Editing Philosophy in Battlestar Galactica
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As they do in the real world, philosophical problems that arise in the series seldom come bundled with clear solutions. | As they do in the real world, philosophical problems that arise in the series seldom come bundled with clear solutions. | ||
*"[[Water]]" contains material that can be examined in light of the viewers understanding of [[w:Determinism|determinism]] versus [[w:free will|free will]] and also responsibility. [[Sharon Valerii]]'s apparent [[w:anterograde amnesia|blackouts]] or [[w:schizophrenia|Disassociative Identity Disorder]] and subsequent acts of treason, sabotage and assassination during these episodes raise these classic philosophical problems: determinism versus free will. Valerii seems unable to exercise control over her volitions, therefore ''Galactica'' crew jumps to the conclusion that Cylons are deterministically or genetically inclined to display malevolence toward humans. [[Saul Tigh]] affirms this notion with his war story of a Cylon assault on his ship and crew | *"[[Water]]" contains material that can be examined in light of the viewers understanding of [[w:Determinism|determinism]] versus [[w:free will|free will]] and also responsibility. [[Sharon Valerii]]'s apparent [[w:anterograde amnesia|blackouts]] or [[w:schizophrenia|Disassociative Identity Disorder]] and subsequent acts of treason, sabotage and assassination during these episodes raise these classic philosophical problems: determinism versus free will. Valerii seems unable to exercise control over her volitions, therefore ''Galactica'' crew jumps to the conclusion that Cylons are deterministically or genetically inclined to display malevolence toward humans. [[Saul Tigh]] affirms this notion with his war story of a Cylon assault on his ship and crew ([[TRS]]: "[[Scattered]]"). The Fleet models its [[w:draconian|inhumane]] treatment of non-human captives based on this and other assumptions. | ||
*The choice of a [[w:Lesser Evil|lesser of two evils principle]] is one common result of the philosophical dilemma. Here, one choice from among multiple unsavory choices must be made. Admiral Adama's decision to save ''Galactica'' by jumping away from [[New Caprica]] in "[[Lay Down Your Burdens, Part II]]" is undesirable but preferable to facing a superior inbound Cylon force. | *The choice of a [[w:Lesser Evil|lesser of two evils principle]] is one common result of the philosophical dilemma. Here, one choice from among multiple unsavory choices must be made. Admiral Adama's decision to save ''Galactica'' by jumping away from [[New Caprica]] in "[[Lay Down Your Burdens, Part II]]" is undesirable but preferable to facing a superior inbound Cylon force. | ||