Theemile wrote:I'm with TLB on this one, Beowulfs's "open society" would have stifled Allison. She would have become another cookie cutter cog in the massive machine at Beowulf - and important one, yes, but still a part of the machinery.
Instead she set herself to be independent - she was the one who moved her clinic to Grayson, who looked at the problems and she was the one who fixed them. Beowulf never would have looked into that - they focus was too close. She blazed her own path, and was more successful than could be otherwise.
Let me try this again.
I understand why you side with tlb. I side with him on this as well, for the most part. However, my point still stands, but
I shall attempt to make that point clearer.
But first. There is no question that Allison made the right decision. For herself.
"Above all one must remain true to thine self."
I am sure her mother has come to accept that as well. I agree that if she had remained on Beowulf, she would have felt stifled. Of course she would have felt that way. She did not want to be there. My parents always stressed an education. "An education will afford you the opportunity of seeking and accepting a career that you
like instead of seeking and accepting a career or job that you
need." It is the same notion of being successful enough to be able to marry for love, and not for money. There is nothing better than liking the career or job or marriage that you have. Your performance will be unmatched when you are happy.
BUT! "IF" Allison
had wanted to remain on Beowulf and follow the path her mother had hoped for her, the field as a whole would have been much better off. The sort of things the Beowulf establishment tackles are of paramount importance to the whole of mankind. For lack of a better example, I would equate the problems Beowulf routinely tackles with the fifteen original Millennium problems of the mathematics world.
Seven remain unsolved.
Her mother's reaction, though severe, had merit. Essentially Allison went to work in a local clinic compared to what was laid out for her. Clinics need good doctors too. The poor deserve good medical treatment as well. As does poor countries. That whole notion is what fuels the concept of "Doctors without borders." But the truth of the matter is that Allison will not be tackling
mankind's biggest problems. There is no doubt that Allison is one of the galaxy's best geneticists, and for that reason alone I am not surprised in the very least that she solved Grayson's problem and that she was able to assure Emily a child that
would regenerate. But at the risk of sharpened pitchforks again, I always felt those accomplishments should have been child's play for any
good geneticist; which didn't need the big guns represented by Allison.
So, to sum this up and to speak for Allison's mother, imagine the Millennium problems of the geneticist's world that would have been solved by Allison, had she wanted to remain on Beowulf, and had. Those problems remain unsolved.