If Our Heroes debated every single way they've defeated similar situations every time they encountered a similar situation, the runtimes would at minimum triple...
Recall that the Reliant wasn't totally destroyed. It was severely damaged, but it could be repaired. Why destroy it and waste the vessel? Also at this point, for all Kirk and company knew, Khan was beaten and could no longer fight back.
Gary7 said:However, what did surprise me is that given the importance of Genesis, why didn't he think to immediately have the device beamed off the ship, just in case Reliant's condition worsened and risked explosion? This is even independent of the idea of Khan being able to still use the device.
^ The Genesis device prevented the transporter from working. Once it's activated, it can't be stopped or beamed away.
Remember Kirk suggested that they beam aboard the Reliant and stop it, and David replied "You can't."
On the contrary, as commanding officer he has the impetus to make considerations like this. The Reliant no longer had any means of attacking as all weapons were off line. It was adrift, inert. Khan was not responsive, so they had no idea if he was still alive. There was no good cause to destroy the ship at that point.Sran said:As a commanding officer, Kirk doesn't have the luxury of making that assumption. As far as he's concerned, Reliant is threat until it's not, Khan or no Khan. Salvaging the vessel would be a distant tertiary concern behind securing the vessel and getting back the Genesis device.
^ The Genesis device prevented the transporter from working. Once it's activated, it can't be stopped or beamed away.
Remember Kirk suggested that they beam aboard the Reliant and stop it, and David replied "You can't."
I'm sure that the Genesis torpedo's radiation would have prevented the transporter from working against it. They don't need to spell it out onscreen, we can infer it. When was the last time a transporter did manage to lock onto something that generated that much energy? They can't even do it with dilithium...
^ Dilithium can't be transported.
Yes, given how Star Trek typically explores possible avenues of solutions, it's a perfectly good idea to test out. Kirk didn't even know that the Genesis device couldn't be shut down once started, so how could he know that the Genesis device gives off an energy field that transporter beams can't lock onto? My point is that he should have at least asked. Remember Nomad? Beamed into space, despite his enormous system overload. And of course, the idea is not to rematerialize the Genesis device, but simply override the re-energizer and then intentionally scramble the atoms of the Genesis device into a state whereby it can no longer explode.I wasn't questioning that as I'm aware of it. I was disputing your assessment that we could reasonably conclude Genesis couldn't be beamed off Reliant.
Umm, what?^ Dilithium can't be transported.
Exactly. David says Kirk can't beam over and shut it down. In addition, David is sitting on the bridge of a starship that can blow other starships to smithereens, and neither him nor Kirk can be unaware of the fact that the ship could try to destroy Genesis as well. Since David indicates there is no hope, this course of action is automatically out by his expert opinion. Kirk doesn't need to ask silly questions on exactly why an attempt to destroy Genesis would fail - this would be complete waste of the remaining four minutes, and of audience time as well....as one of the lead scientists who built the device he would know if it was possible to shut it down or not...
^ Dilithium can't be transported.
I wasn't questioning that as I'm aware of it.
--Sran
The process through which a persons human rights may be revoked is called a "trial" or similar form of due process. You don't have your inalienable human rights pulled just because somebody decides that you're an asshole.Look at it this way, would you give a group of Hitlers, Stalins, and Napoleons their very own world? Seems to me it'd be safer just to waste them all.
This is called a "human rights violation." (Or, I suppose in the world of Star Trek, a "sentients' rights violation.") People have the right to live, even if they are monsters; killing someone is only acceptable in the act of immediate self-defense or the immediate defense of others.
Killing a megalomaniac and his followers who have a history of oppressing and killing others and who have shown intent to do so again would constitute killing "in the immediate defense of others" in my book. Sometimes human rights are revocable.
Kirk spared Khan because Khan WASN'T Space Hitler but Space Napoleon.
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