There is no doubt that human beings are the dominant species on Earth. The seven billion of us account for about one-third of the total body mass of large animals on the planet, with our domestic animals accounting for most of the rest. (Wild animals amount to only 3 to 5 per cent). But are we really central to the scheme of things? That is a different question.
Almost all the scientific discoveries of the past few centuries have moved human beings away from the centre of things towards the periphery. In the 16th century, we learned that Earth went around the Sun, not the other way round.
Then we realised that the Sun was just one more yellow star among a hundred billion others "far out in the uncharted backwaters of the unfashionable end of the western spiral arm of the galaxy", as Douglas Adams put it. And this is just one galaxy among hundreds of billions.
Then the geologists learned that our planet is four-and-a-half billion years old, whereas we primates have only been around for the past seven million years, and modern human beings for a mere 100,000 years. And so on and so forth, until we felt very small and insignificant. But now the story is heading back in the other direction; they're going to name an entire geological epoch after us. The Anthropocene.
Geologists want to see evidence in the rocks before they define an epoch, and it's early days for that yet, but it's clear that the fossil records for the present time will show a massive loss of forests, a very high rate of extinctions, and a preponderance of fossils of only a few species: us and our domesticated animals.