In response to the original post - Andreus Ixiris may indeed be an immortal, but he's an immortal human being. The nature of his existence may have changed, but his perspective hasn't. In fact, I'm a strong believer in the idea of powerful abnormality (having superpowers, being nano-augmented, being immortal, etc.) really just making you more like who you already are.
Becoming a capsuleer doesn't automatically change your perspective. You don't come into being as a capsuleer with an innate understanding of how to deal with never having to die and what that entails. Hell, the longest-running independent capsuleers in New Eden have been around just over ten years now. The vast majority of us haven't actually lived longer than normal human beings - we're just significantly more resistant to staying dead when people kill us - so no-one is at the stage where they can realistically claim to be thousands (or even hundreds) of years old. No-one has been able to develop the same perspective on life that D&D elves and dragons have (wait a decade or two and see if the problem is still there). In point of fact we've fit more life into a single ten-year span than most D&D elves can manage into their entire seven-hundred-year lives.
Ten years in New Eden has seen the rise and fall of hundreds of political figures and dozens of mighty empires, unlikely alliances, earth-shattering wars, murders, thefts, betrayals, oaths of revenge, sickening acts of evil and perversity, awe-inspiring acts of generosity and kindness, unbelievable feats of courage, skill or outright luck - and all of these things are so, so brilliantly human. More like gods than men? Fuck no, if anything I think we as capsuleers are priviledged to be given the opportunity to be more human than anyone walking around on a planet could ever hope to be until the advent of the DUST implant.