> Thoese notions seem to be collectively guided by the uniqueness-of-man
> perspective, and man-as-the-ultimate-objective of Creation understanding
> (all referenced to humans as we know them). But there are some who would
> suggest that these notions may ultimately be as quaint as geocentrism and
> flat earth, noting for example that we humans don't seem to be at the center
> of the known universe as would seem to be consonant with this
> creational-objective perspective.
As George might point out, the ultimate objective of creation is Jesus
rather than Adam. All organisms and things being part of the
objective of creation is a somewhat intermediate alternative. Humans
are unique, but so are everything else.
-- Dr. David Campbell 425 Scientific Collections University of Alabama "I think of my happy condition, surrounded by acres of clams" To unsubscribe, send a message to majordomo@calvin.edu with "unsubscribe asa" (no quotes) as the body of the message.Received on Thu Jul 16 13:50:34 2009
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