• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Does "Observer Effect" refute "Dear Doctor?"

^ It's been a while since I've seen the movie, so please correct if I'm wrong. But, isn't Jurassic Park's "message" on extinction that if nature selects a species for extinction then they should be extinct?

If that's the case, what if nature selects us for extinction? Should we just stand aside and let humanity be wiped out by natural causes?

And as for Cogenitor.... It seems to me that the "message" about the Prime Directive being sent there is that it's better to just cover your own ass then it is to help those being oppressed.
It seems to me that the message of "Cogenitor"is that you can't just barge in and play a knight in a shining armor, give speeches about freedom to a member of an oppressed group, walk away and naively expect everything to work out perfectly. Trip had good intentions, but he went about it the wrong way, without thinking about the consequences. He didn't think about the reality of what would happen after he and the Enterprise left - what would Charles do, where would he/she go? I would have granted Charles asylum if it were up to me, but that would hardly solve any problems. It is a big question if Charles would be able to fit into Earth or some other society... And what about all the other cogenitors back home? Even if things had worked out for Charles, what about all the others?

But as for "Homeward" and "Dear Doctor", those episodes were just stupid. "Dear Doctor" had some bad ethics combined with bad science. The existence of the Valakians didn't prevent the development of the Menk up to that point; why would it be the case in the future? And is there any rule that two sapient intelligent species can't co-exist?
 
^^^You're right about "Errand of Mercy." I took Kirk's initial outburst out of context and didn't give him enough credit. So is it possible that Ayelborne is really "Mayweather," the compassionate Organian?

The more I think about this, the more interesting it gets. Thanks, pookha, for adding another layer to my understanding of this episode.

from the moment i first saw it i very much thought that the organian who possessed travis was based on ayelborne.
look at when kirk and spock first beam down he is just so happy to have visitors.
and things turned out so badly.
:p

donlago
as for a practical way the prime directive came about..
i can see some type of big bad happening due to intererence.
so for awhile the prime directive came in and was taken very seriously .
but after a long time it became more pliable ect say about kirks time.
then later another big bad happened and we get the far more powerful pd of tng.
 
Allowing a species to survive that later destroys your own because you interfered.
Yes, that's right, the Prime Directive sometimes means doing absolutely reprehensible things by doing nothing at all. But as we saw even in Homeward, sometimes attempting to save a species can be just as harmful to it as whatever was going to kill it anyway. Make no mistake, Our Heroes got lucky. And it remains to be seen what might happen to that culture when they realize they were transplanted (and realistically I can't imagine that they wouldn't figure it out).

Let's take a simple example, DonIago.

You see a man drowning.

Do you save him because he's drowning?
Or don't you save him because he could become the next Hitler? But hey, he could become the next Einstein, or remain just an ordinary human.

You can't know what this human will become - you're no prophet. And acting on non-sensical 'prophecies' is just inept.

But you DO know that the person is drowning - and you should act on it. Not acting to save this person when you could have saved him with no risk to yourself makes you no better than a murderer - and that now, with certainty, not in some paranoid imaginary future.

Did you know that throughout history, millions were exterminated by this or that dictator, with justifications based on paranoid fantasies about what the ones being exterminated plan to/will do?
All these justifications were recognised for what they really were - garbagre.

Your defending the Prime Directive in "Dear doctor" or "Homeward" is based on a similar justification - don't interfere, because it could lead to - insert paranoid unsupported scenario.

You see, 'Homeward' and 'Dear doctor' feature this callous behaviour - let those guys die because 'insert your fears there, NOT supported by anything else'.


PS - And they also feature some really bad science - pertaining to sociology and evolution.
Making contact with another culture makes all members of said culture commit suicide? Pseudo-sociology fully contradicted by the real thing.
A species that develops in a certain way in a present environment will develop along the same lines when the environment is substantially changed (an essential part of it diisappearing/changing)? Darwin would roll in its grave.
 
Last edited:
And how about educating the savage Indians because we can offer them a better standard of living?

Ask them - if they want to be educated, very well, build schools and proceed.
If they do not want to be educated - leave them alone. They are, obviously, in no danger, content, etc as they are.

But if these indians are about to be killed by a plague, if you can find the antidote and time is of the essence, you will assume that any sane people will welcome your help in this situation, you will make this antidote and give it to them.
And if these indians (or some of them) don't want your antidote, they're free to refuse it.
 
And what if enough of them want to be educated that it will irrevocably alter their culture, but a significant number of them don't wish to be educated because it will irrevocably alter their culture?
 
And what if enough of them want to be educated that it will irrevocably alter their culture, but a significant number of them don't wish to be educated because it will irrevocably alter their culture?

DonIago, a culture is NOT like a insect trapped in amber. It's not a crime for a culture to change.
That's another non-sensical pseudo-sociological concept introduced by TNG.

My - or your - culture are not what they were 10 years ago; and they're not what they will become 10 years from now.
Cultures change, adapt, evolve - that's part of the very essence of a culture. They're NOT a photograph that should never change under any circumstances.


If some indians want to learn, you're free to build schools to teach them. It's their right as individuals to choose what to do with their lives, to learn.

And if these individuals will then change their society - it's their right as members of that society to try to change it as they see fit. Just as the individuals that did not wish to learn are free to try to keep their culture from changing.
Progressives vs conservatives - you see this ideological battle today, in all cultures of the world - no outside/alien interference required.
 
I'm really glad that this thread has kept going. It just shows that ENT could handle complex issues in a provocative way.

I tend to agree with ProtoAvatar--cultures are constantly evolving. Personally, I'd rather still be alive and have to contend with a shakeup to my worldview than die free from "contamination."
 
And how about educating the savage Indians because we can offer them a better standard of living?

Ask them - if they want to be educated, very well, build schools and proceed.
If they do not want to be educated - leave them alone. They are, obviously, in no danger, content, etc as they are.

I think this sentence is actually a perfect example of why the Prime Directive was created. Educate them in what? Federation history? Perhaps it was because humanity started to note that every time they interfered, there were unforeseen consequences and they were responsible. I actually wanted to see an episode where Enterprise unwittingly destroyed an entire culture through their bumbling.

No native American was going to say no to the gun. You can't ask an entire culture if they want your technology. And you KNOW if you give them your technology, their culture will be forever changed. This is precisely why it needed to be a directive, not some optional rule.
 
And you KNOW if you give them your technology, their culture will be forever changed. This is precisely why it needed to be a directive, not some optional rule.

"A culture is NOT like a insect trapped in amber. It's not a crime for a culture to be 'forever changed'.
The 'it's a crime for culture to change' is a non-sensical pseudo-sociological concept introduced by TNG.

My - or your - culture are not what they were 10 years ago; and they're not what they will become 10 years from now.
Cultures change, adapt, evolve - that's part of the very essence of a culture. They're NOT a photograph that should never change under any circumstances."


And how about educating the savage Indians because we can offer them a better standard of living?

Ask them - if they want to be educated, very well, build schools and proceed.
If they do not want to be educated - leave them alone. They are, obviously, in no danger, content, etc as they are.

I think this sentence is actually a perfect example of why the Prime Directive was created. Educate them in what? Federation history?
"Educate them in what?"
In what they want to know. In what they ask you to tell them.
Most likely science. Perhaps what's beyond their borders.

"If some indians want to learn, you're free to build schools to teach them. It's their right as individuals to choose what to do with their lives, to learn.

And if these individuals will then change their society - it's their right as members of that society to try to change it as they see fit. Just as the individuals that did not wish to learn are free to try to keep their culture from changing.
Progressives vs conservatives - you see this ideological battle today, in all cultures of the world - no outside/alien interference required."

Perhaps it was because humanity started to note that every time they interfered, there were unforeseen consequences and they were responsible.
"Let's take a simple example, Destructor.

You see a man drowning.

Do you save him because he's drowning?
Or don't you save him because he could become the next Hitler? But hey, he could become the next Einstein, or remain just an ordinary human - so many unpredictable/'unforeseen consequences' here.

You can't know what this human will become - you're no prophet. And acting on non-sensical 'prophecies' is just inept.

But you DO know that the person is drowning - and you should act on it. Not acting to save this person when you could have saved him with no risk to yourself makes you no better than a murderer - and that now, with certainty, not in some paranoid imaginary future.

Did you know that throughout history, millions were exterminated by this or that dictator, with justifications based on paranoid fantasies about what the ones being exterminated plan to/will do?
All these justifications were recognised for what they really were - garbagre.

Your defending the Prime Directive (as defined by "Dear doctor" or "Homeward") is based on a similar justification - don't interfere, because it could lead to - insert paranoid unsupported scenario.

You see, 'Homeward' and 'Dear doctor' feature this callous behaviour - let those guys die because 'insert your fears there, NOT supported by anything else'."

I actually wanted to see an episode where Enterprise unwittingly destroyed an entire culture through their bumbling.
Star trek often tried to make it seem that every contact would have disastrous consequences for the contacted culture. And every time it's really bad science:

"'Homeward' and 'Dear doctor' feature some really bad science - pertaining to sociology and evolution.
Making contact with another culture makes all members of said culture commit suicide? Pseudo-sociology fully contradicted by the real thing.
A species that develops in a certain way in a present environment will develop along the same lines when the environment is substantially changed (an essential part of it disappearing/changing)? Darwin would roll in its grave."
 
Pookha, thanks for your recap on "Errand of Mercy". I found "Observer Effect" a bit sedate... because of the very limited scope. It must have been an extremely cheap show to make, relative to others. However, I thought they captured the Organians really well. Their indifference to death and their penchant for observing was very good. Of course, we saw no being possessions take place in "Errand of Mercy", but one could say that this was part of Organian practice that was retired. "Observer Effect" ends with that idea presented rather well.

"Dear Doctor" was a train wreck, IMHO. I like to think of it as an aberration in the Enterprise series and plan to never watch it again. :borg:
 
we get a hint in errand of mercy that the organians were doing some mind altering earlier.. so who knows.
right after beam down spock starts complaining about how what he is seeing and the results from the tricorder seem to be in contradiction.

but you are right about observer effect from what i remember.
it was supposed to be a "bottle" episode to use exiting sets.
 
My - or your - culture are not what they were 10 years ago; and they're not what they will become 10 years from now.
Cultures change, adapt, evolve - that's part of the very essence of a culture. They're NOT a photograph that should never change under any circumstances."

Never said they were. Cultures do develop and evolve naturally, on their own. This is pretty obvious. But can you identify one culture for me that was not either destroyed, marginalized, or at the very least radically changed from what it was after it came into contact with a more technologically advanced culture? Let's see: Indians, Maori, Native Americans, Native Australians, the Inuit, Africans, the Mayans- basically draw a line down any point on a map of the world and every culture you come to you can tick off on this list, because the history of expansion IS the history of how these cultures were destroyed by exactly the sort of thinking you are promoting here. "We did it to educate the less civilized!" is literally what they said to justify it.

The Prime Directive is the logical endpoint of any moral thinking around the idea that any contact with a less-developed culture will alter that culture, and that cultures actually have a right to develop on their own, without the Federation coming in and telling them what's what.


"If some indians want to learn, you're free to build schools to teach them. It's their right as individuals to choose what to do with their lives, to learn.

Do you honestly not hear how horrifying that sentence sounds? "Okay, YOU Indians who want to learn math, you come and live with us in civilization over here, okay? All the rest of you who have been happy living off the land, well, let's put you in these reservations over here, shall we? You're saying these things as though they make the case against the Prime Directive, where all I can think of is that they actually make the perfect case for the Prime Directive.

And if these individuals will then change their society - it's their right as members of that society to try to change it as they see fit. Just as the individuals that did not wish to learn are free to try to keep their culture from changing.

But change would be inevitable the moment they were aware of
this new information. It wouldn't be a choice, it would be something that definitely will occur, and the Federation would be responsible for all of that change. And if it destroyed that culture, the Federation would bear responsibility for that destruction- just as the British Empire is directly responsible for the destruction of the native cultures of New Zealand and Australia.

Progressives vs conservatives - you see this ideological battle today, in all cultures of the world - no outside/alien interference required."

Which is why it's not really an apt metaphor. If we came across a planet of alien life that would be destroyed by contact with us, the onus would be on us to avoid them- not on them to somehow survive our catastrophic interference.

You see a man drowning.
Do you save him because he's drowning?

Yes you've made this argument before, and it's entirely inappropriate, and it's a terrible metaphor, and it doesn't fit this argument at all because you are distorting the metaphor precisely to fit your case. You may as well ask if I'm sure I want to wipe my bench down because the penicillin that grows on it might mutate into the next cure for cancer- it relies on so many what-ifs that it becomes meaningless.

Yes, I would save a drowning man, but a man is not a culture. A culture has it's own natural development, and anything I do as an advanced culture to interfere with that development will alter that development. Any interference with that development will, ultimately, affect the way the history of the galaxy unfolds. The British thought they were 'saving' the indigenous cultures from ignorance. They were, in fact, altering the cultures in order to service the British Empire. Maybe the Federation would do that- maybe they wouldn't. But since it is their highest law that they do not, they presumably have determined that it's not their right to make such interference.

You see, 'Homeward' and 'Dear doctor' feature this callous behaviour - let those guys die because 'insert your fears there, NOT supported by anything else'."

In 'Homeward' they were restricted by a pre-existing law, put there precisely so the Federation would not become entangled in such matters beyond their purview. In 'Dear Doctor', they saw that they held the future of an entire civilization in their hand and it was not their place to judge who lived and who died.

Homeward and Dear Doctor do, indeed, show the negative side of a non-interference policy. There is a big, big negative side to a non-interference policy. But the negatives do not outweigh the positives, or, that is to say, the negatives of interfering outweigh the negatives of not interfering.

What is the Boraalans were at war, and were about to kill each other? Would it be the Federation's place to 'step in' and prevent them from doing so?
 
My - or your - culture are not what they were 10 years ago; and they're not what they will become 10 years from now.
Cultures change, adapt, evolve - that's part of the very essence of a culture. They're NOT a photograph that should never change under any circumstances."

Never said they were. Cultures do develop and evolve naturally, on their own. This is pretty obvious.

And they develop by contact with other cultures.

You will never find any sociological treaty that actually contains notions such as 'natural development is good' as opposed to 'development by contact with other cultures is bad' or 'contact will most likely destroy the culture'.

Why? Because these are pseudo-sociological notions with no basis in fact.

But can you identify one culture for me that was not either destroyed, marginalized, or at the very least radically changed from what it was after it came into contact with a more technologically advanced culture? Let's see: Indians, Maori, Native Americans, Native Australians, the Inuit, Africans, the Mayans- basically draw a line down any point on a map of the world and every culture you come to you can tick off on this list, because the history of expansion IS the history of how these cultures were destroyed by exactly the sort of thinking you are promoting here.
"Indians, Maori, Native Americans, Native Australians, the Inuit, Africans, the Mayans" - in all those cases, the more powerfull civilization came to conquer, to remodel the other culture in their image.

What first contacts were beneficial to the less powerful cultures? All contacts in which the advanced culture did not try to remodel the contacted culture with the equivalent of a chainsaw.
In the colonial age, where exploitation and conquest of native cultures was standard policy, you'll find few examples of this kind. But even in that period, one could name Cook's, Laperouse's, etc contacts with native cultures (which did NOT lead to those cultures comitting mass suicide or entering a dark age).
There are plenty of examples in recent times, though - in present times, we made contact with many less advanced tribes and cultures - contacts that, unsurprisingly, failed to lead to the destruction of those cultures.

The Prime Directive is the logical endpoint of any moral thinking around the idea that any contact with a less-developed culture will alter that culture, and that cultures actually have a right to develop on their own, without the Federation coming in and telling them what's what.
Again - the notion that a contact will only change a culture for the worse is pseudo-sociological nonsense.

Cultures - and individuals - have the right to decide on their own what they want.
Of course the Federation won't tell this or that culture what to do - it will abide by their choices, but it will give them that choice, NOT made that choice for the other cultures - THIS is immoral.

"If some indians want to learn, you're free to build schools to teach them. It's their right as individuals to choose what to do with their lives, to learn.
Do you honestly not hear how horrifying that sentence sounds? "Okay, YOU Indians who want to learn math, you come and live with us in civilization over here, okay? All the rest of you who have been happy living off the land, well, let's put you in these reservations over here, shall we?

Transparent straw-man argument.
There's a REALLY long distance between a policy to teach the individuals who want to learn and a policy to put indians into reservations (to take their lands, etc - conquest).

But change would be inevitable the moment they were aware of this new information. It wouldn't be a choice, it would be something that definitely will occur, and the Federation would be responsible for all of that change. And if it destroyed that culture, the Federation would bear responsibility for that destruction- just as the British Empire is directly responsible for the destruction of the native cultures of New Zealand and Australia.
Again, Destructor - for a culture to change is NOT a crime. And a culture as a whole - and individuals belonging to that culture - has the right to decide on its own what do.

And again - the British Empire intentionally tried to remake the cultures of New Zeeland and Australia into their own image (and failed - the native cultures of Australia and New Zeeland exist even today).
As I already said - when the more powerful culture does not come with the intent to forcubly remake the less powerful culture, both cultures survive just fine - and prosper.

You see a man drowning.
Do you save him because he's drowning?
Yes you've made this argument before, and it's entirely inappropriate, and it's a terrible metaphor, and it doesn't fit this argument at all because you are distorting the metaphor precisely to fit your case.
http://trekbbs.com/showpost.php?p=4373271&postcount=43

You may as well ask if I'm sure I want to wipe my bench down because the penicillin that grows on it might mutate into the next cure for cancer- it relies on so many what-ifs that it becomes meaningless.
Exactly. Much like you saying that contact to another culture will destroy that culture relies on so many pseudo-sociological what ifs, "it becomes meaningless" - essentially, it's an unsupported fantasy.

Saying you'll be responsible for whatever - insert paranoid future fantasy - happens to this culture is like saying that you're responsible for the man you saved becoming Hitler.

Yes, I would save a drowning man, but a man is not a culture. A culture has it's own natural development, and anything I do as an advanced culture to interfere with that development will alter that development. Any interference with that development will, ultimately, affect the way the history of the galaxy unfolds. The British thought they were 'saving' the indigenous cultures from ignorance. They were, in fact, altering the cultures in order to service the British Empire. Maybe the Federation would do that- maybe they wouldn't. But since it is their highest law that they do not, they presumably have determined that it's not their right to make such interference.
"natural development" of a culture? Repeating the same baseless notions will NOT make them true.

And again - the British came with the intent to "alter the cultures in order to service the British Empire" - and their policies more than reflected that. "'saving' the indigenous cultures from ignorance" was just the excuse.
Which is why their influence was generally negative - they forced their will and vision on the other cultures, instead of giving those cultures the choice of what to do.

Your post consists of the same pseudo-sociological ideea (contact with a culture will always/almost always lead to negative consequences to that culture) and the same example (the colonial age) repeated ad nauseam.
I negated both.


You see, 'Homeward' and 'Dear doctor' feature this callous behaviour - let those guys die because 'insert your fears there, NOT supported by anything else'."
In 'Homeward' they were restricted by a pre-existing law, put there precisely so the Federation would not become entangled in such matters beyond their purview. In 'Dear Doctor', they saw that they held the future of an entire civilization in their hand and it was not their place to judge who lived and who died.
In 'Homeward' and 'Dear doctor' they do judge who lives and who dies, Destructor.
Non-interference (letting them die) is playing God just as much as interference (saving them).

Homeward and Dear Doctor do, indeed, show the negative side of a non-interference policy. There is a big, big negative side to a non-interference policy. But the negatives do not outweigh the positives, or, that is to say, the negatives of interfering outweigh the negatives of not interfering.
And, as cause for these negative consequences, both 'Homeward' and 'Dear doctor' "feature some really bad science - pertaining to sociology and evolution.
Making contact with another culture makes all members of said culture commit suicide? Pseudo-sociology fully contradicted by the real thing.
A species that develops in a certain way in a present environment will develop along the same lines when the environment is substantially changed (an essential part of it disappearing/changing)? Darwin would roll in its grave."

You see, this notion of 'contact will always/almost always have negative consequences' IS BAD SCIENCE.
 
And they develop by contact with other cultures.

The premise of the Prime Directive, whether you agree with the premise or not, is that if contacted by a more technologically advanced culture, they'll be subsumed by that culture, and that this is an inherently bad thing.

You will never find any sociological treaty that actually contains notions such as 'natural development is good' as opposed to 'development by contact with other cultures is bad' or 'contact will most likely destroy the culture'.

That's because we don't come into contact with other worlds, but there is such a thing as Westphalian Sovereignty, there is such a thing as the Observer Effect, and the Prime Directive is a naturally logical extension of both.

Why? Because these are pseudo-sociological notions with no basis in fact.

That is because by the time we figured out the phenomenon, the world had been fully explored. We've never been to alien worlds so any country-based metaphor you care to pull out is likely to not be a good fit.

"Indians, Maori, Native Americans, Native Australians, the Inuit, Africans, the Mayans" - in all those cases, the more powerfull civilization came to conquer, to remodel the other culture in their image.

Yes, and they thought they were being benevolent towards the less developed cultures. They thought they were 'helping' them come towards civilization. Don't you see? It's like Julian's parents giving him genetic alteration. He wasn't Julian anymore, he was someone else.

What first contacts were beneficial to the less powerful cultures?

None! Not a one! NO culture has benefited. This is why the Prime Directive exists.

All contacts in which the advanced culture did not try to remodel the contacted culture with the equivalent of a chainsaw.

I don't know what you're talking about here. You don't name any specific examples, because there aren't any.

In the colonial age, where exploitation and conquest of native cultures was standard policy, you'll find few examples of this kind. But even in that period, one could name Cook's, Laperouse's, etc contacts with native cultures (which did NOT lead to those cultures comitting mass suicide or entering a dark age).

What cultures are you referring to?

There are plenty of examples in recent times, though - in present times, we made contact with many less advanced tribes and cultures - contacts that, unsurprisingly, failed to lead to the destruction of those cultures.

Name one.

Again - the notion that a contact will only change a culture for the worse is pseudo-sociological nonsense.

Again, you need to actually refer to something here. It's a scientific fact that you cannot observe a system without altering that system. This is a basic tenet of science.

Cultures - and individuals - have the right to decide on their own what they want.

Yes! And the premise of the Prime Directive is that you take that choice away from them when you provide them with information that is so far beyond anything they have learned for themselves that you are, in effect, responsible for everything they do after that.

Of course the Federation won't tell this or that culture what to do - it will abide by their choices, but it will give them that choice, NOT made that choice for the other cultures - THIS is immoral.

But the cultures wouldn't have a choice not to change. The very act of offering them a choice would be enough to wreak massive damage on a primitive culture. Look, let's say I lived in the 24th century and had a personal shield device that protected me from harm. And then let's say I came across a planet that had just developed the musket. So I beam down (freaking everyone out) and say: "Hey guys, that musket is going to harm you. Now you get a choice: join my super-advanced culture and ultimately be eaten up by it, or, y'know, keep it up with your muskets and disease and the like- whatever you like! It's your choice!" Don't you see how I'd essentially be destroying whatever it was that made that world unique? Don't you think if aliens had come and made the proposal to us during OUR musket age, we would have essentially been subsumed by that culture? You'd be no better than the borg- they think they are doing everyone a favour as well!

Transparent straw-man argument.

I don't know that there's an argument here. I think you think interfering with other cultures is a good thing, I think it's a bad thing, and Star Trek agrees with me. Maybe you should watch Stargate or something?

There's a REALLY long distance between a policy to teach the individuals who want to learn and a policy to put indians into reservations (to take their lands, etc - conquest).

What would you do with the people who didn't want to learn, given that the people who suddenly had access to vastly more advanced technology and information would essentially be as gods to them.

Again, Destructor - for a culture to change is NOT a crime. And a culture as a whole - and individuals belonging to that culture - has the right to decide on its own what do.

The Prime Directive supports this, by letting them develop naturally until they achieve warp drive.

And again - the British Empire intentionally tried to remake the cultures of New Zeeland and Australia into their own image (and failed - the native cultures of Australia and New Zeeland exist even today).

Oh, come on. They were decimated. Beyond decimated. They do NOT survive in anything LIKE the way they were prior to colonization. To even casually say that New Zealand and Australia are not utterly Europeanized is just downright nuts. This has nothing to do with facts, this is belief. You actually believe that those cultures should have made way for the 'superior' culture, don't you? This is the very antithesis of Star Trek.

As I already said - when the more powerful culture does not come with the intent to forcubly remake the less powerful culture, both cultures survive just fine - and prosper.

I will accept that has happened when you list even one example. Even with the best of intentions, it always happens.

Exactly. Much like you saying that contact to another culture will destroy that culture relies on so many pseudo-sociological what ifs, "it becomes meaningless" - essentially, it's an unsupported fantasy.

Uh, you mean except for all those examples I cited? It's say it's a self-evident truth by now.

Saying you'll be responsible for whatever - insert paranoid future fantasy - happens to this culture is like saying that you're responsible for the man you saved becoming Hitler.

Uh, the Prime Directive doesn't exist to prevent cultures from becoming evil. It exists to prevent them from being irrevocably altered by technology beyond their understanding.

Your post consists of the same pseudo-sociological ideea (contact with a culture will always/almost always lead to negative consequences to that culture) and the same example (the colonial age) repeated ad nauseam.
I negated both.[/B]

You've done nothing of a sort, you've simply asserted that cultural contamination would not occur, despite all of history being essentially one long example of the fact that it would. You've not listed even once scintilla of evidence to the contrary, just shrugged and said you believe the opposite. Your belief is fine and I encourage you to stick with it, but you've 'negated' nothing. In fact, the more you talk, the more I think the Prime Directive is a necessity- to protect alien worlds from precisely your mindset.

In 'Homeward' and 'Dear doctor' they do judge who lives and who dies, Destructor.
Non-interference (letting them die) is playing God just as much as interference (saving them).

Just as an advanced race giving force-field technology to everyone about to fight the civil war, or, even better, preventing them from fighting it all together, would have saved thousands. The world as you know it today would not exist.

If the Enterprise had never even driven past Borall II, would they, then, also be responsible? Or would it have just been a natural disaster? If there were Vulcans observing us and witnessed the hundreds of thousands who died in the Indian Ocean Tsunami disaster of 2004, would it be their 'responsibility' to save them all? Or would they say to themselves: "This is their disaster. We have powers that would alter that world forever. We cannot save them all. They have to look after themselves." Would you rather live as you do now, or in a zoo, looked after by some higher power that sees us as incapable of going forward on our own?

And, as cause for these negative consequences, both 'Homeward' and 'Dear doctor' "feature some really bad science - pertaining to sociology and evolution.

I will concede that. I was not defending those individual episodes. I am defending the Prime Directive.

Making contact with another culture makes all members of said culture commit suicide? Pseudo-sociology fully contradicted by the real thing.

Homeward in no way implies this. The character who killed himself was a record-keeper. He was specifically quoted as saying that his history was everything to him, that he felt personally tied to it. It was entirely logical that he might not be able to handle the truth of his existence, just as many religious people might kill themselves if they thought that the existence of aliens disproved their faith. I am sure that most of the Boralans could have handled the truth without suicide. But the truth still would have changed them, utterly and irrevocably, surely you cannot deny that?

You see, this notion of 'contact will always/almost always have negative consequences' IS BAD SCIENCE.

The Prime Directive doesn't need to distinguish between positive or negative consequences. Indeed, it exists to remove the need for personal opinion, because the consequences are so vast that no-one person can safely say that the morally correct decision was made. There is just interference, which changes a system, and non-interference, which does not. Cultures have a right to develop naturally. Ergo, they have a right not to be interfered with. I do not believe the Prime Directive prevents the Federation from saving primitive cultures- Homeward is actually a good example of how they did not reveal themselves, and they also save a planet from an asteroid collision in 'The Paradise Syndrome'- without the knowledge of the people of that world. But if the Federation introduced advanced technology to a primitive world they would be responsible for whatever effects that introduced- and whether those effects were negative or positive would be utterly unpredictable.

"The Prime Directive is not just a set of rules; it is a philosophy... and a very correct one. History has proven again and again that whenever mankind interferes with a less developed civilization, no matter how well intentioned that interference may be, the results are invariably disastrous."
- Captain Picard (TNG: "Symbiosis")
 
And they develop by contact with other cultures.

You will never find any sociological treaty that actually contains notions such as 'natural development is good' as opposed to 'development by contact with other cultures is bad' or 'contact will most likely destroy the culture'.

The premise of the Prime Directive, whether you agree with the premise or not, is that if contacted by a more technologically advanced culture, they'll be subsumed by that culture, and that this is an inherently bad thing.

Which is pseudo-sociological non-sense.

You will never find any sociological treaty that actually contains notions such as 'natural development is good' as opposed to 'development by contact with other cultures is bad' or 'contact will most likely destroy the culture'.

That is because by the time we figured out the phenomenon, the world had been fully explored. We've never been to alien worlds so any country-based metaphor you care to pull out is likely to not be a good fit.
Many human cultures were more different from each other than the Boralaans or the Valakians/Menk were from the Federation.

And yet, throughout human history, less powerful cultures were negatively affected by contact with a more powerful culture ONLY when this stronger culture sought to conquer/transform them and used coercion and force to achieve this objective - as happened during the colonial period.

Oh, come on. They were decimated. Beyond decimated. They do NOT survive in anything LIKE the way they were prior to colonization. To even casually say that New Zealand and Australia are not utterly Europeanized is just downright nuts.
And this had nothing to do with the british making contact with said cultures and ALL to do with the british policies of conquest regarding those cultures.

"The Prime Directive is not just a set of rules; it is a philosophy... and a very correct one. History has proven again and again that whenever mankind interferes with a less developed civilization, no matter how well intentioned that interference may be, the results are invariably disastrous."
- Captain Picard (TNG: "Symbiosis")
Despite the TNG's scenarists' allegations, 'history' has proven the contrary.
The notion that in the case of contact, "the results are invariably disastrous" is non-sensical pseudo-science.

Yes, and they thought they were being benevolent towards the less developed cultures. They thought they were 'helping' them come towards civilization. Don't you see? It's like Julian's parents giving him genetic alteration. He wasn't Julian anymore, he was someone else.
The more powerful cultures thought nothing of the kind. That was propaganda, the excuse they used.
The more powerful cultures wanted to conquer/exploit the less advanced cultures - and they acted accordingly.

I don't know what you're talking about here. You don't name any specific examples, because there aren't any.

What cultures are you referring to?

Name one.

I will accept that has happened when you list even one example. Even with the best of intentions, it always happens.
I already named Cook's and LaPerouse expeditions (and these are not the only ones) - they made contact to various cultures they met, cultures which failed to self-destruct.

In present times, there are contacts between numerous comparatively primitive tribes and industrialised nations - and these tribes/cultures have no problem whatsoever handling the interaction.

Here's another one - The Perry expedition that opened Japan's ports.
The americans were not exactly nice then, but they didn't come intending to outright conquer Japan, either (as was the standard modus operandi during the colonial age).
Result - far from having its culture destroyed, Japan entered a period of prosperity and growth.

That's because we don't come into contact with other worlds, but there is such a thing as Westphalian Sovereignty, there is such a thing as the Observer Effect, and the Prime Directive is a naturally logical extension of both.

Again, you need to actually refer to something here. It's a scientific fact that you cannot observe a system without altering that system. This is a basic tenet of science.

Uh, the Prime Directive doesn't exist to prevent cultures from becoming evil. It exists to prevent them from being irrevocably altered by technology.
How many times must I tell you?
Cultures changing is NOT a crime!
Cultures change all the time - by themselvs or by external influences.

But the cultures wouldn't have a choice not to change. The very act of offering them a choice would be enough to wreak massive damage on a primitive culture.
Again, Destructor - cultures changing is NOT a crime.
And the contacted cultures will choose for themselves what path they they want to walk.

You see, this notion of 'contact will always/almost always have negative consequences' IS BAD SCIENCE.
Homeward in no way implies this.[..]I am sure that most of the Boralans could have handled the truth without suicide.
'Homeward' most definitely implies that a contacted culture will commit mass suicide. This being the 'negative consequence' of making contact.
Much like 'Dear doctor' implies that "a species that develops in a certain way in a present environment will develop along the same lines when the environment is substantially changed (an essential part of it disappearing/changing)".

Both of these allegations being really BAD science.

The Prime Directive doesn't need to distinguish between positive or negative consequences. Indeed, it exists to remove the need for personal opinion, because the consequences are so vast that no-one person can safely say that the morally correct decision was made. There is just interference, which changes a system, and non-interference, which does not.

If the Enterprise had never even driven past Borall II, would they, then, also be responsible? Or would it have just been a natural disaster? If there were Vulcans observing us and witnessed the hundreds of thousands who died in the Indian Ocean Tsunami disaster of 2004, would it be their 'responsibility' to save them all? Or would they say to themselves: "This is their disaster. We have powers that would alter that world forever. We cannot save them all. They have to look after themselves.
Destructor, if you have the power to save someone and you don't use it, YOU ARE PLAYING GOD just as much as when you have the power to save someone and you use it:

http://trekbbs.com/showpost.php?p=4379666&postcount=130

Look, let's say I lived in the 24th century and had a personal shield device that protected me from harm. And then let's say I came across a planet that had just developed the musket. So I beam down (freaking everyone out) and say: "Hey guys, that musket is going to harm you. Now you get a choice: join my super-advanced culture and ultimately be eaten up by it, or, y'know, keep it up with your muskets and disease and the like- whatever you like! It's your choice!" Don't you see how I'd essentially be destroying whatever it was that made that world unique?
That's a straw-man argument - There's a BIG difference between making contact with another culture and giving it weapons.

What would you do with the people who didn't want to learn, given that the people who suddenly had access to vastly more advanced technology and information would essentially be as gods to them.
Straw-man argument - there's a BIG difference between teaching individuals who want to learn the basis of medicine, an objectively correct worldview of the universe and giving them enough information to build god-like technology.

Would you rather live as you do now, or in a zoo, looked after by some higher power that sees us as incapable of going forward on our own?
Straw-man argument - Contact with a more powerful culture will NOT, under any circumstances, lead to our culture being "incapable of going forward".

If the contacting culture has a colonial-type policy, purposefully dismantling our social institutions and the like, we're in trouble.
If not, we'll most likely prosper.


PS - Destructor, you seem to think that cultures are fragile things, that break and disappear as soon as one makes contact.
Nothing is further from the truth. If that was the case, then there wouldn't exist a single intact, half-decent culture on Earth.
Cultures are adaptable, they can absorb/incorporate new facts and worldviews. They'll only 'break' if the more powerful culture intentionally seeks this result, seeks to remodel them into its liking.
 
Last edited:
The question isn't whether cultures can and do change, the question is whether an external agency that knows it has the power to influence other cultures, but cannot possibly predict what repercussions that influence will ultimately have regardless of the effects it -intends- to have, therefore has a moral obligation to avoid influencing cultures in the first place...or is at least then responsible for the ensuing repercussions.

Let's say the Federation exists in the present day, and humans aren't aware of it. The second a Fed representative comes to Earth to offer us advanced technology, the course of Earth's history has been irrevocably altered, and we have no way of knowing whether it will be to our benefit. All human societies to this point have wondered whether there's life on other planets. Having the existence of life elsewhere proven to us -will- alter the planet's societal evolution, and it won't matter whether the aliens just say "Howdy!" and leave, or whether there's greater interaction involved.

A decent follow-up to "Homeward" would involve Our Heroes learning that there was another culture on the Boraalans new planet that their sensors had failed to detect for some reason, and that their transplanted friends were now in the process of wiping out.
 
The question isn't whether cultures can and do change, the question is whether an external agency that knows it has the power to influence other cultures, but cannot possibly predict what repercussions that influence will ultimately have regardless of the effects it -intends- to have, therefore has a moral obligation to avoid influencing cultures in the first place...or is at least then responsible for the ensuing repercussions.

And you cannot possibly predict what a drowning man will become - who knows, maybe Hitler - such a negative consequence of saving him.

Does this mean you have the moral obligation to let him drown, DonIago?

Let's say the Federation exists in the present day, and humans aren't aware of it. The second a Fed representative comes to Earth to offer us advanced technology, the course of Earth's history has been irrevocably altered, and we have no way of knowing whether it will be to our benefit. All human societies to this point have wondered whether there's life on other planets. Having the existence of life elsewhere proven to us -will- alter the planet's societal evolution, and it won't matter whether the aliens just say "Howdy!" and leave, or whether there's greater interaction involved.
First - making contact and offering advanced technology are two VERY different things.

Second - knowing extraterestrial intelligent life exists will alter our worldview, yes.
It won't be the first changing of our worldview. It won't be the last.
It won't, under any circumstances, lead to the destruction of our culture (unless the aliens resort to colonial-style politics or just wipe us out).
It will change our culture? Our culture is always chaning without need of extraterestrial presence. I already told you - cultures are fundamentally dynamic, change is in their nature.

You think we'll commit mass suicide - or some other extravaganza along those lines? Ridiculous!

A decent follow-up to "Homeward" would involve Our Heroes learning that there was another culture on the Boraalans new planet that their sensors had failed to detect for some reason, and that their transplanted friends were now in the process of wiping out.
Decent? I disagree.
'Homeward' was already filled with bad science. Now you want more of the same, in order to vindicate your opinion, despite the fact that it's unsupported pseudo-sociology.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top