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Star Trek Prime Directive Meets Ayn Rand

Posted by dbhalling 10 years, 8 months ago to Philosophy
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First of all let me say that I cannot believe I am doing an analysis of the Star Trek prime directive. The prime directive states:
“As the right of each sentient species to live in accordance with its normal cultural evolution is considered sacred, no Star Fleet personnel may interfere with the healthy development of alien life and culture. Such interference includes the introduction of superior knowledge, strength, or technology to a world whose society is incapable of handling such advantages wisely. Star Fleet personnel may not violate this Prime Directive, even to save their lives and/or their ship unless they are acting to right an earlier violation or an accidental contamination of said culture. This directive takes precedence over any and all other considerations, and carries with it the highest moral obligation.”

The associated prohibitions are given below (according to Jbrenner)

1. Providing knowledge of technologies or science
2. Taking actions to generally affect a society's overall development
3. Taking actions which support one faction within a society over another
4. Helping a society escape the negative consequences of its own actions
5. Helping a society escape a natural disaster known to the society, even if inaction would result in a society's extinction.
6. Subverting or avoiding the application of a society's laws
7. Interfering in the internal affairs of a society


What would Ayn Rand say about the prime directive. I bet her first question would be what is a sentient species? According to dictionary “sentient” means “able to perceive or feel things.” Well cows, cats, dogs, and many other species can perceive or feel things, in fact much simpler organisms would fit this definition. Based on this definition Rand would state that only rational beings have rights. Rand defined the hierarchy of knowledge integration as sensation, precepts, and conceptual. She explains it perceptual in this example.

“An animal is guided, not merely by immediate sensations, but by percepts. Its actions are not single, discrete responses to single, separate stimuli, but are directed by an integrated awareness of the perceptual reality confronting it. It is able to grasp the perceptual concretes immediately present and it is able to form automatic perceptual associations, but it can go no further.”

My guess is that Rand would then ask what is “normal cultural evolution.” Is it normal cultural evolution to allow Rachel Carson to convince countries to ban DDT and cause 100 million deaths? Is it normal cultural evolution to allow Mao to institute the cultural revolution that will starve over 30 million people to death? There is no such thing a normal cultural evolution. But it rings of Marxist ideas of a scientific progression of society.
Then Rand would ask why normal cultural evolution is considered sacred. According to the dictionary sacred means “connected with God (or the gods) or dedicated to a religious purpose and so deserving veneration.” Rand would reject anything based on an appeal to a deity. The proof of the first sentence of the prime directive rests on an appeal to faith, not reason.
It is clear the Prime Directive is based on faith, not reason and is immoral from the first sentence. I will not take on the rest of the directive but I will look at the prohibitions. The first prohibition is “Providing knowledge of technologies or science.” Given that directive was directed to species that are “able to perceive or feel things” this is almost meaningless. Most species that able to perceive are not able to understand or take advantage of knowledge.
But what about rational beings? Why would you not provide knowledge of technologies or science? Does this mean we cannot teach our kids science and technology? That would clearly be immoral. Your objection might be that they are within our culture, but what about African cultures? Should we have not introduced DDT, or steam engines, or the Internet? While we have no obligation to introduce these sciences and technologies, to purposely prohibit them would be immoral.
All the prohibitions and the prime directives are based group think (and written by Hollywood TV writers!). The word society is mentioned nine times in the Prime Directive and in the prohibitions. Individual is not mentioned once. Societies are based on a collection of people and only have rights based on the rights of the individuals, who make up the society, but none separate from them.
Start Trek’s Prime Directive is an inherently Socialist Ideal and Evil.



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  • Posted by khalling 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    "Collectivism holds that, in human affairs, the collective—*society*, the community, the nation, the proletariat, the race, etc.—is the unit of reality and the standard of value. On this view, the individual has reality only as part of the group, and value only insofar as he serves it." Peikoff, The Ominous Parallels (emphasis added)
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  • Posted by CTYankee 10 years, 8 months ago
    As much as I like Trek and its universe, we must recall that it is an idealized projection of a Utopian fantasy. We are reminded and expected to ignore the Socialist undertones, and are provided the alternate target for the evils of Communism in the Romulans and their Mao Suit uniforms. Yet in at least two episodes (Devil in the Dark, Mudd's Women) we are introduced to miners who are very strongly wealth motivated in a Federation that has ostensibly evolved past the need for 'currency'.
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  • Posted by DrZarkov99 10 years, 8 months ago
    Just like the "general welfare" clause in our Constitution, the legal loophole in the Prime Directive is the word "healthy" describing sacrosanct alien cultural development. Who decides what is healthy? Actions by an alien culture that might seem self-destructive to humans might be akin to the agricultural process of burning a field to return nitrogen to the soil, or they might truly be headed toward extinction if not stopped.

    I always thought the Vulcan approach made more sense: observe, but do not contact until the alien society is preparing to venture into the broader interstellar culture.
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  • Posted by radical 10 years, 8 months ago
    I don't have a TV set. Although there are a few good programs (History Channel, Discovery Channel, sports), there is too much drivel (which includes liberal opinions and innuendos). At the moment I am mounting a large "Who is John Galt" sign on a handle to wave at all the motorists on busy intersections.
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  • Posted by CTYankee 10 years, 8 months ago
    Ahhh -- comparing apples 'n oranges.

    But even those two foodstuffs are too similar for this analogy. I should have asked: "Do you walk to school or bring your lunch? Are you going to New York or by bus? I like peanut butter, can you swim?
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  • Posted by $ Susanne 10 years, 8 months ago
    I always laugh over the "Starfleet prime directive". It is built on a direct and irrefutable contradiction upon itself...

    By definition, the "Vulcans" (who were allegedly what the Starfleet Universe bases so much of their thought, rationality, and basis, including this "prime directive" behind) broke every one of the tenets of said "Prime Directive" when they initiated contact with the inhabitants of this little galactic backwater. Why?

    I also wonder - as the "Johnny come lately" into this galactic socialistic experiment - how the people on Earth became the lead players, the "Federation" is based on Earth, and most of the people you see (especially the ranking officers) are either Terran or Terran-Analogues.

    What happened to all the others? Why is the Federation based in San Francisco rather than ShiKahr or Vulcana Regar?

    Anyway... the prime directive, if followed, would have meant the entire Space-Time continuum that the Federation exists in would never have existed, and Earth would have went on its merry way. Without influence by the Vulcans et al...

    Then again, what would I expect from a socialist's fantasy-universe other than their assertion that A≠A...
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  • Posted by 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Not only were you wrong about the Monroe Doctrine. But you tortured attempt to save the word "sacred" from its obvious meaning fails. The first sentence of the PD talks about RIghts of societies. There is no such thing. Anyone who talks that way is a Socialist. Second it talks about the normal culture evolution. There is no such thing. However, the normal course of things when two vastly different societies met was for the less advanced one to become extinct. Since the whole first sentence is nonsense then the only way it can be scared is through faith. Thus the most appropriate definition of scared is one that includes god.

    The Prime Directive is Socialist nonsense, posing a science..
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  • Posted by XenokRoy 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Jbrenner,

    I believe this post to be in error. You cannot make rules based on interactions between societies. Societies do not interact with one and other, they cannot as without the individual people there are no interrelations.

    The Geneva Conventions rules for war represent rules that are reasonable for individuals to use to govern themselves when in a conflict with a different society. The society can do nothing, it cannot break the rules it cannot follow the rules. Only the individual has a mind that can determine if it will follow or not follow rules of war.

    Since a society cannot do anything on its own accord, the rules of war must be accepted and followed by individuals to have any meaning. If they are agreed upon by society but not by the individual the will not be followed.

    Ultimately all agreements, rules, laws, pacts.... must be defined for the individual or they have no meaning at all.
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  • Posted by khalling 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    good points. I direct you to db's comment regarding false choice between having to give a society technology or *not* being allowed to do so. The PD says you may NOT let them have knowledge or technology. That goes against natural rights. No one is suggesting an obligation to do so.
    Take the Monroe Doctrine. The US said, we will interfere if you colonize. We will not colonize. In the first case, this did not preclude trade by individuals or companies. To the second part, did not preclude trade AND is consistent with natural rights. Imperialism went against our Constitution. Trade almost certainly means sharing knowledge and technology. Why would it be sound policy to deny those opportunities? It's like trade boycotts. I rarely support them. The battle of ideas on capitalism are won by trade. Trade is an essentially rational activity and moral.
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  • Posted by DrZarkov99 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    See the cult movie "Equilibrium", with Christian Bale, for a look at a human society that tries to suppress emotion in the name of peace.
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  • Posted by ProfChuck 10 years, 8 months ago
    There is a fundamental difference between sentience and sapience. As stated in the article sentience is the ability to feel and to perceive surroundings. Sapience is the ability to use judgement and to reason. Humans are called "homo sapiens" not "homo sentiens". In this sense the Prime Directive would restrict virtually all space exploration if there was any possibility of disturbing the "natural progress" of sentient creatures. This would include the hives of social insects such as ants, bees and termites. These hive organizations are clearly sentient in that they perceive and react to their environment. However there is no evidence that they are "sapient" or capable of engaging in judgement or reason. From this I would conclude that the "Prime Directive" imposes an unwarranted restriction on exploration and the expansion of human knowledge.
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  • Posted by XenokRoy 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I am still christian. If you look at the nature of god then he has to let well-deserved death, starvation and misery go forward. Which he obviously does do if he exists and has the ability to stop such from happening. If we are in fact attempting to be as god is, to ascend to live with him do we not have to learn to do the same?

    It is far more difficult to stand back and let someone you love go through a painful process of learning from a bad decision than it is to step in and save them from the consequences. Standing back and letting them work though it lets them learn and progress and become stronger and better. Stepping in and preventing the consequence weakens them and makes them less able to handle the next problem they face.

    This is true rather you are atheist, Christian or some other religion. It is true for individuals and groups of individuals.
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  • Posted by teri-amborn 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    When vacationing, my husband and I go petroglyph hunting.
    Our "prime directive" in doing so is to put ourselves in the place of primitive people who are trying to convey thoughts/sights of whatever they experienced.
    We have found carvings and paintings (pictographs) which resemble things like helicopters and UFOs.
    Perhaps they had close encounters?
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  • Posted by Animal 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Spock also matured beyond that; in the last original-cast movie (Undiscovered Country) he tells a younger Vulcan "Logic is the beginning, not the end of wisdom."
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  • Posted by XenokRoy 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    or spock, or McCoy or any other crew member who thinks for themselves. Next Gen not so much so. Was there even a prime directive in the original series?
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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    And if Obama becomes dictator, I will say the same thing about doing business with the USA.
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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Afghanistan is unquestionably a primitive culture. Iraq has some characteristics of an advanced culture and many that are not. When a country returns to rule by despots and theocracies, it becomes once again a primitive culture unworthy of doing commerce with.
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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Countries are the proper analogy to Star Trek's planets. I don't like the Great Society, affirmative action, slavery, caste systems, or Japanese internment camps either. You are talking about laws internal to a country, and I am referring to agreements between countries. They are different animals. Free trade agreements and peace treaties are examples of rules based on societies agreeing on a common set of values. I am not saying that I agree with any particular such agreement.

    The Prime Directive is not socialist, is extremely rational, and not based on faith whatsoever.
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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    AS is about individuals, not societies, whereas the Prime Directive is about societies. Nonetheless, many of the same principles apply. Earlier I wrote, "One of the hardest parts of AS to read is when Francisco and John Galt are having a discussion in the Gulch about Francisco going back out into society to tell Rearden that Dagny is still alive. That is the best answer to your question I can give, db." In that discussion, Francisco is asking a variant of db's question of "Is it okay as a scientist to watch death, starvation, and misery when you know it could be prevented?" John Galt clearly tells Francisco that he should not tell Rearden that Dagny is still alive. I think that is highly analogous to db's "Is it okay as a scientist to watch death, starvation, and misery when you know it can be prevented?" question. I struggled a lot with this issue because my Christian upbringing led me to db's conclusion. After reading AS, I was convinced that it was not a good idea to prevent well-deserved death, starvation, and misery. It was the hardest change I had to make as a result of reading AS.
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  • Posted by Solver 10 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Great episode!
    The "he" I used above is Kirk (the subject of the sentence) not McCoy.
    If Kirk had not acted, everyone and everything he ever knew, outside the city, before finding the time portal, would be gone forever. It could be argued he made the rational choice and not the emotional one.
    It does beg the question, What would John Galt have done?
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