Savant

by Kokokoo
Any man can go and destroy knowledge and accomplishment. It takes a man of science to create it.

[size=30]Savant[/size]
[size=25]The Tale of the Lone Human[/size]

[size=20] Any man can go and destroy knowledge and accomplishment. It takes a man of science to create it.

People have a way of denying something that they can't understand. Something too different. Not familiar enough for them. Sometimes it needs to be dumbed down.[/size]




But the people have had enough of one man. He tried to dumb it down. Nothing could numb the blow that he gave the planet. He has proven everything they know to be wrong, everything they know and love dissolved into cold hard facts. He has taken the wonder and magical sense of curiosity from the world compressed it into numbers and equations. And the people have had enough. All the wonders that were created, all the innovations pioneered in his wake was cast aside in a flurry of vengeful disbelief as they sprinted toward the vile thing that dare change their world view. That man was denied. He was exiled from the world.

He was hated by everyone he knew and loved because he had shown the world what they were not ready to see. He had bestowed upon them what they could never attain by themselves. Knowledge, the metaphorical drums of progress and innovation. He established his own world, on an island in the middle of nowhere, only to be taken from it. His solitude and misery would continue no longer. There was a new land, and they were ready for the keeper of knowledge. The single, lone human, the wisest man that ever lived, that rocked Equestria off of its foundations and sparked a global revolution. He passed the torch, he gave them the drums. But they weren't just the drums of knowledge. They weren't the key to innovation. They were the drums of war and hatred and suffering. The war drums of what makes a human.

Story/Plot Advisor:
Proofreaders(s):

Teen
Incomplete
Adventure
Human
Dark
 

8756 words: Estimated 44 minutes to read

3 Chapters:

  1. Question 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC
    1620
  2. Hypothesis 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC
    2432
  3. Experiment 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC
    4704