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The Outer Limits (1995) :: The New Breed (01x17)
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Episode Information |
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| Title: | The New Breed |
| Episode #: | 01x17 |
| Original Airdate: | Wednesday July 05th, 1995 |
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Episode Summary |
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Richard Ledbetter’s nanomachines offer the promise of perfect health. So when a man is diagnosed with a terrible disease he steals into Ledbetter’s laboratory and injects himself with the tiny machines. And they cure him! Then he discovers that the cure comes with a price tag and implores Ledbetter to remove the machines.
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Guest Stars |
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Main Cast |
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Episode Quotes |
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Richard Ledbetter: Let’s just say… God created a flawed man. I think I can do better! | Dr. Andy Groening: Do the X-Rays show anything?
Dr. Katzman: I believe we’ve located the source of your back pain.
Dr. Andy Groening: What is it, a pulled muscle?
Dr. Katzman: I’m afraid it’s not that easy. The tests indicate a mass in your pelvic region.
Dr. Andy Groening: What kind of mass?
Dr. Katzman: Osteosarcoma.
Dr. Andy Groening: Cancer.
Dr. Katzman: I’m sorry.
| (After healing from a serious knife wound in seconds.)
Dr. Andy Groening: They won’t let me die. It’s ironic, isn’t it? Two weeks ago, I would have sold my soul for a new lease on life. And it appears that’s exactly what I have. Now I’m desperate to die and I can’t. | Control Voice: (closing narration) Over millions of years man has become the very paragon of animals. But we must take care not to alter what nature has taken so long to forge, or risk being burned by the very fires of creation. | Control Voice: (opening narration) Man has long worked to stave off the disease that can ravage us. But what can happen when the cure grows more fearsome than the disease? |
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Analysis |
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Ledbetter tells the audience at the beginning of the episode that his machines can repair malfunctioning cells. Human science is nowhere near this level of understanding of cellular function; the mechanics of cellular activity are enormously complex. Putting that aside, the machines later make unprogrammed physiological changes to their host in response to external events such as injuries and stresses. Still later, they make modifications (such as gills) that could not have been programmed because they were never part of human physiology. Either Ledbetter programmed them with various sorts of animal physiologies - dangerous, to say the least - or they demonstrated an emergent property of collective intelligence and deduced how to counter the stresses that challenged their host. They're either much smarter than even Ledbetter realized when he claimed he could improve on God, or the premise of the episode is fundamentally flawed and this commentary belongs in 'Goofs' instead. I leave it to the reader to decide which explanation he prefers. |
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