Hive Mind: Difference between revisions

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* ''[[The Midwich Cuckoos]]'', which was adapted onto film twice as ''[[Village of the Damned]]''. The alien "Children" (30 boys and 30 girls) have two distinct group minds. They protect themselves (and cause havoc along the way), both use telepathy to control others' actions, organs, and other parts of the body.
* The cho-ja from Raymond E. Feist's ''[[The Riftwar Cycle|Empire Trilogy]]'' share conciousness amongst the [[Hive Queen|hive queens]] who have reached maturity.
* In the [[Star Trek Novel Verse]], the Tholians are part way there. While all individuals (and indeed possessing just as many dreamers, dissenters, seditionists and individualists as any other Trek culture), they have a version of this on the instinctive level. The Tholian lattice connects the minds of all Tholians, distributing basic race-knowledge to all and allowing individuals to commune with one another. The lattice is regulated carefully, with different castes having different degrees of access. On occasion, it can indeed cause the entirety of the Tholian race to share an experience, as was the case with the telepathic assaults of the Shedai. See [[Star Trek: Vanguard]] and [[Star Trek: theThe Lost Era]] in particular.
* As a result of their [[Bond Creatures|mental bond]], [[Inheritance Cycle|Eragon and Saphira]] share a consciousness.
* D'ivers of the ''[[Malazan Book of the Fallen]]'' are [[Voluntary Shapeshifting|shapeshifters]] who transform into a multitude of creatures, but maintain a single mind. This can be anything from a dozen to literally thousands of individual bodies, and so long as one survives so does the D'ivers.