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Knowledge, Memory, and Moral Intuition
A tension between empirical diagnostics and lived memory recurs: Data, Wesley, and tactical sensors offer precise, necessary facts about the rift and enemy presence, while Guinan’s unexpected interventions bring ethical, temporal, and historical perspective that the instruments cannot capture. The narrative posits that full moral appraisal requires both rigorous evidence and the corrective force of memory or intuition; when technical certainty is lacking, human (or near‑human) wisdom reshapes command choices.
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