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SweetFreedom Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

Does "wrought" refer to the past participle of work?

Does "wrought" refer to the past participle of work?

Background info:

As appealing as it seems, Paley's argument cannot be the
whole story. To examine the complexity of life and our own ori-
gins on this planet, we must dig deep into the fascinating reve-
lations about the nature of living things wrought by the current
revolution in paleontology, molecular biology, and genomics. A
believer need not fear that this investigation will dethrone the
divine; if God is truly Almighty, He will hardly be threatened by
our puny efforts to understand the workings of His natural
world. And as seekers, we may well discover from science
many interesting answers to the question "How does life
work?" What we cannot discover, through science alone, are
the answers to the questions "Why is there life anyway?" and
"Why am I here?"

More see:
Dawkins The God Delusion
  

Top answer

SweetFreedom Does "wrought" refer to the past participle of work? No; it is now means 'made, caused, created'.

  • SweetFreedom Does "wrought" refer to the past participle of work?
  • No; it is now means 'made, caused, created'.
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1 Answers
0
SweetFreedomDoes "wrought" refer to the past participle of work?
No; it is now means 'made, caused, created'.

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