Yes, but working on upgrading a weapon of mass destruction is not the job of someone who has taken an oath to do no harm.
But why SHOULDN'T McCoy be perfectly willing to do it? (Putting aside the question of whether it made sense for McCoy, and not someone whose job involved technical or tactical concerns, to work on the torpedo in the first place). He is still a military officer, as well as a doctor. Destroying the Klingon ship was not only an act of self-preservation, but also, an act that helped to secure peace between the UFP and the Klingons. I'm still not convinced that even a STRICT reading of the Oath would disallow such actions. Which brings me to...By the same token, McCoy is in a situation where he is ordered by his 'higher up' (Kirk) to do something he wouldn't normally do. (I know he was all gung-ho about it). The surgeon would have been in Sickbay but was in a place where he was going to launch a torpedo on a run to disable a Klingon ship.
There is something also. McCoy never did any harm did he? Once the Klingon ship dropped its cloak, it was Kirk and Sulu that killed the ship and its crew. Though McCoy must have known his part in the plan, he didn't pull the 'trigger' on the phasers and killing torpedoes.
My question in response to your previous post was never answered by anyone: IS that, in fact, what the Hippocratic Oath is? An Oath to do NO harm, period? Or just an Oath to do no harm as a healer? i.e. to always try to help the sick and wounded, and never do anything that could harm a patient.Yes, but working on upgrading a weapon of mass destruction is not the job of someone who has taken an oath to do no harm.
McCoy is in a situation where he is ordered by his 'higher up' (Kirk) to do something he wouldn't normally do.
A photon torpedo is hardly a "weapon of mass destruction," if anything their destructive abilities are consistantly shown to be fairly weak for something that supposedly possess a antimatter warhead.Yes, but working on upgrading a weapon of mass destruction is not the job of someone who has taken an oath to do no harm.
A photon torpedo is hardly a "weapon of mass destruction," if anything their destructive abilities are consistantly shown to be fairly weak for something that supposedly possess a antimatter warhead.Yes, but working on upgrading a weapon of mass destruction is not the job of someone who has taken an oath to do no harm.
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I'm certainly no expert on the subject, and maybe I missed something, but looking through this page, I see nothing about using force against other human beings when not practicing medicine. Now, it stands to reason that many medical officers in Trek would be less willing to use force in certain situations than an officer in another department, but I still see no reason to suspect that the Hippocratic Oath has ANY bearing whatsoever on, say, McCoy working on a torpedo, or Bashir shooting at Jem'Hadar, or Crusher killing Jo'Bril, etc.
A photon torpedo is hardly a "weapon of mass destruction," if anything their destructive abilities are consistantly shown to be fairly weak for something that supposedly possess a antimatter warhead.Yes, but working on upgrading a weapon of mass destruction is not the job of someone who has taken an oath to do no harm.
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To be fair to both sides of this particular debate, torpedo yields have been anything but consistent when it comes to hitting anything other than starship shields. That said...A photon torpedo is hardly a "weapon of mass destruction," if anything their destructive abilities are consistantly shown to be fairly weak for something that supposedly possess a antimatter warhead.Yes, but working on upgrading a weapon of mass destruction is not the job of someone who has taken an oath to do no harm.
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I'm not sure about that - not devastatingly destructive against starship shields maybe, but it has been established that starships have the capability to destroy an unshielded planet from orbit...
I'll get to the WMD issue in a moment. First:I'm certainly no expert on the subject, and maybe I missed something, but looking through this page, I see nothing about using force against other human beings when not practicing medicine. Now, it stands to reason that many medical officers in Trek would be less willing to use force in certain situations than an officer in another department, but I still see no reason to suspect that the Hippocratic Oath has ANY bearing whatsoever on, say, McCoy working on a torpedo, or Bashir shooting at Jem'Hadar, or Crusher killing Jo'Bril, etc.
In those other examples, the doctor(s) in question were in very real 'kill or be killed' situations. Jo'Brill was going to kill Crusher. Just as the Jem'Hadar were going to kill Bashir.
In the case of McCoy working on the torpedo, I would think that there were about 400 people more qualified and more inclined to work on a WMD.
A photon torpedo is not a WMD. Neither is a shipboard phaser.Yes, it is very much a WMD. we'd just never seen them used on a city. But, in a universe where the alternative weapon of a starship can bore holes in the crust of a planet, I'd think you know better.
and this from Memory Alpha:A 25 isoton photon torpedo explosion could destroy an entire city within seconds. (VOY: "Living Witness")
I think most people would agree that the destruction of a city and beyond qualifies as 'mass destruction'. Otherwise we're splitting hairs between a weapon of mass destruction and a weapon what would cause mass destruction.USS Voyager was equipped with type-6 photon torpedoes. They were not in use before Voyager was launched in 2371. Some of these torpedoes had a yield of 25 isotons. A class-6 warhead in this type of torpedo had the explosive yield of 200 isotons. These torpedoes had an effective range of approximately 8 million kilometers.
Defensive measures (most especially, shields) are powerful enough to prevent these weapons from imparting their full effects with each volley. Thus, ships NEED weapons on this level in order to effectively combat one another. A photon torpedo would only be a WMD by our standards, today; in Trek, it's the equivalent of something like a cruise missile.
I think most people would agree that the destruction of a city and beyond qualifies as 'mass destruction'.
Sounds about right. I probably should have said "under normal use", or "when used against equivalent technology", etc.Defensive measures (most especially, shields) are powerful enough to prevent these weapons from imparting their full effects with each volley. Thus, ships NEED weapons on this level in order to effectively combat one another. A photon torpedo would only be a WMD by our standards, today; in Trek, it's the equivalent of something like a cruise missile.
I think most people would agree that the destruction of a city and beyond qualifies as 'mass destruction'.
I would say both arguments are correct. So in the Star Trek universe, where they regularly come into contact with wildly varying degrees of defensive measures, WMD would have to be a very relative term. When a ship is visiting a planet that doesn't have shields protecting their cities, that ship's photon torpedoes are WMDs. Other times, they're not.
^Well, the Klingon ship was running with it's shields down as it was cloaked at the time. In the previous example the existence of defensive shields was the deciding factor. In that case, it should be here as well. The reason shields exist is because these weapons are devestating.
The only thing defending the Klingon crew from a direct antimatter explosion (and the several that followed) was a few layers of hull plating.
Still don't see how it's at all ambiguous, let alone damning.Regardless, the ethics of a healer working on such a weapon (WMD or not) are at the very least ambigious and damning at the worst.
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The Klingons are clearly on par; let's not forget that while the Enterprise was trying to find a way to return fire (an action you seem to find morally questionable simply because the Klingons chose a method of attack that gave them a significant advantage, but at the cost of their shields being down), these Klingons were hitting the Ent with... *drumroll*... photon torpedoes!
Then why did the fact that Chang's ship was unshielded even enter into it? And don't say it's because I brought up shields first; I made it very clear in that post that what I was referring to was level of technology, the general ability of the other ship/power to defend themselves against Federation weapons, not "are their shields up or down?"![]()
The Klingons are clearly on par; let's not forget that while the Enterprise was trying to find a way to return fire (an action you seem to find morally questionable simply because the Klingons chose a method of attack that gave them a significant advantage, but at the cost of their shields being down), these Klingons were hitting the Ent with... *drumroll*... photon torpedoes!
Only in as much as it was a healer upgrading the weapon in question. I have already repeatedly explained as much in my posts.
Qualified?There were only about 400 other personel on the Enterprise-A that were immently more qualified to modify said torpedo and I would never have raised an issue about it.
Yes, I do remember that this was the original premise of the thread. It's also a flawed premise. I've pointed out three times that the Hippocratic Oath itself has nothing whatsoever to say about the doctor doing harm to others when he/she is not acting AS a healer. You've ignored this for some reason.I certainly never would have titled such a thread "The Hippocratic Oath?". Yeah, remember the original point of the thread?
It's not about the weapons, its about an Oath to do no harm.
Such as when the ship they are on is under attack, and its destruction would kill the doctor, his staff, and any patients in sickbay?In retrospect, I have zero problem with a medical doctor defending themselves and others under their charge,
They did no such thing. They didn't change the destructive properties of this standard weapon (seriously, calling it a "highly efficient destructive weapon" is technically correct, but using it in this context is very hyperbolic) at all. They simply added a specialized tracking feature, without which the torpedo wouldn't have been able to even locate the enemy ship that has been shooting "highly efficient destructive weapons" at the Enterprise, unprovoked, for the last ten minutes.not however, when it comes to making a highly efficient dustructive weapon even more capable of destruction,
The problem with that particular quote is the the museum curator Quarren, in Living Witness, was shown to be wildly inaccurate in his "facts" concerning anything about Voyager and it's equipment.Which is all well and good except that one little stat given in a episode of Star Trek: Voyager.
A 25 isoton photon torpedo explosion could destroy an entire city within seconds. (VOY: "Living Witness")
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