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Spoiler Alert: If you haven't seen the following movie and might like to, then please know that this little clip will 'spoil' it for you, and you may want to refrain from reading the rest of this post and watching the clip. Thanks!
In the following clip from the movie, Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991), Spock literally takes moral matters into his own hands in order to (according to the context of the movie) 'defrock' Lt. Valeris [the female Vulcan] by FORCING a mind-meld (which for Vulcans can have a sexual nature) with her......................in order to extract information from her that will help Spock and friends avoid a catastrophic, intergalactic war.
Was he logical and morally right to do so? Why?
Is this act of Spock's justified by the various factors embedded in something like the Trolley Problem? Or, might we question Spock in this regard?
Here's an additional article to add to our overall considerations:
Does the Trolley Problem Have a Problem?
In the following clip from the movie, Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991), Spock literally takes moral matters into his own hands in order to (according to the context of the movie) 'defrock' Lt. Valeris [the female Vulcan] by FORCING a mind-meld (which for Vulcans can have a sexual nature) with her......................in order to extract information from her that will help Spock and friends avoid a catastrophic, intergalactic war.
Was he logical and morally right to do so? Why?
Is this act of Spock's justified by the various factors embedded in something like the Trolley Problem? Or, might we question Spock in this regard?
Here's an additional article to add to our overall considerations:
Does the Trolley Problem Have a Problem?
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