# The Corruption of Empirical Authority
Victorian institutions—represented by the Royal Society and the Church—supposedly anchor rational and moral order, yet become complicit in or even weaponize supernatural corruption. Reverend Matthews’ vehement assertions of religious primacy against evolutionary science reveal how dogma prioritizes control over truth, rendering him blind to Josiah’s occult experiments. Concurrently, Josiah Samuel Smith subverts institutional authority by deploying evolutionary theory as a means to assert supernatural domination over the household’s inhabitants, including his captive. The Doctor’s strategic provocation exposes the hollowness of both institutional facades, emphasizing that empirical institutions in Victorian settings are structurally predisposed to corruption when wielding power beyond accountability—echoing the series' concern with institutional decay but grounding it in the clashes between 19th-century science and primitive myth.
Events Exemplifying This Theme
Reverend Matthews arrives at Gabriel Chase expecting accommodation for his status, only to find the Doctor and Ace already embedded in the household’s unsettling rhythms. His opening courtesy curdles into …
The drawing room at Gabriel Chase becomes a battleground of clashing worldviews as Reverend Matthews arrives to challenge Josiah Samuel Smith. The Doctor and Ace enter, immediately drawing Matthews' scorn …
Josiah’s forced cheer cracks under the pressure of his own machinations when he shouts the word light and the room dims, his false poise crumbling to reveal the depths of …
The Doctor and Ace arrive at Gabriel Chase to confront Josiah Samuel Smith about the taxidermy conspiracy, but the tension escalates when Ace recognizes the house itself as the source …