If holograms like the Doctor are simply holodeck-like projections of software running on the Voyager computers, and they've got enough spare processing power (which they should for basic tasks since they've got a holodeck...) That's certainly how they're usually portrayed, but then with loads of contradictory evidence that is never explained.pilight wrote: ↑Sun Aug 29, 2021 3:17 amThere's no good reason the computer couldn't generate multiple doctors if the situation required it other than the general nonsense of the Voyager writers.the Doctor, who, as competent as he is, is only one person
It's surprising that no one ever considered programming a holographic nurse to assist the Doctor. For that matter, it's awfully coincidental that all the actual nurses assigned to assist the original ship's surgeon were apparently killed when he was. It's also a bit odd that the Val Jean didn't at least have someone trained as a field medic.
I came up with the idea that a sophisiticated hologram might not quite work that way. If the same technology was used to simulate a clock (consider a purely mechanical one for ease of the example, although it works with any) then the projection might be of the wheels and springs and pendulum and escapement, subjected to the normal forces of nature. There's nothing specifically simulating "clock", e.g. nothing saying "pendulum swings this far, gear advances once a second" and so on, it's just what you get from all the components. If an intelligent hologram works in a similar manner it might go some way to explain some of the inconsistencies, and difficulty in creating new ones (although not the duplication issues we get where he's sent somewhere else so can't be on Voyager).