The film also argues that overreliance on science instead of one’s own intelligence could lead to the loss of one’s identity and soul. Gwillim was part of Professor Mather’s science experiment, but soon after the experiment he had lost his identity and wanted to “see [his] whole town utterly destroyed” Gwillim think that humans’ are “no more advanced than a monkey” and will never “become civilized for another million years” (The Sixth Finger). Gwillim has lost his humanity to satisfy his thirst for ultimate knowledge. He loses touch with humanity by declaring that they would never become civilized and he begins to see them as expendables. It is ironic how his hate for humanity grows as he learns more about mankind’s history and behavior. As Gwillim’s knowledge about mankind grew, he began to see them as a “race too prejudiced to tolerate any differences from its own kind” and he had no hope to prevent mankind from any further “struggles for petty comfort and false security” (The Sixth Finger). He