Vernor Vinge's A Fire Upon the Deep has a number of viewpoint characters who can be considered hiveminds. A Tine pack has 4-6 members who share a single consciousness. The effects of having that many bodies are explored. They interact with humans in the story and find them peculiar, but basically the same.SWPIGWANG wrote: Truely alien intelligence. No more bugs or human with weird forheads. It would be fun to see humans though the eyes of a intelligent hive mind for once, though original ideas would be better. It would also be fun to learn about non-human emotions and motivation that is completely alien to us. How have them debate philosophy with discordians for fun.
The Skroderiders in the same book are certainly not the same old humanoids or space bugs. They're potted plants in super wheelchairs.
I can't think of any truely weird psychologies that get seriously explored. Cherryh's Atevi lack the concept of friendship, but that doesn't seem enough. A serious problem exists in this field, in that a truely unorthodox thought process is difficult to process for normal minds. It's even harder to come up with them. It's like thinking outside the box when your whole world's a box. You can't come up with a completely alien thought or else it wouldn't be alien. If you could pull it off it certainly would be a trip, though.