Evil: Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
Line 37: Line 37:
#* [[Tegana]]; [[Tlotoxl]]; [[Maximilien Robespierre]]; [[Eric Klieg]] and [[Kaftan]]; [[Carrington (The Ambassadors of Death)|Carrington]]; [[Eric Stahlman]]; [[Hepesh]]; [[George Trenchard]]; [[Charles Grover]]; [[J. P. Kettlewell]] and [[Hilda Winters]]; [[Sorenson]]; [[Harrison Chase]]; [[Hieronymous (The Masque of Mandragora)|Hieronymous]]; [[Taren Capel]]; [[Maximillian Stael]]; [[Kassia]]; [[George Hutchinson]]; [[Timanov]]; [[Dastari]]; [[Helen A]];
#* [[Tegana]]; [[Tlotoxl]]; [[Maximilien Robespierre]]; [[Eric Klieg]] and [[Kaftan]]; [[Carrington (The Ambassadors of Death)|Carrington]]; [[Eric Stahlman]]; [[Hepesh]]; [[George Trenchard]]; [[Charles Grover]]; [[J. P. Kettlewell]] and [[Hilda Winters]]; [[Sorenson]]; [[Harrison Chase]]; [[Hieronymous (The Masque of Mandragora)|Hieronymous]]; [[Taren Capel]]; [[Maximillian Stael]]; [[Kassia]]; [[George Hutchinson]]; [[Timanov]]; [[Dastari]]; [[Helen A]];
# Those motivated by megalomania and/or a desire for conquest —
# Those motivated by megalomania and/or a desire for conquest —
#* [[The Master]]; [[the Rani]]; [[Borusa]]; [[Morbius]]; [[Animus]]; [[Eldrad]]; [[Meglos]]; [[Monarch (Four to Doomsday)|Monarch]]; [[Mestor]]; the [[Borad]]; [[Kroagnon]]; [[Kane (Dragonfire)|Kane]]; the [[Ice Warrior]]s; the [[Voord]]; the [[Drahvin]]s; the [[Macra]]; the [[Dominator]]s; the [[Kroton (species)|Krotons]]; the [[War Lord]]s; the [[Nestene]]; [[Cook (The Greatest Show in the Galaxy)|Cook]];[[Axos]]; the [[Zygon]]s; the [[Kraal (species)|Kraals]]; the [[Krynoid]]s; [[the Nucleus]]; the [[Movellan]]s; the [[Nimon]]; the [[Terileptil]]s; the [[Tractator]]s; [[WOTAN]]; [[BOSS]]; [[Zaroff]]; [[Salamander]]; [[Tobias Vaughn]]; [[Magnus Greel]]; [[Morgaine]]; the [[Dalek]]s; the [[Cybermen (Mondas)|Cybermen]]; the [[Sontaran]]s;
#* [[The Master]]; [[the Rani]]; [[Borusa]]; [[Morbius]]; [[Animus]]; [[Eldrad]]; [[Meglos]]; [[Monarch (Four to Doomsday)|Monarch]]; [[Mestor]]; the [[Borad]]; [[Kroagnon]]; [[Kane (Dragonfire)|Kane]]; the [[Ice Warrior]]s; the [[Voord]]; the [[Drahvin]]s; the [[Macra]]; the [[Dominator]]s; the [[Kroton (species)|Krotons]]; the [[War Lord]]s; the [[Nestene]]; [[Cook (The Greatest Show in the Galaxy)|Cook]]; [[Axos]]; the [[Zygon]]s; the [[Kraal (species)|Kraals]]; the [[Krynoid]]s; [[the Nucleus]]; the [[Movellan]]s; the [[Nimon]]; the [[Terileptil]]s; the [[Tractator]]s; [[WOTAN]]; [[BOSS]]; [[Zaroff]]; [[Salamander]]; [[Tobias Vaughn]]; [[Magnus Greel]]; [[Morgaine]]; the [[Dalek]]s; the [[Cybermen (Mondas)|Cybermen]]; the [[Sontaran]]s;
# Those who seemed to be evil incarnate —
# Those who seemed to be evil incarnate —
#* The [[Celestial Toymaker]]; the [[Great Intelligence]]; [[Sutekh]]; the [[Mandragora Helix]]; the [[Fendahl]]; the [[Black Guardian]]; [[the Shadow]]; the [[King Vampire]]; the [[Mara]]; the [[Gods of Ragnarok]]; [[the Destroyer]]; [[Fenric]];
#* The [[Celestial Toymaker]]; the [[Great Intelligence]]; [[Sutekh]]; the [[Mandragora Helix]]; the [[Fendahl]]; the [[Black Guardian]]; [[the Shadow]]; the [[King Vampire]]; the [[Mara]]; the [[Gods of Ragnarok]]; [[the Destroyer]]; [[Fenric]];

Revision as of 11:29, 28 April 2019

Evil

Evil was the concept or force perceived as being the opposite of what was good, both of them being part of moral duality.

However, like good, evil could be perceived differently from conflicting vantage points; evil was, according to the Seventh Doctor, a matter of perspective. (PROSE: Utopia) As such, the Seventh Doctor claimed evil had no name, (TV: The Curse of Fenric) and the Twelfth Doctor later asserted that "hardly anything [was] evil, but most things [were] hungry." (TV: The Pilot)

N-Space existed side-by-side with a reservoir of evil made up of manifest suffering and fear. Dr Colin Dove and Dr Jeremiah O'Kane attempted to unleash it using Daniel O'Kane and Peter Russell. (HOMEVID: The Zero Imperative)

In the distant past, the Grey Man's people imposed duality onto the first humanoids to evolve, resulting in them destroying themselves in chemical warfare. The Grey Man later created Cathedral as a metacultural engine that introduced "greyness" and "doubt" into the universe. (PROSE: Falls the Shadow)

At the end of the Thousand Year War, Ronson told the Fourth Doctor that the Scientific Elite believed Davros had changed the nature of their research to something immoral and evil, which later resulted in the creation of the Daleks. (TV: Genesis of the Daleks) The First Doctor, in his first encounter with the Daleks, called their plan to destroy the Thals as "senseless, evil killing." (TV: The Daleks)

The Daleks, in fact, according to Bernice Summerfield, were "the most evil race the universe ever came up with". (AUDIO: The Lights of Skaro)

The Twelfth Doctor described Chandra Scindia as being "truly evil". (COMIC: The Swords of Kali)

The Time Lords did not believe in nor give much thought to the concepts of good and evil, but the Doctor had always maintained that evil was an actual force. (PROSE: Strange England, AUDIO: The Guardians of Prophecy, COMIC: A Groatsworth of Wit) When he was first put on trial, the Second Doctor used a Thought Channel to justify his interference in the universe by showing the Time Lord tribunal some of the evils he'd fought, including the Quarks, the Robot Yeti, the Ice Warriors, the Cybermen, and the Daleks. (TV: The War Games)

In his travels he met many "embodiments" of evil, including the Black Guardian, (TV: The Armageddon Factor) the Mara, (TV: Snakedance) Malador, (AUDIO: The Guardians of Prophecy), the Beast (TV: The Impossible Planet) and Fenric, whom the Doctor told Ace was one of two forces, only good and evil, that existed before the beginning of all time and space. (TV: The Curse of Fenric) The Ninth Doctor described the Shadeys as "something evil," mentioning to Rose Tyler that "some people don't believe in evil... They say it's all subjective. No absolutes," and as a rebuttal to this, he told Rose to "take a look" at the Shadeys. (COMIC: A Groatsworth of Wit)

The Fifth Doctor believed that, considering its nature, the one thing evil could never face was itself, and utilised this principle to trap the Mara in a circle of mirrors and banish it from Deva Loka. (TV: Kinda)

The Eighth Doctor called the Master "pure evil". (TV: Doctor Who) The First Doctor declared that he opposed everything the Doctor held dear. (AUDIO: The Destination Wars) The Fourth Doctor referred to the Master as the "quintessence of evil", (TV: The Deadly Assassin) while the Third Doctor described him as "the personification of evil". (TV: The Sea Devils)

Borusa told the Master that he was "one of the most evil and corrupt beings [that] Time Lord race [had] ever produced." (TV: The Five Doctors) Even when Melanie Bush told him he was "utterly evil," the Master replied, "thank you." (TV: The Ultimate Foe) The Master later took offence to the idea of her having "gone good". (TV: The Magician's Apprentice)

In truth, anyone was capable of both good and evil, as the Master pointed out when he revealed to the Sixth Doctor that the Valeyard was a future version of him:

There is some evil in all of us, Doctor, even you. The Valeyard is an amalgamation of the darker sides of your nature...The Master [The Ultimate Foe (TV story) [src]]

While the Doctor often tried to be a force for good, (TV: Into the Dalek) his methods could be seen as evil, causing other races to raise arms in fear against him, (TV: A Good Man Goes to War) with an alliance including several of his enemies imprisoning him in an attempt to prevent the end of the universe. (TV: The Pandorica Opens) Several individuals considered the Doctor's good to be their evil, including Sutekh (TV: Pyramids of Mars) and the Black Guardian. (TV: Mawdryn Undead)

Behind the scenes

The Universal Databank identified six types of evil which the Doctor has fought against. These were as follows:

  1. Those motivated by greed
  2. Misguided fanatics —
  3. Those motivated by megalomania and/or a desire for conquest —
  4. Those who seemed to be evil incarnate —
  5. Those driven to become evil by a cruel twist of fate —
  6. Those motivated by factors beyond human notions of good and evil