2.24 — “The Ultimate Computer”
Plot: The Enterprise is selected to test the new Mark 5 computer–an artificial intelligence capable of completely automating a starship and its functions, allowing the crew to be dispensed with. Kirk is honored, but not sure how to take his planned obsolescence. Dr. Richard Daystrom, the Mark 5’s inventor, beams aboard to supervise the proceedings, which are to include war games against a squadron of four other Federation starships. There is a secret the crew don’t know, however: Daystrom has imprinted the computer with his own neural patterns–and Daystrom is insane.
Thoughts: I didn’t write much down while I was watching this episode. I liked the dignity of William Marshall as Dr. Daystrom, and Dr. McCoy’s dialogue at the top of Act I (“They wouldn’t have to replace me. I’d resign because everybody else aboard would be nothing but circuits and memory banks!”). Nevertheless, I think this one has dated worse than other episodes. The paranoia about the advance of computer technology is hard to empathize with, seeing how afraid they are of tech that seems so primitive. We are, of course, already sending robot drones to other worlds.
Would the Mark 5 technology have worked just fine if only Dr. Daystrom had chosen a different brain with which to imprint the computer? Is it really such a curse to peak so early in your career? I feel sorry for Mark 5; it is playing the role of Frankenstein’s Monster in this episode. The writers missed an opportunity in not developing the machine’s personality. Daystrom is dismissed as deranged for talking of it as his child; but if Mark 5 is sentient that makes this episode something of a tragedy, like the superior episode “The Changeling.”
I’m feeling a bit of Star Trek fatigue at the end of Season Two. Only two more episodes to power through, however, and we’ll take a well deserved end-of-season break.
3 out of 5 bottle shows scripted by D.C. Fontana.
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