I had the pleasure of rewatching "Observer Effect" the other night, and I've been mulling the episode over for a few days now. I've been considering something that I wanted to get some perspective from other fans on.
The whole point of OE is that compassion and empathy are what makes humans human. Even Phlox, a Denobulan, tells the Organians they are reprehensible for merely observing while "lesser" species suffer, in one of my favorite moments in the episode.
But three years earlier, he made a very conscious decision to refuse to help the Valakians in "Dear Doctor," and even convinced Archer not to do so. (Let's set aside for a minute the dodgy ideas about "evolution" that the episode is based on) One could argue that he was motivated by a greater empathy for the Menk, but at the end of the day he still refused to give aid to millions of people and condemned a race to its doom (following story logic that only the E's doc can cure the people, in a 45-minute window, and the problem can't be deferred to any other authority).
One real-world way to look at it is inconsistent writing, which may be the case. But I was trying to think of an in-universe explanation for Phlox's reversal.
Is it possible that the events of the Xindi Arc convinced Phlox that the more interventionist approach of Archer was right, that morality should trump neutrality?
It's just a question I've been mulling, and I'd love to hear what others think.
The whole point of OE is that compassion and empathy are what makes humans human. Even Phlox, a Denobulan, tells the Organians they are reprehensible for merely observing while "lesser" species suffer, in one of my favorite moments in the episode.
But three years earlier, he made a very conscious decision to refuse to help the Valakians in "Dear Doctor," and even convinced Archer not to do so. (Let's set aside for a minute the dodgy ideas about "evolution" that the episode is based on) One could argue that he was motivated by a greater empathy for the Menk, but at the end of the day he still refused to give aid to millions of people and condemned a race to its doom (following story logic that only the E's doc can cure the people, in a 45-minute window, and the problem can't be deferred to any other authority).
One real-world way to look at it is inconsistent writing, which may be the case. But I was trying to think of an in-universe explanation for Phlox's reversal.
Is it possible that the events of the Xindi Arc convinced Phlox that the more interventionist approach of Archer was right, that morality should trump neutrality?
It's just a question I've been mulling, and I'd love to hear what others think.