In Star Trek, we are shown a very simple code which is supposed to be followed in most situations: if it ain't your business, don't get involved.
The whole thing is simple and logical, until something goes wrong. Something like Data forming contact with an alien girl. Once that first bit of involvement takes place, the Prime Directive starts fighting conscience; and in the end it winds up getting dropped in the lap of the Captain.
Where does one draw the line? Where should the line be drawn?
We see time and time again in Trek Canon instances where the Prime Directive is cited and endorsed as ample cause for leaving folks to die or be harmed, until somebody actually sees one of the victims. At that point, feelings for them kick in, and it is realized that it is too late to jump to warp and escape without lending a hand. In other words, we seem to kind of get the message that it is fine to leave a guy bleeding in the gutter as long as we are on the other side of the street and he doesn't notice us passing.
In real life, the same issue tends to come up, as a matter of fact. Once you help somebody, it feels inappropriate to just walk away and leave them there. You don't have to invite the homeless man in, but once he is sitting on your couch, is it right to push him out into the snow?
Thus the debate: When should conscience play a role in the Prime Directive? If you were Captain, would you support the prime directive, despise it, or bend it to fit the circumstance?
The whole thing is simple and logical, until something goes wrong. Something like Data forming contact with an alien girl. Once that first bit of involvement takes place, the Prime Directive starts fighting conscience; and in the end it winds up getting dropped in the lap of the Captain.
Where does one draw the line? Where should the line be drawn?
We see time and time again in Trek Canon instances where the Prime Directive is cited and endorsed as ample cause for leaving folks to die or be harmed, until somebody actually sees one of the victims. At that point, feelings for them kick in, and it is realized that it is too late to jump to warp and escape without lending a hand. In other words, we seem to kind of get the message that it is fine to leave a guy bleeding in the gutter as long as we are on the other side of the street and he doesn't notice us passing.
In real life, the same issue tends to come up, as a matter of fact. Once you help somebody, it feels inappropriate to just walk away and leave them there. You don't have to invite the homeless man in, but once he is sitting on your couch, is it right to push him out into the snow?
Thus the debate: When should conscience play a role in the Prime Directive? If you were Captain, would you support the prime directive, despise it, or bend it to fit the circumstance?