Linguofreak
Well-known member
The quark who believes that he is so special as to warrant a relationship with the human is not being humble.
This is where the analogy breaks down. A quark may warrant the interest of a human being because there is something special about that quark that warrants a good chunk of that human's limited processing power.
Humans warrant the interest of God not because they are extraordinarily special, but because God has enough processing power that nothing need be ignored. That's where the wonder comes in.
Also, take the example of an artist and a painting. The painting need not be the greatest or most special painting the artist has ever painted to warrant the artists attention. It is his painting, and it warrants his attention because he chose to paint it and chooses to give it attention. If it is a work in progress, it warrants his attention because it is the painting he is working on at the moment.
As humans, we are used to thinking of people who have something to offer us, or can take something from us, or have some special status that merits special favor as being the ones that deserve our attention. We tend to forget that sometimes even we turn our minds to the most unremarkable things for the purpose of simple amusement.