Doctor's Orders (Enterprise episode)
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"Doctor's Orders" is the title of an episode from the third season of the television series Star Trek: Enterprise. Its episode number is 068, and it first aired on 18 February 2004.
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[edit] Plot summary
This is a summary of the beginning portion of the episode. Please note that the events described in this summary are not necessarily in the same chronological order in which they occur on screen.
While traveling through the Delphic Expanse, the Enterprise encounters a trans-dimensional disturbance that lies directly within its navigational course. The crew learns that the disturbance causes permanent neurological damage to humans who are exposed to its interior. (Apparently, the neurological risk to Vulcans is similar.) To avert the danger, an idea to have Phlox disable the neo-cortices (presumably a part of the central nervous system) of all crewmembers, except himself, is deliberated among the senior officers. In this plan, the entire crew (except Phlox) would effectively be tranquilized until Enterprise was clear of the dangerous disturbance. Thus, the neurological danger to the crew would be neutralized. Furthermore, during that time, all responsibility for the well-being of the ship and the crew would lie with Phlox. The only alternative to this plan, as decided by the senior officers, would be to circumvent the disturbance altogether. This is felt to be too time-consuming, however, and despite Tucker's skepticism, the former plan is implemented.
While the crew is soundly resting, Phlox is shown attending to his duties aboard the ship. With a lack of inhibition, he even on occasion fails to clothe while doing his work. (The entire episode is also superimposed with Phlox's composition of a letter to an acquaintance of his. Presumably, it is the same person to whom he has written in previous episode(s), "Dear Doctor" being at least one example.) Soon, however, the trans-dimensional disturbance begins to have an adverse neurological effect on Phlox himself: he begins to hallucinate. In his first series of apparitions, he is frightened by what he perceives as strange (one might say “spooky”) sights and sounds, and he frequently assumes he is sensing other people in his vicinity (though everyone else aboard the ship is asleep). Phlox's delusions escalate when he is accompanied by an imaginary T'Pol. Phlox, and the audience for that matter, believes she is real; it is revealed only at the end of the episode that this isn't true. In fact, at this point, the audience is unaware that any of Phlox's perceptions are false; the audience experiences as legitimate all of the events that take place in Phlox's mind.
As the episode progresses, however, the audience can infer that all of Phlox's apparitions are indeed delusionary, with the exception of his perception of T'Pol; the audience is falsely led to believe that T'Pol was excluded from Phlox's treatment, and that she is accompanying him in administering to ship-related duties while they venture through the disturbance. On one occasion, Phlox is inside a room monitoring the health of a crewmember when he "hears" and "sees" what one might assume to be a life form directly outside the window. Panic-stricken, he alerts his imaginary T'Pol. Upon find nothing unusual in the ship's sensor records, he and she conclude that his observation was nothing worrisome; it was probably—indeed it was truly—just his imagination.
On another, more severe, occasion, while Phlox is "making his rounds" (eg., is checking on the health of the crew), he sees an insect-like Xindi directly before him. Panicked yet again (nearer to the point of cardiac shock, one can presume), he runs away and locks himself in an airlock. When he regains some mental capability, he contacts the imaginary T'Pol and alerts her to the Xindi "presence" on board. Again, using information from the ship's sensor records, she attempts to persuade Phlox that it is impossible (or at least highly unlikely) that there are any Xindi onboard. Unconvinced, Phlox takes it upon himself to solitarily search the ship, deck by deck, for Xindi, with a deadly phase pistol in hand. While this is occurring, Porthos, who Phlox earlier left unsecured and unattended, walks out from behind a wall into Phlox's field of vision. Startled, Phlox fires at the dog, but fortunately misses.
It is revealed within the episode that Denobulans, the species of which Phlox is a member, frequently do hallucinate under periods of stress and prolonged isolation. However, unlike humans, such hallucinations are not signs or symptoms of insanity and mental collapse, but rather a normal part of their biological adaptation to stressful situations. The mind provides itself with figures of conversation so that, despite being isolated, it may remain occupied and focused.
[edit] Trivia
- Phlox's line "I'm a physician, not an engineer" is an obvious reference to The Original Series, in which Dr. McCoy often complained that he was a doctor and not something else (ex: "I'm a doctor, not a mechanic."). T'Pol saying "Fascinating" is also a nod to TOS given that Spock often said the word.
- This episode has a great deal of similarity to the fourth season Star Trek: Voyager episode One.
- John Billingsley apparently does a nude scene. According to a UPN source talking to Sci Fi Wire, this was partly the result of production calling Billingsley's bluff.
- Phlox seeing something on the ship's hull is reminiscent of William Shatner's classic episode of The Twilight Zone, where he sees a creature on an aeroplane's wing during a flight.
Preceded by: Harbinger |
Star Trek: Enterprise episodes | Followed by: Hatchery |
[edit] References
- Episode information from STARTREK.COM
- Star Trek: Enterprise episode 068: "Doctor's Orders"
This episode has a similar scenario to the Star Trek: Voyager episode "One": Voyager's crew is placed into stasis as they cross a dangerous nebula, leaving Seven of Nine and the Doctor in command of the ship. Seven of Nine experiences loneliness and separation from her new individualism.
[edit] External links
- Doctor's Orders article at Memory Alpha, a Star Trek wiki.