Well that's what the Doctor said was the reason at any rate. I don't particularly buy it either. Do you have an alternative theory why a Dalek didn't kill or at least extract her to take her to the Crucible?
His manner at the end of the episode was of a man who has lashed out in rage, then regained his senses to discover what a terrible thing he's done, and genuinely regrets it.
I saw him do nothing for personal gain, or power.
I saw him do nothing for personal gain, or power.
Actually, that's exactly what he did. What we saw, for a few minutes, was a Time Lord become drunk with power. He went over to the dark side.
Temporal Prime Directive and all that.
Why should she be grateful for her life being saved?
^ I'm not even sure what you're arguing here. The point isn't that the Doctor saved lives. The point is that he nearly fucked up the timeline of the entire human race, untold billions of people, to save three lives. Temporal Prime Directive and all that.
Aside from one or two continuity errors (I thought humans first landed on Mars in 'The Ambassadors of Death'?), it was a good episode, with some good moments.
^ I'm not even sure what you're arguing here. The point isn't that the Doctor saved lives. The point is that he nearly fucked up the timeline of the entire human race, untold billions of people, to save three lives. Temporal Prime Directive and all that.
It doesn't make sense that it would screw up the timeline. Adelaide could've still inspired her granddaughter without dying. You can do that while you are alive, you know.
Even if the grand daughter wasn't inspired, all that means is someone else would've piloted the FTL ship. No big deal. Just change the wikipedia details like we saw in this story. Humans have that drive to expand. If one person doesn't do it, another will.
Mr Awe
The point is that for whatever reason, it wasn't so simple in this case.
Recall when Martha asking about the butterfly effect----the difficulty is that while normally that doesn't apply, at a few crucial junctures in time, it absolutely does. And that's the danger----the changes which could result from meddling in those events could be completely unpredictable even to a Time Lord.
Aside from one or two continuity errors (I thought humans first landed on Mars in 'The Ambassadors of Death'?), it was a good episode, with some good moments.
Is that specifically stated though ( in Ambassadors..) ? I always seemed to think they just went into Mars orbit.
You wait 6 months for an episode of Doctor Who and get this? At least Planet of the Dead was enjoyable. This was just a boring nothing.
Ooh no, the Doctor's gone too far. Gawd 'elp us.
They couldn't even rustle (no pun intended) up an exciting trailer for The End of Time.
I'd be worried is anyone over 12 found any episode of DW scary. I've no doubt there were plenty of kids being creeped out tonight.
The moment Ten opened his mouth to say "Tough!" to Addy, all I heard was Colin Baker's "mad god" come to the forefront.
^ I'm not even sure what you're arguing here. The point isn't that the Doctor saved lives. The point is that he nearly fucked up the timeline of the entire human race, untold billions of people, to save three lives. Temporal Prime Directive and all that.
It doesn't make sense that it would screw up the timeline. Adelaide could've still inspired her granddaughter without dying. You can do that while you are alive, you know.
Even if the grand daughter wasn't inspired, all that means is someone else would've piloted the FTL ship. No big deal. Just change the wikipedia details like we saw in this story. Humans have that drive to expand. If one person doesn't do it, another will.
Mr Awe
The point is that for whatever reason, it wasn't so simple in this case.
I'm in Timelord mode right now, so I think Adelaide should have been grateful for the Doctor saving her.
The opportunity to interact with her grand daughter!
"You don't know that!"
Oh C'mon live a little.
I'm sorry, but what exactly did the Doctor do that was so bad?
I saw him harm no one. I saw him do nothing for personal gain, or power.
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