Science vs. Tradition
The Doctor’s scientific rationalism clashes with the monastery’s spiritual and pacifist traditions, creating a fundamental opposition in methodology and worldview. While the Doctor seeks to dissect and understand the mechanical nature of the Yeti to neutralize the threat, Rinchen and Sapan dismiss such explanations as sacrilegious, clinging to the belief that the Yeti are demonic or divinely ordained. This tension escalates as the Doctor’s evidence mounts, forcing characters like Khrisong and eventually the Senior Lama to confront the possibility that their traditions may be rooted in misunderstanding or manipulation. The narrative ultimately argues for synthesis rather than replacement: the Doctor’s logic exposes the monastery’s vulnerability, but only when combined with humility and respect for its values can the greater threat be addressed.
Events Exemplifying This Theme
The scene opens with monks Sapan and Rinchen debating the nature of the captured Yeti—whether it is a demonic vessel or an unnatural mechanical construct. Their disagreement exposes the monastery’s …
The Doctor interrupts a tense exchange between Khrisong and Abbot Songsten, where Khrisong—frustrated by the monastery’s pacifist constraints—pleads for permission to fight the Yeti with force. The Doctor’s abrupt arrival …
Khrisong, ignoring the Doctor’s explicit warnings, picks up the alien sphere twice despite its ominous beeping—first when he discovers it in the mud, then again as the Yeti approach. The …
In the courtyard, the Doctor and Jamie interrogate Khrisong about the Yeti’s sudden retreat, piecing together that the creatures were not attacking but retrieving the alien sphere—a discovery that reveals …