Fabula
S3E6 · Booby Trap
S3E6
· Booby Trap

Picard's Model Ships — A Human Touch Against Machines

In the Captain's ready room Picard and Riker quietly parse Geordi's radical proposal to cede control of the Enterprise to the computer to buy time. Picard's idle, nostalgic monologue about building model ships becomes a moral parable: tactile, human craftsmanship versus the ship's cold automation. Riker's skeptical quip about computers and Picard's rueful memory expose the captain's inner conflict — a thematic turning point that foreshadows his later decision to trust human intuition over machine certainty to save a thousand lives.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

1

Picard reflects nostalgically on simpler times with model ships, contrasting them with the current reliance on machines, underscoring the theme of human versus technological control.

skepticism to nostalgic reflection

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

4

Contemplative and conflicted; outwardly measured but inwardly distressed at the moral consequences of a decision that could cost lives.

Seated in the ready room, Picard receives Riker, relays La Forge's proposal, and launches into a tactile, nostalgic monologue about model ships that frames the moral dilemma of ceding control to the computer.

Goals in this moment
  • Understand the practical implications of La Forge's proposal before committing.
  • Reconcile his duty to protect the crew with his moral discomfort about delegating command to a machine.
Active beliefs
  • Human judgment carries moral weight that machines cannot replicate.
  • Command decisions are not just technical choices but ethical responsibilities tied to human experience and memory.
Character traits
reflective nostalgic principled weighing responsibility
Follow Jean-Luc Picard's journey

Cautiously skeptical with an undercurrent of professional concern — attempting to test the proposal's reliability without escalating fear.

Enters on summons, asks about La Forge's plan, voices pragmatic skepticism about computers' ability to originate orders rather than simply follow them, providing a foil to Picard's inward moral deliberation.

Goals in this moment
  • Clarify the technical and tactical details of La Forge's proposal.
  • Prevent rash decisions that would abdicate command irresponsibly or prematurely.
Active beliefs
  • Computers are strong at execution but weak at originating judgment.
  • Command responsibility should remain with accountable humans whenever possible.
Character traits
practical skeptical clear‑thinking supportive of command structure
Follow William Riker's journey

Urgent and solution-focused (inferred from proposal) — willing to push conventional boundaries to buy time and save lives.

Not physically present in the room but explicitly referenced; La Forge's inventive, urgent proposal to cede control to the computer is the catalyst for the conversation and the moral conflict Picard faces.

Goals in this moment
  • Implement a technical workaround to stabilize the ship and protect the crew.
  • Convince command to permit a risky but potentially life‑saving automation of ship control.
Active beliefs
  • Engineering solutions may require unconventional delegation of control to systems.
  • The immediate survival of the crew can justify technically risky choices.
Character traits
innovative (inferred) technically daring (inferred) urgent (inferred)
Follow Geordi La …'s journey

Neutral/impersonal by nature; its presence in the debate heightens Picard's concern about surrendering human moral agency to an algorithmic process.

Referenced as the entity La Forge would hand control to; its capacity for faster adjustments is central to the tactical argument but it is portrayed as neutral, efficient, and lacking moral accountability.

Goals in this moment
  • Execute precise adjustments faster than human operators (functional/inferred).
  • Carry out orders and optimize ship systems without moral consideration (structural/inferred).
Active beliefs
  • Algorithmic optimization is superior to human reaction time for certain technical tasks (ascribed by La Forge).
  • Decision-making can be reduced to data-driven procedures (ascribed).
Character traits
efficient (described) unemotional precise
Follow USS Enterprise's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

2
Ready Room Chime

The ready-room door chime audibly signals Riker's arrival and punctuates the conversation's privacy; its brief tone initiates the exchange that leads to the moral argument about machine control.

Before: Idle, fitted flush into the bulkhead and on …
After: Returns to standby after summoning Riker; functionally unchanged …
Before: Idle, fitted flush into the bulkhead and on standby.
After: Returns to standby after summoning Riker; functionally unchanged but narratively has triggered the crucial private discussion.
Captain Picard's Model Ships

Picard invokes the model ships as a tactile memory and moral metaphor: their handcrafted nature and the boyhood imagination they carried become the fulcrum of his argument against ceding command to cold automation.

Before: On a shelf in the ready room within …
After: Remain as a silent, symbolic presence in the …
Before: On a shelf in the ready room within reach of the captain (implied); intact and familiar, bearing signs of handling.
After: Remain as a silent, symbolic presence in the room; their meaning in Picard's mind has been reactivated and used to frame his ethical stance.

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What this causes 2
Thematic Parallel medium

"Picard's nostalgia for simpler times with model ships contrasts with his ultimate reliance on human intuition to manually navigate the Enterprise to safety."

Cut the Power, Trust the Captain
S3E6 · Booby Trap
Thematic Parallel medium

"Picard's nostalgia for simpler times with model ships contrasts with his ultimate reliance on human intuition to manually navigate the Enterprise to safety."

Holodeck Farewell — Geordi Lets Go
S3E6 · Booby Trap

Part of Larger Arcs

Key Dialogue

"PICARD: He's come up with something that might give us a chance. If we agree to stay out of it."
"RIKER: Computers have always impressed me by their ability to take orders; I'm not at all as certain about their ability to give them."
"PICARD: You missed something by not playing with model ships. They were the source of one boy's imaginary voyages, each holding a treasure of adventures. Manning the earliest space craft. Or flying a plane with only one propeller to keep you in the sky. Imagine that. Now, the machines are flying us."