Humanised Daleks

The Humanised Daleks were a renegade faction of Daleks who the Second Doctor had 'created' by implanting them with the Human Factor; the essence of what distinguished humanity from other species. They first appeared in the Doctor Who TV episode Evil of the Daleks (of which only the 2nd episode of the 7 episode serial still exists).

The implantation initially regressed the Daleks to a child-like state, although the Second Doctor explained that they would 'grow up' within a few hours. The most notable difference is that the Humanised Daleks possessed a greater range of emotions (pure Daleks mostly been devoid of emotions and only able to comprehend them) and a tendency to question orders rather then automatically obeying.

The Humanised Daleks ended up being the cause of a civil war on Skaro, in which they initially appeared to win as they overcame the pure Dalek's resistance and attacked the Dalek Emperor. However, they were eventually defeated by the pure Daleks and presumably wiped out, although a small number managed to escape during the civil war and created an underwater colony on the planet Kyrol.

Origins
As part of one of their plans to conquer Earth and later the Universe, the Daleks planned to use the Doctor to discover the Human Factor; the essence of what distinguished humanity from other species. The purpose of this was for the Daleks to use what he found to locate the Dalek Factor and spread it across Earth's history; essentially 'converting' humanity into obedient slaves that the Daleks could use. In order to accomplish this, they set up a base on Earth in the 19th century, where the experiments of two men - Theodore Maxtible and Edward Waterfield - had been researching time travel with a chamber or mirrors and static electricity, which allowed the Daleks entry. They forced Edward to obey them by kidnapping his daughter Victoria and gaining Maxtible's alliance by promising to show him how to transmute base metals into gold.

The Daleks located the Doctor's TARDIS as the Doctor and his companion Jamie were saying goodbye to his companions Ben and Polly had it stolen. The Daleks eventually revealed themselves to the Doctor - threatening to destroy his TARDIS if he didn't help them discover the Human Factor by using Jamie as a guinea pig in a series of tests, although Edward fears that doing so would allow them to breed a race of 'Super-Daleks'. With no choice, the Doctor is forced to comply - extracting the Human Factor by forcing Jamie to rescue Victoria. The plan works, with the Doctor monitoring the process and recording several emotions including instinct, courage, mercy and self-preservation. He then proceeds to imprint them into positronic brains before implanting the Human Factor into three test Daleks. Jamie is not impressed with how the Doctor is collaborating the Daleks and how he used Jamie as a guinea pig for the experiment - even threatening to leave the Doctor due to having lost his faith in the Time Lord. However, his attitude changes when the test Daleks are activated.

After been implanted with the Human Factor and activated, the three Daleks are revealed to have become similar to human children - taking the Doctor for a ride on their fenders, playing trains with each other and spinning around with the Doctor; displaying a sense of humour as when the Doctor says he is getting dizzy from the spinning, they playfully call out "Dizzy Doctor!". Jamie questions the Doctor on the humanised Dalek's intelligence, with the Doctor explaining that while the Daleks currently have a child-like mindset, they will 'grow up' in a matter of hours. Calling them to him, the Doctor introduces himself and Jamie to the humanised Daleks - stating to them that they are all friends before naming the trio Alpha, Beta and Omega as well as writing their names as a symbol on their domes. After happily chanting their names, the humanised Daleks respond to an orded to return to Skaro, with the Doctor and Jamie been forced to follow due to the Daleks putting a bomb in Maxtible's house.

Civil War and Aftermath
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End of the Humanised Daleks
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Similar instances of 'Humanised' Daleks
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