Series: Star Trek: Voyager
Season 2, Episode 24
Original Air Date: May 6, 1996
via Memory Alpha |
Tuvok and Neelix are merged into a single being through a transporter malfunction. What follows is one of the most interesting moral quandaries in all of Star Trek. That's saying something. "Tuvix" may be the most polarizing episode in the franchise. It's the make-or-break story determining how many fans, including my own child, feel about Captain Janeway as a character.
The merged being is his own man. Tuvix is the best of both, the worst of both. He shares the memories of each but the experiences from the point of merger are all his own. He deserves to live. There's really no question of that, is there? His existence also means the end of the independent lives of two others. There's no denying that either. Thus the dilemma.
Spock: Logic clearly dictates that the needs of many outweigh the needs of the few.
Kirk: Or the one.
If there's one exchange that defines - and haunts - Trek, it's that one from the climactic scene of The Wrath of Khan. By this argument, the needs of two outweigh the needs of one. Tuvok's and Neelix's separate rights to exist trump Tuvix's.
But real life is more complicated than that, isn't it? Those we might cast as "the few" suffer needlessly all the time. The benefits to "the many" from such suffering are often nebulous to non-existent. There's a term for it: the tyranny of the majority. It's not theoretical. It's largely how the world works.
Tuvix's pleas for his own survival are both chilling and heartbreaking. Plenty of viewers hate Janeway for the choice she makes. Would any of those critics have chosen differently in her place? I think it's too easy to say yes. Either way, she's choosing death. Either path means pain and regret.
It certainly makes for good television. However one feels about the choice made - and a deep, emotional reaction is absolutely understandable - the question itself is exactly the sort of dilemma that has made Star Trek so compelling to watch for nearly 60 years. If the answers were always obvious, who would care?
Acting Notes
via Criminal Minds Wiki |
Tom Wright (Tuvix) was born in Englewood, New Jersey, November 29, 1952. This episode is his first of two Trek appearances. Films include The Brother from Another Planet, Barbershop and Barbershop 2: Back in Business. In television, he had principal roles on Extreme, Martial Law and Granite Flats. His other high-profile guest role was the recurring character Mr. Morgan, a Yankees front office colleague of George's on Seinfeld.
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