Doctor Rejects Supernatural Evidence
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Miss Hawthorne delivers occult books to the Doctor, hoping they will explain recent events, but the Doctor dismisses the supernatural explanation, attributing the phenomena to science.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Skeptically cautious, his firsthand experience with the forcefield making him question the Doctor’s rigid stance.
Sergeant Benton voices his skepticism, referencing his firsthand experience with the psionic forcefield. His tone is measured but firm, challenging the Doctor’s dismissal of the supernatural. He stands slightly apart from the group, his posture reflecting his unease with the debate but his willingness to speak up when necessary.
- • To ensure the team acknowledges the reality of the threat, regardless of its origin.
- • To support the Doctor while also pushing for a more pragmatic approach that accounts for the unknown.
- • The threat is real, and dismissing any potential explanation—supernatural or otherwise—could be dangerous.
- • The Doctor’s methods are effective but may need to be flexible enough to adapt to unexpected challenges.
Thoughtfully urgent, torn between loyalty to the Doctor and the practical need for a solution that addresses the threat’s true nature.
Jo Grant listens intently to the debate, her expression thoughtful as she processes the clash between science and the supernatural. She aligns with Yates’ urgency, asking how they can stop the threat without understanding it—a question that cuts to the heart of the team’s dilemma. Her deference to the Doctor is tempered by her growing realization that his methods may not be enough.
- • To bridge the gap between the Doctor’s scientific approach and the team’s need for actionable solutions.
- • To understand the nature of the threat so they can counter it effectively, even if it means challenging the Doctor’s assumptions.
- • The team cannot act effectively without understanding the threat’s true nature.
- • The Doctor’s methods are valuable but may need to be supplemented or adapted to address the supernatural elements at play.
Frustrated and indignant, her patience worn thin by the Doctor’s refusal to acknowledge the supernatural.
Miss Hawthorne presents the occult texts with conviction, her frustration palpable as she challenges the Doctor’s dismissal of the supernatural. She insists on the reality of magic and the occult, her tone sharp and unyielding. Her physical presence is commanding, her belief in her cause unwavering as she pushes back against the Doctor’s rationalism.
- • To force the Doctor and UNIT to recognize the supernatural nature of the threat.
- • To protect the villagers of Devil’s End by ensuring the team takes the occult threat seriously.
- • The Master’s threat is rooted in the supernatural, and ignoring this will lead to disaster.
- • Magic and the occult are real forces that must be addressed directly, not dismissed as superstition.
Righteously defiant, masking a creeping doubt about the limitations of his scientific worldview.
The Doctor takes the occult texts from Miss Hawthorne with a mix of politeness and dismissiveness, flipping through the pages as if humoring her before setting them down firmly. His posture is rigid, his tone sharp as he insists on scientific explanations, though his acknowledgment of the psionic forcefield reveals a crack in his armor. He engages in a heated debate, his defiance masking a growing unease that his methods may not suffice against the Master’s threat.
- • To reassert the primacy of science and rational explanation over supernatural claims.
- • To maintain control of the narrative and the team’s approach to the threat, despite internal skepticism.
- • Supernatural explanations are intellectually lazy and unscientific.
- • The Master’s threat can be understood and countered through empirical methods, even if those methods are still evolving.
Urgent and focused, his mind on the mission and the need for immediate solutions.
Captain Yates interrupts the debate with a radio transmission, his urgency reflecting UNIT’s operational demands. He presses for clarity on how to stop the threat, his tone practical and no-nonsense. His presence grounds the discussion in the reality of the crisis, reminding everyone that action is needed—now.
- • To shift the debate from theory to action, ensuring the team has a clear plan to counter the threat.
- • To maintain UNIT’s operational readiness and coordinate with the Doctor and Jo to address the crisis effectively.
- • The team cannot afford to be bogged down in debates about the nature of the threat; they need to act.
- • The Doctor’s expertise is valuable, but it must be applied in a way that leads to tangible results.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Captain Yates’ R/T device interrupts the debate, its beeping radio transmission serving as a stark reminder of UNIT’s operational reality. The device is a symbol of the military’s need for action and coordination, cutting through the theoretical discussion to ground the team in the immediate crisis. Yates’ use of the R/T to communicate with Greyhound Two highlights the urgency of the situation and the practical constraints the team faces, reinforcing the stakes of the debate.
Miss Hawthorne’s collection of occult texts serves as the catalyst for the debate, symbolizing the clash between science and the supernatural. The Doctor flips through the yellowed pages with dismissive curiosity, using them as a prop to reinforce his argument for rational explanations. The texts themselves are treated as evidence by Hawthorne but are ultimately rejected by the Doctor, who sets them aside firmly. Their presence in the scene underscores the ideological divide and the stakes of the argument: if the threat is supernatural, the Doctor’s methods may fail.
The photographic slides, though not explicitly described, are implied to be part of Hawthorne’s evidence, likely depicting occult symbols or supernatural phenomena. The Doctor selects a few and studies them closely, using them as another point of contention in the debate. Their role is to bolster Hawthorne’s claims, but like the texts, they are ultimately dismissed by the Doctor. The slides serve as a visual counterpoint to the Doctor’s scientific worldview, reinforcing the tension between empirical proof and the unexplainable.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Cloven Hoof Bar serves as the neutral ground where the ideological clash between science and the supernatural plays out. Its dim, smoke-filled interior and cluttered tables create an intimate yet tense atmosphere, amplifying the urgency of the debate. The bar’s confined space forces the characters into close proximity, heightening the emotional stakes as they grapple with the nature of the threat. The slide projector’s flickering beam and the Doctor’s firm setting aside of the occult texts add to the visual tension, making the bar a microcosm of the larger conflict unfolding in Devil’s End.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
UNIT is represented in this event through Captain Yates’ radio transmission and the broader context of the team’s mission. Yates’ interruption to communicate with Greyhound Two underscores UNIT’s operational demands and the need for actionable solutions. The organization’s presence is felt in the urgency of the debate, as the team grapples with how to counter the Master’s threat while adhering to UNIT’s protocols and the Doctor’s scientific approach.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The Doctor dismissing supernatural explanations for the strange events parallels the Brigadier's initial desire for military solutions. Both are attempts to impose order (science and force) on a situation that defies easy categorization. It foreshadows the clash in methodology between the Doctor's complexity and the Brigadier's directness."
Doctor reveals Daemons as ancient cosmic threat"The Doctor dismissing supernatural explanations for the strange events parallels the Brigadier's initial desire for military solutions. Both are attempts to impose order (science and force) on a situation that defies easy categorization. It foreshadows the clash in methodology between the Doctor's complexity and the Brigadier's directness."
Doctor reveals Daemons as ancient cosmic threatThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"HAWTHORNE: "Well, there is only one possible explanation. This is the supernatural at work.""
"DOCTOR: "Nonsense.""
"HAWTHORNE: "You're being deliberately obtuse. We're dealing with the supernatural, the occult, magic.""
"DOCTOR: "Science, Miss Hawthorne.""
"BENTON: "Yes, well, what about the thing that got me? That was real enough.""
"DOCTOR: "There's nothing more real than a forcefield, Sergeant, even a psionic one.""
"JO: "And how can we stop it without knowing what it is?""