Victor E Pearce in "Who was Adam?" (Paternoster, 1969) also advocated a Neolithic Adam. The idea of Preadamites had a long history, going back at least to the 19th century.
Jon
bivalve wrote:
> >First of all, I think you, Armin Held, and I are the only ones in the entire 20th century to have written of Adam as an insertion into the human race, not at the apex of it.<
>
> The idea of a relatively late Adam, subsequent to the appearance of modern behaviors, is also advocated by Kidner in the Tyndale series commentary on Genesis (InterVarsity Press).
>
> Dr. David Campbell
> Old Seashells
> University of Alabama
> Biodiversity & Systematics
> Dept. Biological Sciences
> Box 870345
> Tuscaloosa, AL 35487 USA
> bivalve@mail.davidson.alumlink.com
>
> That is Uncle Joe, taken in the masonic regalia of a Grand Exalted Periwinkle of the Mystic Order of Whelks-P.G. Wodehouse, Romance at Droigate Spa
>
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