» Tue May 08, 2012 8:41 am
I think the state of the Lich after raising from the dead is entirely based on the skill and compentency of the necromancer. In a few books and quests regarding this, most necromancers never achieve it or fail horribly during their attempt and die because much like creating life Frankenstien style is a huge secret. From what I have gathered the difference between normal undead and a lich, is that the lich retains it's concious awareness, where normal undead skeletons and zombies are just mindless creatures consumed by some basic and primal emotion like rage unless they are controlled by a skilled necromancer. In most fantasy games including Elder Scrolls the act of turning yourself into a lich requires you to temporarly or sometimes permenantly store your concious mind and power into a phylactry, which usually works like a special soul gem in the sense that a soul gem is a prison for a soul but a phylactry allows the soul inside to still interact with the world. Such a device would be incredibly difficult to create not to mention you do not get to test it, so you either pass or fail with your life on the line.
In Oblivion there was a necromancer who was using a special hourglass device to slowly seperate his mind and power from his body, and the simple act of removing the item from him would kill him as he was split between the two.
In Skyrim there is a Lich who used a stone basin and his own blood in an attempt, not to mention there is plenty of little quests and stories through out elder scrolls of necromancer's who have failed attempting it and become nothing more then a
mindless skeletal mage afterall, the concious mind is all that seperates a skeletal mage and a Lich. A large portion of the Oblivion Mage's guild revolves around this very study, as well as a few side quests.
In some of those quests it is suggested that much like medical sceince requires a great deal of hand's on work with dead to understand how things work, so does necromancy, and it is suggested that the very act of commiting yourself to a long
and obsessive life of studying the dead can lead someone to become, troubled mentally or in some cases completely insane. Which could be argued that could happen for many reasons, the very slightly error in the transferance process could of
resulted in the necromancer losing vital parts of their concious mind, rendering them insane, or the years of dealing with the dead while hiding in a cave or crypt out of fear would lead to a pyschosis, or the regret at having lost things they did not think they
would miss like, feel of skin, taste of food, wind in your hair could lead someone to become violently aggressive towards the living because they would see them as a reminder for everything they can no longer have that generally makes a person happy.
There is pleny of Lich's in Elder Scrolls who have proven that the transformation is entirely possible to achieve without going entirely insane. Mannimarco was apparently a power mad wizard before, and Lichdom was just a means to an end to ensure he would
have many thousand's of years to obtain more power, where as some Lich's have done it out of fear of death such as the necromancer in Oblivion who used a special hourglass. So no matter what the drive the risks involved according to every account I have come across is basicly like rolling the dice with a 1 in 1,000 chance of getting it right, and more study and preperation will help lower those odds, but there is no garuntee and that is part of secret of eternal life.
Also I would like to add about black and white souls. I have seen quite a few oddities in the creatures of Elder Scrolls regadring soul color, for instance the Falmer were once like any other elven race, yet they have white souls like an animal.
Giants are sentient beings with many resembalances to elves but they too are white souls, so what makes the 'people' races have black souls?