Search
Cookie Usage Statistics Colour Key Sudden Death Monthly Poll Caption Comp eMail Author Shops
Ships Fleets Weaponry Species People Timelines Calculators Photo Galleries
Stations Design Lineage Size Charts Battles Science / Tech Temporal Styling Maps / Politics
Articles Reviews Lists Recreation Search Site Guide What's New Forum
Introduction Enterprise Attack Azati Prime Sphere Bashing Saving Earth Vulcan Civil War Romulan Marauder Empire in Crisis Battle of the Brown Dwarf Altimid Battle Romulan Attack Romulan Attack The Doomsday Machine The Deadly Years The M-5 Debacle The Wrath of Khan Khitomer Crisis The Battle of Minos Wolf 359 Klingon Civil War The Odyssey Death of a Caretaker A Flagship Battle The Omarion Nebula Deep Space Nine Kazon Attack Shattered Mirror Borg / 8472 War The Swarm Sector 001 The Dominion War The Valley of Death The Chin'toka Invasion AR-558 The Chin'koka Retreat Righteous Insurrection Advance on Cardassia Vaadwaur Battle Workforce Incident Reman Nemesis Coppelius battle

Nothing Human

ReviewImagesDatapointsQuotesMorals
TimelinePreviousNextYour View
Title :
Nothing Human
Series :
Rating :
2
Overall Ep :
102
First Aired :
2 Dec 1998
Stardate :
Unknown
Director :
Year :
Writers :
Season Ep :
5 x 08
Main Cast :
Guest Cast :
YATI :
The whole premise of this episode is somewhat flawed. Voyager finds it quite acceptable to use Borg technology and information whenever it likes without a thought for the method of acquisition. Now, all of a sudden it doesn't want to save B'Elanna with similarly acquired information. Worse still, the EMH uses Crell Mosset's knowledge to save B'Elanna, and then deletes him so nobody will benefit from the knowledge. So if his decision was that nobody should benefit from the knowledge, why did he not do it straight away and them leave B'Elanna to die? The moral of the episode seems honestly to be that "nobody should benefit from immorally obtained knowledge, except for B'Elanna Torres."
Great Moment :
The rush to escape the Doctors slide show led, as it should be, by Captain Janeway.
Body Count :
Zero, but the Cardassian doctor is deleted.
Factoid :
Actor David Clennon played Lee Silver in "From the Earth to the Moon".

Plotline

When an injured alien attaches itself to B'Elanna, the EMH creates a hologram of a Cardassian xenobiology expert in order to assist with her treatment. But when she realizes that the man is a war criminal, B'Elanna refuses to undergo treatment from him - and the crew face an ethical dilemma.

Analysis

Yet again Jeri Taylor demonstrates that her ethics and mine are diametrically opposed...
© Graham & Ian Kennedy Page views : 32,521 Last updated : 31 Aug 2010