So, why should this harm done to Tuvok and Neelix matter less and why should the crew accept that? That's what I've been trying to ask.
It isn't that the harm done to Tuvoc and Neelix should matter
less. The reason the crew should have accepted it is that doing
further harm to rectify it was wrong.
I think they should have accepted it because it could have been a much worse transporter accident. Remember the Vulcan science officer in TMP? What was the quote? "What we got back didn't live long. Fortunately." He was so screwed up his crewmates were glad he died swiftly. The crew of Voyager should have been GLAD they got as much of Tuvok and Neelix back as they did, really. It could have been MUCH worse.
Okay, that's fair enough. Let's spin it around: Tuvix wasn't killed by Janeway's choice, merely transformed back into two separate individuals who retained memories of their time as Tuvix. If his right to survive is to be based on part on his "parents" surviving in this changed form, why assume that Tuvix couldn't have survived in them the same way?
The problem with that is that it doesn't spin around like that. How could Tuvix have survived in them the same way? He was made of BOTH of them. Tuvix had the abilities of Neelix, Tuvok, AND his own unique abilities. After the split, Tuvok did not have Tuvix's abilities, nor did Neelix have Tuvix's abilities.
It's like taking apart a watch. A whole watch can be used to tell time. If you take out the gears and set them next to the shell, neither the shell nor the gears can give you the correct time. The gears are not the watch, and the shell is not the watch, only together are they the watch. So it is with Tuvix.
The *only* thing that we are guaranteed when we're born is that we'll die. And when people die, the survivors grieve. Preventing sorrow doesn't give you the right to kill.
Well Said.
"Here is my one big problem with this concept. Tuvoc and Neelix weren't exactly dead. Their knowledge still existed, their memory still existed, their skills still existed. They were not killed, but transformed."
Using that logic you can say that Tuvix wasn't truly dead either after he was split. So what's the problem?
See above.
Janeway made a choice as captain. She picked two lives over one. To me, it's really that simple.
But, it ISN'T that simple. It would be that simple if the scenario was "
Two people are tied to a bomb in one building, one person is tied to a bomb in another building, you only have time to disconnect one bomb." THAT is picking two lives over one. THAT is pragmatic.
Killing one person, who was safe and innocent in order to bring back two others is not pragmatic, it is murder.
I can still see bringing back two lives at the cost of one as in some ways the more 'moral' choice. That may make me a bad person.
Well, I think that is evil for sure.
Here is a what-if for you. Seska kidnaps Kim and Torres. She says that all she wants is Chakotay dead for breaking her heart and she will release them, otherwise they die. Kes uses her amazing psychic powers to probe Seska's mind and discovers that she is telling the absolute truth. She WILL release Kim and Torres if Chuckles dies. The moral thing for Janeway to do is to pull out a phaser and kill Chakotay without ever even seeking an alternate option?
That is evil.
In one of the many debates on this episode over the years, someone said that *of course* he would kill to keep a loved one alive, and that *anyone* would. This sounds all romantic and everything, till you really think about it. Of course, none of us would. We might, in our darkest moments, *think* about it, but I don't think anyone would if they were truly faced with the option.
I disagree with all of that. I don't think anyone would kill to save a loved one, and I don't believe that no one would either.