The Rational vs. The Supernatural
A core tension in the story pits empirical science against arcane forces, embodied in the Doctor’s skepticism versus Olive Hawthorne’s warnings and the villagers’ growing belief in demonic possession. Yates and the Brigadier represent the military’s struggle to reconcile protocol with inexplicable events, oscillating between dismissing occult claims and accepting their reality as casualties mount. The Doctor’s scientific detachment (e.g., dismissing Hawthorne’s ‘devil’ with ‘I’m afraid I don’t believe in Devils’) is repeatedly undermined by events like Benton’s attack or the fiery roadblock, culminating in a pragmatic alliance between science and mysticism to confront Azal.
Events Exemplifying This Theme
The Doctor, freshly recovered from his near-death experience and dismissive of Jo and Yates’ concerns about his health, insists he is fully restored and ready to return to the dig …
In the dim, smoke-filled Cloven Hoof bar, Olive Hawthorne’s frantic insistence that Constable Garvin’s death was no accident but the work of a monstrous 'Horned Beast'—the Devil himself—unsettles Jo and …
In the dim, smoke-filled Cloven Hoof bar, the Doctor and Jo confront Olive Hawthorne, who insists the village’s horrors stem from a Satanic cult and a literal Devil sighting. The …
The Brigadier investigates a fiery roadblock reported by a panicked delivery man, whose van inexplicably burst into flames after an earthquake. Using his swagger stick, the Brigadier tests the scorched …