The Engine of Cosmic Horror: Predation as Evolution
The Daleks and Davros embody predation not as a tactic but as a teleological imperative—violence is generative, producing cycles of dominance and rebirth. Davros’s physical revival through cryogenics mirrors the Daleks’ relentless regeneration, framing survival as a grotesque perversion of evolution. Even the blank-faced soldiers and conditioned behavior of the Lytton Troopers reflect systemic predation: individual will is irrelevant, agency is stolen, and obedience becomes a kind of cognition. The Doctor’s opposition to this teleology—through logic, empathy, and improvisation—pits rational benevolence against an ideology of exterminism, revealing how cosmic horror emerges not from monsters, but from systems that treat life as a resource to be harvested.
Events Exemplifying This Theme
The upper level of the warehouse becomes a slaughterhouse as the Dalek confronts the Doctor and soldiers. The alien’s eyestalk is targeted but the fight turns desperate when Tegan is …
Lytton has awaited Davros’s death with grim satisfaction, assuming the creator of the Daleks would finally succumb as the invaders fell. A trooper monitors the cryo-chamber only to confirm the …
Davros interrogates Lytton about the Daleks' past defeat by the Movellans, learning of the virus that could annihilate them. Fueling his appetite for vengeance and dominance, he rejects any restrictions …
Archer’s patrol intercepts Tegan and Laird mid-flight from the gunfire, their faces devoid of recognition. Archer’s curt assurance Nothing’s to worry about surfaces as a chilling inversion of reassurance, the …
Davros presses forward with his secret genetic experiments on Earth, privately demanding Lytton assemble biochemical and mechanical expertise for a high-risk mutation procedure. But his façade of control shatters when …