The Corruption of Guide Principles: Time Lord Detachment vs. Moral Imperative
The Doctor’s adherence to Time Lord non-intervention policy—framed as secular doctrine—clashes with the moral gravity of Frontios, where lives are drained to fuel the Tractators’ gravity motor. His insistence on procedural correctness ('Time Lord rules') becomes a shield against complicity, yet Tegan exposes its hollowness by demanding action: 'You can’t walk away. Not this time.' This tension crystallizes when the Doctor rationally dismisses the colonists’ emotional needs ('symbolic gratitude'), revealing his programmatic detachment as a form of alien logic as sterile as the Gravis’s own. Ultimately, the narrative asserts that moral agency transcends protocol when survival itself is the question.
Events Exemplifying This Theme
In the Operations Centre's tense atmosphere, Tegan challenges the Doctor's willingness to share intelligence with Gravis about Gallifrey's non-intervention policy. Her pointed remark about the TARDIS's compromised state forces the …
The Doctor and Tegan discuss the Tractators' gravity motor and the urgency of stopping their plan to control Frontios. When the Orderly is dragged away by a gravity beam, the …
The Doctor delivers a sharp admonishment to Tegan and Turlough for their unauthorized interference in Time Lord affairs, warning of severe consequences if their actions on Frontios were discovered. His …