Human beings are extraordinarily different compared to the natural world. So different, it almost seems as though we did not evolve from present-day life forms. This uniqueness has nothing to do with intelligence, as most would believe. Human uniqueness comes from the fact that sexual dimorphism was pushed in one direction as part of our early evolution. In other words, humanity represents an extreme or prodigious female push away from the savage natural world. It was a clever response by nature to win a life and death competition against other hominids 50,000 years ago.
While this idea or hypothesis might sound absurd at first, if you look at specific patterns in nature, life, and the entirety of human evolution, this hypothesis is easily provable.
The problem that presents itself today is that humanity is quickly losing their prodigy. Nature is pushing humanity back to the natural world.
Ryan, a man secretly obsessed with nature, evolution, and life, is convinced that humanity is not unique because of intelligence but because of empathy. He believes this sole trait gave birth to love, language, socialness, and consciousness. He’s also convinced that humanity is collectively losing this trait, thinks he can prove it, and ultimately wants to save it.
Follow Ryan as he reveals his obsession to his friend Jessica and tries to convince her to help him save empathy, love, and socialness in the human race. He takes her on a path of discovering how nature and life work. He shows her how humans evolved to become so unique, and if they want to stay this way, they must recognize specific patterns in nature and collectively act on this information. Join in their journey as they reveal the inner workings of nature and challenge Darwinian theory. In the end, it comes down to Jessica and her decision to save the the entire human race.