Editing Themes in Battlestar Galactica (RDM)
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Several times, characters directly question mankind's worthiness to survive. Commander Adama does so at ''Galactica''{{'|s}} decommissioning ceremony, stating that humans still kill each other for petty reasons and that they never asked themselves why they deserve to survive {{TRS|Miniseries}}. Later, Sharon Valerii refers to that speech and tells Adama that it might not deserve so. When Adama calls off the planned assassination of Admiral Cain, he says verbatim "It's not enough to survive. One has to be worthy of surviving." {{TRS|Resurrection Ship, Part II}}. At Baltar's trial, [[Doyle Franks]] expresses the sentiment that mankind's flaws are what separate it from the Cylons and might make it a species worth saving {{TRS|Crossroads, Part II}}. | Several times, characters directly question mankind's worthiness to survive. Commander Adama does so at ''Galactica''{{'|s}} decommissioning ceremony, stating that humans still kill each other for petty reasons and that they never asked themselves why they deserve to survive {{TRS|Miniseries}}. Later, Sharon Valerii refers to that speech and tells Adama that it might not deserve so. When Adama calls off the planned assassination of Admiral Cain, he says verbatim "It's not enough to survive. One has to be worthy of surviving." {{TRS|Resurrection Ship, Part II}}. At Baltar's trial, [[Doyle Franks]] expresses the sentiment that mankind's flaws are what separate it from the Cylons and might make it a species worth saving {{TRS|Crossroads, Part II}}. | ||
== Themes compared to those in other | == Themes compared to those in other Media == | ||
* The retaliatory nature of sentient machines against humanity is a popular theme in science fiction, dating back to the 1921 play [[w:R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots)|Rossum's Universal Robots]] which first popularised the term ''[[w:Robot|robot]]''. | * The retaliatory nature of sentient machines against humanity is a popular theme in science fiction, dating back to the 1921 play [[w:R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots)|Rossum's Universal Robots]] which first popularised the term ''[[w:Robot|robot]]''. | ||