Social Biomimicry is a written thesis setting out do discover if looking to nature can inspire our social challenges. It asks why other species recover from major stressors like predation, while humans often fail to recover and suffer from diseases like heart-disease and depressions. It is an exploration of different types of stressors, stress-responses and how to recover. All accompanied by examples from other species including our closest relatives and how they deal with personal and interpersonal challenges. We will see that looking to other species will teach us about ourselves as humans and discover that surprisingly we are not so different after all. It presents the potential for Social Biomimicry to inform education and therapy through practical experiments. The conclusion is an encouragement to create conditions conducive to life for the next generations, even though it might not suit us right here and now.
Biomimicry have been successful in many technical fields, will it have the potential to go beyond?