As far as we can tell, it shares a central problem with death penalty: it's an awful lot of punishment dished out in one package and cannot be aborted or compensated for if the person being punished is later found to be not guilty after all.
Timo Saloniemi
That said, though, it strikes me that the point of prison is not necessarily just punishment but also rehabilitation and protecting the rest of society from potentially dangerous and anti-social people, so this strikes me as a pretty piss-poor substitute from the latter standpoint.
As far as we can tell, it shares a central problem with death penalty: it's an awful lot of punishment dished out in one package and cannot be aborted or compensated for if the person being punished is later found to be not guilty after all.
Timo Saloniemi
That struck me as a bit strange, though, almost a point of plot convenience. If Federation medical technology has the ability to alter memory, even of lived experience (as they did with Kurn in 'Sons of Mogh', for example), why was Bashir having so much trouble removing the experiences of prison from O'Brien's mind?
That said, though, it strikes me that the point of prison is not necessarily just punishment but also rehabilitation and protecting the rest of society from potentially dangerous and anti-social people, so this strikes me as a pretty piss-poor substitute from the latter standpoint.
Surely the entire point of prison is rehabilitation and protecting the rest of society from potentially dangerous and anti-social people?
they don't lose the actual time from their lives that innocent prisoners actually lose. They just gain some unpleasant memories.
nobody knows how to rehabilitate criminals
Well, Dr Adams (Dagger of the Mind, right?) hobbled minds, he didn't "heal" them.
Harry Mudd was "treated"?
Well, Dr Adams (Dagger of the Mind, right?) hobbled minds, he didn't "heal" them.
According to McCoy, the man did a lot of good work.
It's just that he was a perfectionist, so in addition to curing people, he also banged his head against a wall trying to cure incurables - which gave us Lethe and the misadventure with the torture chair.
Ask anyone who has been or has read about someone who has been in a prison in a 2nd or 3rd World country about how harsh prisons can be.
Hmh? Trying to interpret the episode as stating that Adams was a madman who just happened to have the mandate to run a madhouse rather than be one of the customers doesn't strike me as particularly mature. Are you really trying to say that you prefer to see Adams devoid of any motivation beyond "he was evil"?A good man who just goes bad for unknown reasons isn't meaningful, and that makes no point
True. But if he's in the business of reforming criminals, then the one result he can publish is a reformed criminal. If he isn't churning out those for real, then not only is McCoy way off base, the entire Federation penal-medical establishment is, in allowing Adams to consume resources for no observable gain. For twenty years straight.A doctor or researcher can have a good reputation based on results which seem successful, but haven't been examined or questioned enough yet. McCoy may have heard good things about Adams, but we don't know what he heard or from whom.
Sounds silly. Only villains get corrupted by power? Everything actually stated in the episode establishes Adams as a good man gone bad, not a villain materializing out of the blue on the path of our heroes with strange government resources oddly at his disposal.At the least, this episode's about how total power over human beings, and being allowed to make your own rules, can corrupt and attract power freaks.
In order to be able to run an asylum, he'd have to meet the standards of others. And Adams was doing that for twenty explicit years. (Meeting the standards, that is; running a single asylum was something that only fell on his lap when he fried van Gelder's brain - before that, he had apparently in practice been running ALL the asylums in the Federation!)by his own standards, his treatments worked
Hmh? Trying to interpret the episode as stating that Adams was a madman who just happened to have the mandate to run a madhouse rather than be one of the customers doesn't strike me as particularly mature. Are you really trying to say that you prefer to see Adams devoid of any motivation beyond "he was evil"?A good man who just goes bad for unknown reasons isn't meaningful, and that makes no point
True. But if he's in the business of reforming criminals, then the one result he can publish is a reformed criminal. If he isn't churning out those for real, then not only is McCoy way off base, the entire Federation penal-medical establishment is, in allowing Adams to consume resources for no observable gain. For twenty years straight.A doctor or researcher can have a good reputation based on results which seem successful, but haven't been examined or questioned enough yet. McCoy may have heard good things about Adams, but we don't know what he heard or from whom.
Sounds silly. Only villains get corrupted by power? Everything actually stated in the episode establishes Adams as a good man gone bad, not a villain materializing out of the blue on the path of our heroes with strange government resources oddly at his disposal.At the least, this episode's about how total power over human beings, and being allowed to make your own rules, can corrupt and attract power freaks.
McCoy considered Adams the real McCoy in medicopenology. Noel fully agreed, even after getting the grand tour of what Adams was up to. By definition, those are our experts on the matter - the viewer is not. Claiming that Adams was no good to start with is like trying to argue warp physics with Scotty.
But never mind complicated medical issues. We have another witness statement to Adams doing good work, and he doesn't suffer psychobabble or read scientific papers. Kirk indicated several times that he had frequented penal colonies both before and after the methods of Adams were adopted. Furthermore, he never indicated his visits would have been limited to Tantalus V; he felt confident in stating that (at least several and most probably all) the penal colonies, plural, had become "more like resort colonies".
In order to be able to run an asylum, he'd have to meet the standards of others. And Adams was doing that for twenty explicit years. (Meeting the standards, that is; running a single asylum was something that only fell on his lap when he fried van Gelder's brain - before that, he had apparently in practice been running ALL the asylums in the Federation!)by his own standards, his treatments worked
But what if this lawful behavior is accomplished by disabling the will and hobbling the personality, in a way that might not be clear or obvious to most observers?
I have no clue what you mean by "Only villains get corrupted by power?"
Not enough people who would dare second guess him, perhaps. Not enough oversight.
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