killing Tuvix was intentional, ergo Janeway made an ethically bad decision. In any case further research could have been conducted to preserve Tuvix and duplicate the patterns of Tuvok and Neelix immanent in Tuvix through the transporters, rather than killing Tuvix off.
Nope. Tuvok and Neelix weren't dead. The dead don't come back. (Well, at least not without Seven's nanoprobes but that comes later). Here you had two crewmen trapped in the body of a third personality. Janeway did the right thing. It wasn't the easy thing but I'll bet if any of us were trapped in someone else we'd want out too.
You'd lose that bet.
I can categorically say that I would not kill an innocent to save my own life or that of a loved one.
Nope. Tuvok and Neelix weren't dead. The dead don't come back. (Well, at least not without Seven's nanoprobes but that comes later). Here you had two crewmen trapped in the body of a third personality. Janeway did the right thing. It wasn't the easy thing but I'll bet if any of us were trapped in someone else we'd want out too.
You'd lose that bet.
I can categorically say that I would not kill an innocent to save my own life or that of a loved one.
^ So if you were the Tuvix, you wouldn't have insisted on preserving your life over the lives of your two "donors"?
"Pure" and "simple" indeed.
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