When you fall unconscious, your perception of the passage of time ceases, a.k.a. reduced awareness. From the moment you close your eyes to the moment you wake up, any amount of time could pass, since your brain is not registering anything in this interim. This amount of time could be minutes, hours, days, years, and all of it feels like only a brief moment. This is why people get surprised when "just 5 more minutes" of sleep becomes an hour. This is also why coma patients go into a panic and develop traumas when they finally wake up - to them, a whole decade felt like ten seconds. It's hard to come back from that as a sane human being.I understand what her father is trying to do, but what is the point of giving the girl memories that are not her own? What if it takes years for her to wake up? All those people she (or rather, the robots) met will have moved on with their lives...
But she is frozen in time, retaining her original age. She is not aging up, so i don't see how it would benefit her... Shouldn't he just let her wake up and live her life from there?When you fall unconscious, your perception of the passage of time ceases, a.k.a. reduced awareness. From the moment you close your eyes to the moment you wake up, any amount of time could pass, since your brain is not registering anything in this interim. This amount of time could be minutes, hours, days, years, and all of it feels like only a brief moment. This is why people get surprised when "just 5 more minutes" of sleep become an hour. This is also why coma patients go into a panic and develop traumas when they finally wake up - to them, a whole decade felt like ten seconds. It's hard to come back from that as a sane human being.
The CEO's plan is actually very impressive, and so is the technology used for it. He's essentially granting formative memories (which are invaluable to human beings) to his daughter so that she will grow up healthy. Having continued memories from her growing years and the people she knew when she was awake instead of an empty void between childhood and adulthood might just save her from a lifetime of psychiatric help and hospital visits.
Idk. The main story always felt like a means to an end - the romance played second fiddle to philosophy. From the start, this manga has been super heady regarding the philosophy of human-machine relationships, the ethical questions related to the social integration of machines, and the breadth and meaning of human-machine interactions. This seriously feels like a textbook for human-machine ethics in manga form.I really don't know why this wasn't a side story, this manga was supposed to be about a guy married to a robot, not a high school robot club or random robot relationships.
Time is still passing. She could wake up to a completely different world and zeitgeist. People she cares for will continue to age, and they could move/pass away in that time as well. It's lost time all the same, so her father is making up for it.But she is frozen in time, retaining her original age. She is not aging up, so i don't see how it would benefit her... Shouldn't he just let her wake up and live her life from there?
didnt even bother to read the whole chapter(no offense scanlator san, youre pog) but, is author san asking for this series to get axed sooner?
Why is there 2 of them now ?
I see what you mean, but romance/slice of life mangas out there manage to explore so many different situations and emotions in several chapters... this manga, that focuses on a new perspective that brings new possibilites, should still be able to portray many different and interesting situations with the main couple.Idk. The main story always felt like a means to an end - the romance played second fiddle to philosophy. From the start, this manga has been super heady regarding the philosophy of human-machine relationships, the ethical questions related to the social integration of machines, and the breadth and meaning of human-machine interactions. This seriously feels like a textbook for human-machine ethics in manga form.
Point being that the author has covered practically all the ground he can using the initial relationship. They've gone from cohabitation to romance to marriage to having children, and even exploring miscellaneous situations like handling stray robots. They explored a lot of the basics of living in a society with socially integrated machines.
It's not like the shift away from them came out of nowhere. There's just not many ideas left for them to explore. I'm sure we'll revisit them often, but I suspect that most of the real narrative meat rests with characters who are in different circumstances.
Can the people that are complaining just leave already? The author wants to make more than just the main couple, if you dont like it, go away, this manga is about robots and the questions that living and loving them brings to the table, if you dont like it, go read something else, you wont be missed.
I see what you mean, but romance/slice of life mangas out there manage to explore so many different situations and emotions in several chapters... this manga, that focuses on a new perspective that brings new possibilites, should still be able to portray many different and interesting situations with the main couple.
I don't know if the author's intention was ALWAYS to focus more on the world itself than on the main couple, but if his intention was to make a romance manga, i feel like he started to rush things way too fast.
Yes exactly. It's not like we only had a couple of chapters at first portraying the lives of Mina and the MC... no, many of the chapters focused on them; hell, the name of the manga implies that it is the main point of the series, so i totally agree that it feels like bait and switch.My issue is that if the author wanted to go into a wider array of characters, this should've been an anthology/group series from the start. Instead it was like 30 chapters of mostly Takuma/Mina/Mamorou and then in the last 12 chapters it's increasingly shifted to the high school robot club. It probably also shouldn't have been titled "my wife has no emotions" which obviously places Takuma and Mina as the central characters.
I don't fault the author for having grander ideas than a small-cast slice of life series, but doing it this way is a bait-and-switch. Bring people in for the light philosophical SOL home-life rom-com, then once they're hooked switch it up to high school kids having intro-to-philosophy level debates about AI ethics, the nature of consciousness, and the definition of life. It's like if you started reading a shonen battle manga and then after 50 chapters it turned into a domestic cooking comedy and just stayed that way.
I don't know what his intention was per se, but it's just a feeling I've had. He always spent more time exploring the ethics side of stuff and the philosophy stuff than the romance stuff - even with the titular couple. You're right that there's plenty of minutiae they could explore, but most of the big issues have been tackled by them, I feel.I see what you mean, but romance/slice of life mangas out there manage to explore so many different situations and emotions in several chapters... this manga, that focuses on a new perspective that brings new possibilites, should still be able to portray many different and interesting situations with the main couple.
I don't know if the author's intention was ALWAYS to focus more on the world itself than on the main couple, but if his intention was to make a romance manga, i feel like he started to rush things way too fast.
Yeah i agree. My main point of complaint here is that the story was initially sold to the audience as being focused on the main couple (the title and the vast majority of the initial chapters), so it is understandable that people feel frustrated when that point is put on hold so often and for so long. If the story tried to diversify its content to encompass human-robot relationships in general ever since the beggining, including having a different title to sell that idea, it wouldn't feel like bait-and-switch.I don't know what his intention was per se, but it's just a feeling I've had. He always spent more time exploring the ethics side of stuff and the philosophy stuff than the romance stuff - even with the titular couple. You're right that there's plenty of minutiae they could explore, but most of the big issues have been tackled by them, I feel.
Look at this chapter. A big part of the ridiculousness that you and others feel is because this is a particularly hamfisted attempt at fitting a philosophical and ethical quandary into the story. Restated without the storytelling trappings, the question is: "is it okay to have a robot record memories for and live in place of somebody else?" It's an interesting ethical quandary, but it's very hard to build a grounded story around it.
That's obviously something the author wanted to explore, but it's not something he could explore with the main characters. I don't think this was the best chapter but I've read worse stuff. It still has some thematic continuity because the focus is on love between humans and machines, but the thematic continuity is all that it has.
Maybe I'm wrong about the direction of where this is headed. But if I'm not, I think the author's biggest mistake wasn't the direction or anything he's actually written. It would be the title. If the goal is to explore ethics and machine human relations first and the romance of these two characters second, then he should have tried to attract an audience that was interested in the primary focus, instead of people who were interested in the secondary focus (the romance). But I'm willing to give the author the benefit of the doubt and guess that the publisher probably wanted him to work the romantic angle. There's a larger audience for that. But it does set the audience up for disappointment when the story they signed up for isn't really there.
IDK. We'll see what happens.
Page 1 I didn't catch that and it was most definitely rendered incorrectly due to a bug on photoshop, because it did say "how" on the layer text but somehow the h went missing. FixedIs it me or translation is kinda bad?
Page 1: missing "H" in "How".
Page 6: "Well-born girls don't know that their heads can be taken off" - right after her head falls off. Maybe she wanted to say, that they do actually "know"?
Page 7: "It's life threatening for a reason, and modern medical technology can't seem to help." - sounds like some assassination attempt, lol. "Her condition is life threatening, and modern medical technology can't seem to help." makes more sense.
Page 9: First of all, it's not "end of the school year", but "end of the school day", right? And the second text box should probably say something like "In the morning, they would overwrite robot's memory with Shiratorii's..."
Page 22: "So hard for you to leave school with me" - ?
Page 27: Girlfriend Shiratorii's lines sound really weird. "It's too late", "you want me to be all kinds of fun"