I was watching this episode last night. There is that scene where Equinox captain Ransom was trying to have the Voyager doctor (who was on Equinox at the time) extract a security code from Seven of Nine so that they could enable their enhanced warp drive. The doctor claims that he would cause serious damage to Seven in doing so, and refuses. Captain Ransom then proceeds to delete the Doctor's "ethical subroutines" after which he basically turns into an evil doctor and is happy to perform the surgery on Seven, even singing while he does it.
This scene really bugged me, and I felt that it really cheapened and took a lot of depth out of the Doctor's character. If this had happened to a default/stock EMH, or if the Doctor had been operating on one of the Equinox crew (essentially, someone he isn't familiar with), I could sort of understand. I feel like the Doctor should have had deeper connections to Seven of Nine than what would have been directly controlled by "ethical subroutines".
Seven and the Doctor were essentially friends. Wouldn't he have still wanted to keep her alive, if not for ethical reasons, then simply for selfish reasons? Meanwhile what reason does he have to follow the orders of the equinox crew? The fact that he was directly violating the Hippocratic oath would seem to indicate that "violating orders" should not be a big deal for him at that point.
I think it would have been a much better plot development if disabling the ethical subroutines essentially backfired on the Equinox crew. The Doctor could have worked to save Seven (for selfish, not ethical reasons) while taking actions against the Equinox crew that were not necessarily ethical...
Finally, I think that, at the end of the episode, they really glossed over the implications of what the Doctor had done (Operating on Seven against her will, almost causing permanent severe brain damage). He mentioned it, Seven didn't seem to care, and then they briefly talked about potentially making the doctor's program more secure. In the earlier episode "Latent Image", the doctor freaks out due to having to make a choice in which one crew-member dies. It seems to me that this should have had just as much repercussions, if not more, as that did for him.
This scene really bugged me, and I felt that it really cheapened and took a lot of depth out of the Doctor's character. If this had happened to a default/stock EMH, or if the Doctor had been operating on one of the Equinox crew (essentially, someone he isn't familiar with), I could sort of understand. I feel like the Doctor should have had deeper connections to Seven of Nine than what would have been directly controlled by "ethical subroutines".
Seven and the Doctor were essentially friends. Wouldn't he have still wanted to keep her alive, if not for ethical reasons, then simply for selfish reasons? Meanwhile what reason does he have to follow the orders of the equinox crew? The fact that he was directly violating the Hippocratic oath would seem to indicate that "violating orders" should not be a big deal for him at that point.
I think it would have been a much better plot development if disabling the ethical subroutines essentially backfired on the Equinox crew. The Doctor could have worked to save Seven (for selfish, not ethical reasons) while taking actions against the Equinox crew that were not necessarily ethical...
Finally, I think that, at the end of the episode, they really glossed over the implications of what the Doctor had done (Operating on Seven against her will, almost causing permanent severe brain damage). He mentioned it, Seven didn't seem to care, and then they briefly talked about potentially making the doctor's program more secure. In the earlier episode "Latent Image", the doctor freaks out due to having to make a choice in which one crew-member dies. It seems to me that this should have had just as much repercussions, if not more, as that did for him.
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