Talk:Oxygen (TV story)
We cannot say the Doctor is permanently blind[[edit source]]
I have deleted two uses of the word "permanently" with relation to the Doctor's blindness. We do not know what is planned in the episodes to come. We do not know that the Doctor will be blind for the rest of this incarnation. To say so now would be a violation of the spoiler policy even if it has been announced as being the case. This obviously can be revisited after the 2017 Christmas special airs, should the Doctor still be blind as of the end of Series 10. 23skidoo ☎ 03:08, May 14, 2017 (UTC)
- Last words of the episode: "I can't look at anything, ever again. I'm still blind." We're working directly from the source material to say that it's permanent. It would be speculation to assume that what the Doctor explicitly says is permanent at the end of this episode, will not be so. If future narratives work around this somehow, that's something we can deal with when and if that happens. But right now, we work from what we've got, and what we've got right now says "I can't look at anything, ever again."
× SOTO (☎/✍/↯) 06:02, May 14, 2017 (UTC)- It's important to note that several of the (released) novels are set after this story and (presumably) don't feature a blind Doctor. It's illogical to move novels meant to be set after this story to before this story. OS25 (Talk) 06:23, May 14, 2017 (UTC)
- Not sure why that would have to be? I haven't read them yet personally, but as I understand, Diamond Dogs must take place after Smile and Thin Ice (and The Shining Man must take place after Diamond Dogs), but who's to say these can't take place before Oxygen? There's plenty of time between narratives this season for these other stories to take place in. Is there something I'm missing here?
× SOTO (☎/✍/↯) 07:01, May 14, 2017 (UTC)
- Not sure why that would have to be? I haven't read them yet personally, but as I understand, Diamond Dogs must take place after Smile and Thin Ice (and The Shining Man must take place after Diamond Dogs), but who's to say these can't take place before Oxygen? There's plenty of time between narratives this season for these other stories to take place in. Is there something I'm missing here?
- @SOTO - Yeah, but that's also a cliffhanger. If an episode ends with the last line saying "Character X is dead" does that mean we change everything related to "Character X" and then have to change everything back a week later when Character X is proven to be alive and kicking? Heck, remember "Rule 1" also with regards to the Doctor. (Also, the duration of the Doctor's blindness has been addressed elsewhere, however of course that can't be discussed in this venue without violating the policy.) In any event, someone revised the reference to include "potentially" which is an OK compromise. 23skidoo ☎ 01:32, May 16, 2017 (UTC)
- It's important to note that several of the (released) novels are set after this story and (presumably) don't feature a blind Doctor. It's illogical to move novels meant to be set after this story to before this story. OS25 (Talk) 06:23, May 14, 2017 (UTC)
Enemy[[edit source]]
Our page for The Aztecs has Tlotoxl as the main enemy and not tradition.
The Reign of Terror has Robespierre as the enemy and not revolutionary spirit.
Thin Ice has Lord Sutcliffe and not industry or greed or imperialism.
I think the main enemy for Oxygen should remain the smartsuits and not the more abstract enemy of capitalism. Jack "BtR" Saxon ☎ 13:29, 29 November 2023 (UTC)
- Oh, and we have Krasko as the enemy for Rosa and not racism. Template:Infobox Story/doc/TV story says that the field is for "Main enemies that appear in the story". I don't believe this applies to capitalism in this story. Jack "BtR" Saxon ☎ 17:38, 29 November 2023 (UTC)
- "They're not your rescuers. They're your replacements. The end point of capitalism. A bottom line where human life has no value at all. We're fighting an algorithm, a spreadsheet. Like every worker, everywhere, we're fighting the suits."
- The episode is very explicit on this point. The thing they're actually struggling against isn't the suits, per the episode itself. It's capitalism. The suits are just a manifestation of this larger struggle. This is not the case in any of the episodes you've listed, none of them emphasize that the currently listed main enemies are logical endpoints of the ideology in question. Indeed, based on how you're framing the first three, it would be effectively impossible for that to be true. Najawin ☎ 18:24, 29 November 2023 (UTC)
- And it could just as easily be argued that the struggle in Rosa is less against Krasko and more about the racism evident in him and the American people. Capitalism is to blame, sure, but it's not the "Main enem[y] that appear[s] in the story". Jack "BtR" Saxon ☎ 18:30, 29 November 2023 (UTC)
- I'm open to placing racism as well, if we can find quotes that suggest a certain level of authorial intent. The issue here is that the episode is explicitly saying that the suits are manifestations of capitalism and that they're fighting capitalism. The episode, in fact, explicitly tells us that capitalism appears in the story and that it's the main enemy. Let's not conflate "it could be argued" with "the episode literally tells us this". Najawin ☎ 18:48, 29 November 2023 (UTC)
- The talk page for World Enough and Time goes into greater detail as to why the wiki doesn't list ideas and concepts as main enemies. BananaClownMan ☎ 19:37, 29 November 2023 (UTC)
- Capitalism is not an idea, it's a way in which an economy is organized. If we instead were to insist that we're talking about "capitalist ideology", then we're in the same bind if we ever say that the main enemy is the Nazis. But the very talk page you're referencing explicitly affirms that groups may be main enemies, so this doesn't work - groups that are inspired by ideologies are kosher.
- Moreover, Snivy's suggestion as to why ideas aren't used as main enemies simply isn't applicable to this situation.
- if we start falling down the line of adopting concepts as the enemy, that falls into vague abstractions that become enemies that would require elaboration for why those concepts should be the main enemy
- Everything here is explicitly stated in the episode. Even if we were to misinterpret capitalism as something purely conceptual. And as pointed out in the edit summaries, we do sometimes list ideologies as main enemies, namely, The Enemy. Najawin ☎ 20:48, 29 November 2023 (UTC)
- I really dont think the Enemy is comparable. The Enemy is described as a process, sure, but what that actually means isn't clear. Jack "BtR" Saxon ☎ 20:52, 29 November 2023 (UTC)
- Moreover, Snivy's suggestion as to why ideas aren't used as main enemies simply isn't applicable to this situation.
- "The form of the Enemy was constantly shifting."
- "Some theorised that the real War was against 'the archetypal concept of enmity itself'."
- Is it 1 to 1? No, of course not. I fully cede that. But I think it's more than sufficient precedent for this situation where we have something that isn't even a concept - it's a way of structuring an economy, and is explicitly stated to be the antagonist in the episode. Najawin ☎ 20:57, 29 November 2023 (UTC)
- The Doctor says that they're fighting the suits, a play on words referencing the term for a high-ranking executive. I can see an argument for Ganymede Systems being the main enemy, but capitalism itself? I strongly disagree.
- And the Enemy is a baddie around whom contradictory grandiose and mythological statements have been made. They can't be compared to an economic system. Jack "BtR" Saxon ☎ 21:36, 29 November 2023 (UTC)
The first argument only works if you ignore the very clause before it. Every worker everywhere is not fighting Ganymede Systems. You have to wholly decontextualize that statement from the rest of the Doctor's comment in order to make that reading work. He's very clearly talking about capitalism - he mentions it by name. Indeed, the closing section specifically states that the workers revolt brings down capitalism. The episode is incredibly clear on this point. Moffat explicitly mentions capitalism in his introduction to the episode. Per Mathieson: "The line I was really happy they kept was 'the end point of capitalism, the bottom line where human life has no value.' Which I really thought in away it’s too political but in a way it’s the point of the episode. The point of the episode is this is where it could end up if we’re not careful. And in a way it’s a dark fairytale and it’s fantastic but the idea of corporations going if we could get away with it, the people at the bottom of the food chain would be worth nothing." It is the explicit intent of the writer, the showrunner, and the episode itself tells us this.
You also are underplaying the weirdness of The Enemy in order to try to get around how much of a precedent it serves as. See the section on metafiction. The contradictions are part and parcel of the concept itself. Najawin ☎ 22:26, 29 November 2023 (UTC)
- I suppose the most fair way to approach it would be to list the company being driven by capitalism, Ganymede Systems, as the main enemy; their a group, so that fits, being driven by capitalist ideas, which I believe is what User:Najawin is advocating, and their the ons behind the smart suits, thus causing the episode conflict. BananaClownMan ☎ 06:38, 30 November 2023 (UTC)
- No this is not correct. I'm not suggesting that capitalist ideology is the main enemy, and, in fact, I explicitly deny this is a necessary reading of the episode above. Were this the case, yes, a group that held that ideology could perhaps be seen as a reasonable approximation. (If we were to completely discount the precedent of The Enemy.) I'm stating that capitalism, as a way of organizing an economy is the main enemy. These two things are not synonymous. You can have capitalist ideology in a non capitalist system, and you can have people who (ostensibly) lack capitalist ideology in a capitalist system. Suggesting that it's the company rather than the economic system is a reading that's directly at odds with the stated intent of the author, the showrunner, and the text of the episode. Najawin ☎ 07:04, 30 November 2023 (UTC)
- I don't agree. The capitalist system is the reason that the world of Oxygen is the way that it is, sure, but religion is responsible for the world of The Aztecs, social media for Like and Nazism for Just War. I think we need some more opinions. Jack "BtR" Saxon ☎ 13:08, 30 November 2023 (UTC)
- At the risk of tremendously missing the point, what's the precedent with The Enemy supposed to be? Is there a source which lists "The Enemy" as its main, er, enemy? 'cause they're certainly not the main enemy of The Book of the War. That novel's story is too scattershot and drenched in ambiguities to make out a clear "main antagonist" (or indeed main protagonist), but the Houses would have a better claim if anyone. For the most part the Enemy serve as a background element. The only stories I can think of in which some force identified as "the Enemy" are clearly the baddies are ones which posit a specific identity or representative which consequently has a better claim to appearing in the field than just "the Enemy".
- I do think at any rate that the equation is flawed, even with a fuller understanding of "the Enemy". The idea that one could literally endeavour to fight "capitalism" as distinct from fighting "capitalists" relies on certain philosophical assumptions which I don't think Oxygen actually gives us. It might make sense with something like the Enemy because the sources themselves embrace a reification of non-physical, non-local forces as things which somehow have an existence of their own that can be interacted with separately from their embodiments; loa, etc. If we had stories about characters who say they're fighting "the concept of enmity itself" in a non-fantastical sense where they're just tryng to materially stop people from antagonising one another, with no magic-realist suggestion that there's anything more to that campaign than meets the eye, then I don't think we would put "Enmity" in the |main_enemy field. Rosa makes a good thought experiment; I think even if we had quotes about the characters fighting "racism", it would be a false equivalence to treat that as synonymous with the magic-realist-type thing of "we're fighting a living idea on the conceptual plane".
- (This isn't to say that the Doctor & Co. aren't "fighting capitalism" in the vernacular sense; they certainly are. But I don't think that makes "the capitalist system itself, distinct from the fact that some people fight to preserve it" an "enemy" in the same sense as the Daleks might be the enemy in something. Given certain lines in The Dead Planet itself, I could certainly imagine Terry Nation saying in some interview that "really, the characters are fighting fear itself, xenophobia itself, the fear of the unknown; that's the real enemy, puppeteering the Daleks along", or something. But I don't think we would want to replace "Daleks" with "Xenophobia" in the |enemy= field of The Daleks even if such a quote were to be found, because it's not meant literally; it's an abstraction.) Scrooge MacDuck ⊕ 13:38, 30 November 2023 (UTC)
- Quite honestly, I'm puzzled as to why you keep comparing this episode to The Aztecs, Just War, Like or similar stories. The episode explicitly tells us that they're fighting capitalism and two relevant creatives say the same. There is no comparison. None. If someone knows of another story that satisfies those same conditions, we can have a discussion on whether people explicitly ignored the abstract enemies in it. But these stories can't be compared.
- Is there a source which lists "The Enemy" as its main, er, enemy? [...] The only stories I can think of in which some force identified as "the Enemy" are clearly the baddies are ones which posit a specific identity or representative which consequently has a better claim to appearing in the field than just "the Enemy".
- The Enemy - The Hole in Everything (short story). And that infobox is not mine, even if the summary is. Perhaps it's mistaken, but it's been there for almost 6 years.
- This isn't to say that the Doctor & Co. aren't "fighting capitalism" in the vernacular sense; they certainly are. But I don't think that makes "the capitalist system itself, distinct from the fact that some people fight to preserve it" an "enemy" in the same sense as the Daleks might be the enemy in something.
- But surely this is precisely what's under debate. It's not clear that there's precedent that this is needed. I brought up The Enemy merely to show that there is precedent that ideologies/concepts can be treated as main enemies, which was denied by Jack. I also denied that it was needed, because Talk:World Enough and Time (TV story) doesn't argue against all abstract main enemies, as you seem to be doing here, merely main enemies that are ideas. Which capitalism is not. Najawin ☎ 19:38, 30 November 2023 (UTC)
- Quite honestly, I'm puzzled as to why you keep comparing this episode to The Aztecs, Just War, Like or similar stories. The episode explicitly tells us that they're fighting capitalism and two relevant creatives say the same. There is no comparison. None. If someone knows of another story that satisfies those same conditions, we can have a discussion on whether people explicitly ignored the abstract enemies in it. But these stories can't be compared.