Using these four letters, design something meaningful: D-R-W-O.
DROW? DORW? ORDW? ROWD? RODW? WODR? WORD?
Make any sense to you . . . ?
Well, the arrangement at the end does: WORD.
Yeah, that works. An arrangement that has meaning. That’s what we’re looking for.
So we find: At the end of our search for meaning . . . WORD
In the beginning, the letters were wordless and void of meaning, and meaninglessness was over the surface of the screen.
And then . . . Let there be WORD, and there it was . . . a WORD.
And it was good, an improvement beyond what we had before WORD popped up; we separated the WORD from sound and gibberish signifying nothing. When I saw it, it was a little bit like a light going on in my head.
But I’m an amateur at this sort of thing. For a more informed view, check out Stephen Meyer’s explanation:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eW6egHV6jAw
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