Ahem, Archeology...
Well, yeah, but I was thinking of a planet-wide disaster, something that wouldn't really leave much behind. And surely digging up artifacts isn't the same thing as 'live' observation.
Ahem, Archeology...
This comes back to a certain concept explored in Star Trek III: "The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, or the one." But in this case, it was a matter of preserving the timeline. They had to let Edith Keeler die as she was meant to, or otherwise risk a huge change to history and everything that happened in consequence (including the formation of the Federation). So, it doesn't really make sense to compare it with the PD choices...
Yeah, but in the case of time travel, the issue is more of "temporal violation" versus "prime directive violation". History is a string of events that happened in a certain way and you don't want to risk changing it (if your current state of existence was at least acceptable). Saving Edith Keeler resulted in a dramatic change that effectively prevented the Federation from forming (with Earth as the primary driver--it might have just existed with a different species leading the charge). They realized she had originally died and that McCoy saving her changed everything. So... they had to let her die, as she "originally did", in order to preserve the time line. Thus, I don't see it as something to do with the non-interference prime directive.
Now one could get into the debate on whether history should be open for changes, but that's a whole other topic.![]()
McCoy did the right thing, given what he knew.
But isn't this the point of the Prime Directive, that you never can know what 'knock on effects' your actions might take, and since ANY interference with a less advanced culture will almost certainly have negative knock-on effects, that's presumably why the Prime Directive exists.McCoy did the right thing, given what he knew.
You could be right. Not every sentient species survives to reach space faring technologies and beyond. But you have to give them credit that their dying was way beyond their control--the planet was simply losing its ability to sustain life.Yeah, we really don't know that Nikolai's actions necessarily ended up helping the Boraalans. For all we know he merely prolonged their extinction by a few months, up to the point where they realized they'd been moved from their homeworld and committed suicide en masse...or even just en masse enough to make the continuation of their species impossible...though I guess at least one human was happy to help with that, PD or no PD...(eye-roll)
Maybe the asteroid ends up hitting another planet that had a developing civilization.![]()
OK, I keep seeing this argument brought up again and again, most recently by Don Iago.
Basically, the argument says: "if you interfere, you don't know that your well-intentioned interference might not produce unintentionally disastrous effects."
First, is this how you approach helping people in real life scenarios? "There's a guy drowning over there, flailing his arms, and I'm a first-class swimmer, but.... he could turn out to be a serial killer, so maybe I shouldn't interfere."
Posters have argued that the analogy is flawed, because it doesn't deal with "naturally developing cultures."
Considering Earth was barely missed by two meteors this week, the argument should become more relevant to us. If a space-faring race were to see a large spatial object about to destroy our non-warp capable civilization, should they save us or not?Maybe there is a provision in the PD to save civilizations when practical without using direct interference? This would make things like moving ELE asteroids perfectly OK and avoid Anwar's "slippery slope" problem.
OTOH, we can't deny that if a spacefaring culture did save us (and we were aware of it) the implications for our planet would likely be highly significant.
But isn't this the point of the Prime Directive, that you never can know what 'knock on effects' your actions might take, and since ANY interference with a less advanced culture will almost certainly have negative knock-on effects, that's presumably why the Prime Directive exists.McCoy did the right thing, given what he knew.
... since ANY interference with a less advanced culture will almost certainly have negative knock-on effects, that's presumably why the Prime Directive exists.
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