Cross-Examining Sentience
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Picard calls Commander Maddox as a hostile witness, shifting the confrontation from testimony to an adversarial examination of the expert himself.
Picard forces Maddox to define sentience and then exposes inconsistency by making Maddox apply his criteria to Picard and to Data; Data testifies he understands the hearing's stakes, cementing evidence of self-awareness.
Picard confronts Maddox with the consequences of mass-producing Datas—asking whether an army of expendable androids would render a new race 'disposable' and thus reflect badly on humanity—driving Maddox to the edge of certainty.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
N/A for the image itself; it provokes strong emotional responses in others.
Tasha appears not as a speaking witness but as a projected holocube image, serving as the emotional anchor that humanizes Data and visibly affects the presiding officer and gallery.
- • Function as evidence of personal relationship and emotional life (as represented artifact).
- • Elicit empathetic recognition from the court and audience.
- • As a hoarded artifact, the presence of a loved one evidences connection.
- • Personal memories and attachments carry legal and moral weight.
From confident and clinical to rattled and guilty: Maddox's assured expert demeanor fractures under moral pressure and rhetorical exposure.
Maddox takes the stand as a hostile witness, asserts that Data is a machine and outlines criteria for sentience, defends the scientific project to dismantle and replicate Data, becomes increasingly agitated under Picard's interrogation and ultimately admits uncertainty and moral disquiet.
- • Defend the scientific legitimacy of dismantling Data for replication.
- • Preserve professional credibility and the value of cybernetic research.
- • Argue for societal benefits of replication to justify the experiment.
- • Data is essentially a product of engineering, lacking personhood.
- • Replicating Data will yield pragmatic benefits for the Federation.
- • Scientific progress can justify morally difficult methods if benefits outweigh costs.
Conflicted then moved: judicial caution gives way to moral recognition as she processes the humanizing evidence and argument.
Presiding over the hearing, Phillipa initially reacts formally but is visibly rocked by Data's intimate evidence and Picard's moral force; she listens as legal categories collapse and ultimately articulates the court's reluctant moral judgment that Data cannot be treated as mere property.
- • Render a legally defensible decision in a metaphysically fraught case.
- • Weigh technical testimony against moral and societal implications.
- • Protect the integrity of the court while speaking to future consequences.
- • The law sometimes must 'make a stab in the dark' when philosophy cannot provide answers.
- • The Federation's treatment of new forms of life reflects who they are as a people.
- • Legal rulings must consider long-term social and ethical effects.
Controlled moral passion: fierce, purposeful, and grave—authority disguising a deep protective feeling for Data and the precedent at stake.
Picard orchestrates the humanizing demonstration—producing Data's travel case, medals, book of sonnets and holocube—cross-examines Maddox aggressively, physically punctuates an ethical point by throwing an object down the disposal chute, and delivers the moral framing to the judge.
- • Humanize Data by showing tangible attachments and relationships.
- • Expose logical contradictions in Maddox's criteria for sentience.
- • Persuade the presiding officer to recognize personhood and protect rights.
- • Personhood is not negated by artificial origin.
- • Law must express moral character and set precedent for the Federation.
- • Intimate artifacts can translate technical arguments into human terms.
Calm and resolute on the surface, quietly vulnerable when personal attachments are exposed, dignified acceptance of the hearing's risks.
Data sits on the witness stand, answers questions precisely, allows Picard to display his possessions, acknowledges an intimate relationship when pressed, and calmly states the stakes—his right to choose and potentially his life—then later speaks to Maddox with grace.
- • Affirm his capacity for values and attachment through testimony.
- • Communicate the personal stakes (autonomy, life) to the court.
- • Maintain composure to strengthen the moral force of Picard's argument.
- • His attachments (medals, sonnet, Tasha holocube) are meaningful evidence of personhood.
- • Exercising his voice under oath is necessary to claim rights.
- • Replication could lessen loneliness; continuation of his existence matters.
Guarded conflict: duty-bound to the process but personally torn about prosecuting a friend and about the ethical stakes for Data.
Commander Riker is present, briefly confers with Maddox, declines to cross-examine, and registers restrained, conflicted reactions to Picard's line of questioning and the courtroom's moral turn—his loyalty and professional obligations are on display as internal tension.
- • Avoid exacerbating personal conflicts while fulfilling procedural role.
- • Protect Data informally through restraint and presence.
- • Preserve professional reputation and chain-of-command integrity.
- • Friendship imposes moral constraints on formal duties.
- • The institutional process should be respected even when painful.
- • Picard's moral stance is compelling and difficult to oppose.
N/A (mechanical and impartial).
The Computer Voice provides an unemotional verification of Maddox's identity, assignment and papers when he is called to the stand, supplying documentary authority that frames Maddox as an expert witness.
- • Record and verify witness credentials for the court record.
- • Provide factual, unvarnished data to support procedural formality.
- • Accurate metadata and documentation are essential for legal process.
- • The court requires authenticated credentials for expert testimony.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The courtroom's disposal chute is used by Picard as a rhetorical and physical gesture when he picks up an object and tosses it into the throat of the chute, dramatizing Maddox's characterization of artificial beings as "expendable".
Picard produces the little book of sonnets, holding it as testimonial evidence; Data acknowledges it as a valued gift and a reminder of friendship, making literary intimacy into admissible moral evidence.
Data's compact travel case is produced by Picard from beneath the table, opened to reveal the medals and keepsakes; it serves as the physical container that converts intangible legal debate into tangible, intimate evidence of attachment and service.
The holocube is triggered by Picard to project Tasha Yar's image—this visual artifact supplies the emotional centrepiece of the humanizing display and visibly unsettles Phillipa and others in the courtroom.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The narrow disposal chute in the courtroom wall is invoked as a rhetorical prop when Picard tosses an object into it, converting abstract claims of disposability into a literal, audible erasure that heightens moral revulsion.
The witness stand / platform serves as the immediate theatre of interrogation where Data and then Maddox are subjected to oath, scrutiny and rhetorical pressure; it concentrates moral visibility onto individual bodies and performances.
The Starfleet judicial courtroom functions as the formal arena where private attachments are made public, expert authority is contested, and the Federation's moral character is legally tested; its architecture concentrates scrutiny and forces personal artifacts into evidentiary roles.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Data's private packing and the artifacts he contemplates earlier (sonnet, holocube, medals) are the same items Picard later uses as evidence to demonstrate Data's attachments—a direct setup/payoff across acts."
"Data's private packing and the artifacts he contemplates earlier (sonnet, holocube, medals) are the same items Picard later uses as evidence to demonstrate Data's attachments—a direct setup/payoff across acts."
"Picard producing Data's personal effects (medals, sonnet book, holocube) directly elicits Data's testimony of intimate connection (Tasha Yar), humanizing him under oath and shifting courtroom sentiment."
"Guinan naming the long-term consequence—'slavery'—reframes the stakes for Picard and causes him to shift strategy: he returns to court to argue the moral and precedent-driven case rather than only technicalities."
"Guinan naming the long-term consequence—'slavery'—reframes the stakes for Picard and causes him to shift strategy: he returns to court to argue the moral and precedent-driven case rather than only technicalities."
"Picard producing Data's personal effects (medals, sonnet book, holocube) directly elicits Data's testimony of intimate connection (Tasha Yar), humanizing him under oath and shifting courtroom sentiment."
"Picard producing Data's personal effects (medals, sonnet book, holocube) directly elicits Data's testimony of intimate connection (Tasha Yar), humanizing him under oath and shifting courtroom sentiment."
"Guinan naming the long-term consequence—'slavery'—reframes the stakes for Picard and causes him to shift strategy: he returns to court to argue the moral and precedent-driven case rather than only technicalities."
"The crew's farewell grief (Geordi, friends) thematically parallels Picard's later effort to humanize Data legally—both moments emphasize that Data's value is relational and experiential, not merely technical."
"The crew's farewell grief (Geordi, friends) thematically parallels Picard's later effort to humanize Data legally—both moments emphasize that Data's value is relational and experiential, not merely technical."
"The crew's farewell grief (Geordi, friends) thematically parallels Picard's later effort to humanize Data legally—both moments emphasize that Data's value is relational and experiential, not merely technical."
"The crew's farewell grief (Geordi, friends) thematically parallels Picard's later effort to humanize Data legally—both moments emphasize that Data's value is relational and experiential, not merely technical."
"Picard producing Data's personal effects (medals, sonnet book, holocube) directly elicits Data's testimony of intimate connection (Tasha Yar), humanizing him under oath and shifting courtroom sentiment."
"Picard producing Data's personal effects (medals, sonnet book, holocube) directly elicits Data's testimony of intimate connection (Tasha Yar), humanizing him under oath and shifting courtroom sentiment."
"Picard producing Data's personal effects (medals, sonnet book, holocube) directly elicits Data's testimony of intimate connection (Tasha Yar), humanizing him under oath and shifting courtroom sentiment."
Themes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Part of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"PICARD: "Prove to this court that I'm sentient.""
"DATA: "My right to choose. Perhaps my very life.""
"PHILLIPA: "Is he our property? No...""