Guinan Names the Future: 'Slavery'
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Guinan forces Picard to name the stakes: Maddox's success would let Starfleet build hundreds or thousands of Datas to do exploration and dangerous work, a revelation that reframes the dispute from procedural to existential for future beings.
Guinan names the consequence—slavery—and Picard seizes the word and the idea of precedent; their alarm hardens into resolve as they lift their glasses, toast, and drink, closing the scene with renewed purpose to fight for Data's rights.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Absent physically; inferred vulnerability and dependence on human advocates to protect his legal status and autonomy.
Not physically present in the scene but the subject of Picard's plan and Guinan's concern; Data functions as the immediate stake and hypothetical future template whose rights are being argued over.
- • Remain autonomous and retain personhood (inferred)
- • Avoid becoming experimental property or replicable labor (inferred)
- • His existence raises questions about personhood and rights (as assumed by Picard and Guinan)
- • His fate will influence legal treatment of similar beings in the future (assumed by others)
Patiently concerned and quietly firm; emotionally steady, using moral clarity to pull Picard out of private despair and reframe the problem.
Approaches from behind the bar with two drinks, listens attentively to Picard's confession, asks incisive questions that expose long-term consequences, names the moral term 'slavery', and offers a terse benediction that crystallizes Picard's resolve.
- • Help Picard see the ethical stakes beyond personal pride
- • Prompt Picard to act from principle rather than tactical self-preservation
- • Past institutional shame warps present choices and must be named to avoid repeating injustice
- • Naming the true ethical cost is necessary to transform tactical decisions into principled action
Not present; depicted as smug and professionally satisfied in Picard's retelling, a source of personal grievance and institutional antagonism.
Mentioned by Picard as Phillipa — the assistant to the prosecution at the Stargazer court-martial — she is invoked as an antagonistic figure who relishes his earlier defeat and now enjoys seeing institutional pressure applied.
- • Maintain and enforce Starfleet procedural rigor (inferred)
- • See adversarial rules applied, possibly to Picard's detriment (inferred)
- • The adversarial system and meticulous legal work are valid ways to adjudicate disputes
- • Exposing and exploiting precedent and obscure rulings is an effective prosecutorial tactic
Grieving and bruised pride at the surface, moving to focused and quietly galvanized moral resolve once the ethical implications are named.
Seated alone at a Ten-Forward table, Picard turns an empty glass, recounts the Stargazer court-martial in clipped, bitter bursts, lays out a tactical bargain to protect Data, and visibly shifts from wounded pride to moral determination during the exchange.
- • Explain his tactical plan to Guinan and unburden his wounded pride
- • Find a way to salvage Data's rights and avoid a legal precedent that would declare Data property
- • Institutional defeat (Stargazer) still haunts present decisions and influences how opponents will act
- • If the hearing proceeds without a negotiated solution, Starfleet law could classify Data as property, setting a dangerous precedent
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
An empty tumbler sits before Picard as a tactile anchor for his grief; he turns it repeatedly while speaking. Guinan brings two drinks, and the ritual of lifting and toasting the glasses punctuates the moment when tactical frustration converts into moral resolve.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Ten-Forward provides a near-empty, intimate late-night setting where Picard's private confession and Guinan's moral interrogation can occur away from formal Starfleet scrutiny. The lounge's quiet creates the psychological space for truth-telling and reorientation from tactical to ethical stakes.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Riker powering Data down in court produces Picard's emotional collapse and need for counsel; Picard seeks Guinan immediately afterward, shaken and defeated."
"Riker powering Data down in court produces Picard's emotional collapse and need for counsel; Picard seeks Guinan immediately afterward, shaken and defeated."
"Riker powering Data down in court produces Picard's emotional collapse and need for counsel; Picard seeks Guinan immediately afterward, shaken and defeated."
"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."
"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."
Key Dialogue
"PICARD: If Data agrees to undergo Commander Maddox's procedure we can get out of this hearing before he's declared the property of Starfleet command."
"PICARD: Precedent! This case will set the precedent for all the future Datas. It will determine their status, and they'll all be property."
"GUINAN: There is an ancient word for it -- slavery."