So what happen to the dinosaurs and other organisms that are now extinct? Animal life today is obviously not identical to what it was in the distant past. Why has biological natures significantly changed in its form over time during the history of life on this planet?
I am not denying the value of human-beings. I’m just saying that the idea of animal life being static in its form and not evolving is not consistent with what science has discovered. Why should I distrust empirical science?
You may be reading things into what I said that I did not intend. Always glad to act as someone’s foil, I still don’t like being misunderstood.
They all, dinosaurs and their avian descendants, have animal souls which make them who they are individually.
There is a big difference being a rock (sit with one sometime) and being a plant.
There is a huge difference between an animal and a human being, however infirm that person may be.
I do not know how God created man, but create him from the dust, He did. And, from one man, we have all arisen and fallen, and through one man who is God, we are saved.
In a previous Hindu/Buddhist mind set, I would have imagined something like a life-force seeking perfection from a ground of matter, organizing itself through successive forms into mankind who could then awaken to its true Divine nature. I wrongly interpreted my coming into being as an evolutionary process. The person is radically different from primates. We are eternal as ourselves. We have a spiritual soul which makes us different from the life around us, and with whom we share a physical nature.
I don’t understand what you are arguing against. I most likely would share your view.
As to distrusting empirical science, that one disagrees with modern, eventually to be supplanted views and interpretations, is to not to lack faith in a method which should not be taken beyond its limitations.