There’s an easy solution. Create a transporter clone and split that one back before he realizes what happened. Everyone wins (except the cloned Tuvix).
I didn’t say it wasn’t wrong. I just watched that episode last week and it’s definitely heartbreaking but it’s just a SciFi version of the trolley problem, either decision is potentially the wrong one.
I think we need to clarify what is meant by “worst decision”. To me, the worst decision is the one that costs the most lives or one that prolongs their time in the Delta Quadrant, since that also potentially leads to more lives lost.
That was a moral dilemma for her and the crew but was it really her “worst decision”?
I mean she straight up unequivocally murdered an innocent to revive two of her dead crewman.
There’s an easy solution. Create a transporter clone and split that one back before he realizes what happened. Everyone wins (except the cloned Tuvix).
Better that than to allow her dear friend Tuvok to suffer like that. Trapped in an eternal hell of feelings and dislogic.
Yes.
Or, certainly the one that hurt the most.
Watch Tuvix plead for his life, and tell me that wasn’t wrong.
… And would have been great to have the rest of Voyager’s episodes continue with Tuvix.
It would be a way to deal with an actor who wanted off the show, but I doubt either actor would be happy about it.
I didn’t say it wasn’t wrong. I just watched that episode last week and it’s definitely heartbreaking but it’s just a SciFi version of the trolley problem, either decision is potentially the wrong one.
I think we need to clarify what is meant by “worst decision”. To me, the worst decision is the one that costs the most lives or one that prolongs their time in the Delta Quadrant, since that also potentially leads to more lives lost.