((It's the little things. You realize that you don't feel air currents on your face, or smell the chemical smell of the latrines or whatever they have onboard. With no metabolism, you have that much less to do. Waking and dreaming are that much less distinct. On its own, it won't cause insanity, but in a fragile person or on top of other factors, it could push them over the edge. And the HMRC has plenty of people close to the edge...))
((The thing is, since no real-world studies have been done on this kind of thing, we don't know if it would cause insanity on it's own. I would cautiously lean towards the idea that yes, it would. But once again, we really don't know.))
((I would post down a medical note, but it would take long. So I'll just say this: I've taken Psychology, and those kinds of things are relative to the person's philosophy before that current time. While the concept of 'being human' is also as relative, it has universal definitions...
And GWG isn't putting the correct details there. :p I'd rather take this to PMs if anyone is interested.))
((Well, of course they're relative, the question is how much, and what exactly they are. There's always going to be a small minority, a sizable minority, and a majority. The question is who is who. For my side, I wouldn't go insane or murderous per se, but I'm not sure I would be able to distinguish between imaginations and reality, since there isn't any real way to distinguish between them when being in a robot body.
Not sure that I see how it relates to the concept of 'being human'. I mean, I see how being in a robot body can raise questions about one's humanity. But were talking about what it means to the user, not how humanity will see him. And I don't think Grate put any details at all out there, correct or not.
And can't you just put it in a spoiler? If you really feel uncomfortable putting it here, the yes, please do pm me.))
Assuming that there are people who care about your psychological health enough to not let you fester in your malignant thoughts, and assuming no other issues, it should be simple enough to prevent the problems from happening. They're long-term ones, easily solved with a little bit of effort every day.))
((Don't be a jerk and assume that people don't. Because this rubbed off very badly for me.))
((Caring requires action, not caring does not require one. Therefore, it was correctly written.
We're not talking if you or any of our friends, or specific people, or whether a society at large will care. There are many situations where that won't happen, from HMRC to bad neighborhoods to failed states. Therefore, it should not be a foregone conclusion, and was written correctly.))