Option 1: (D), (C), (A), (B) -> Forms: "This amusing and well constructed satire centres on the figure of Aryabhatta's zero which is made to play a key role in the war of intellectual property rights" - grammatically correct and logical.
Option 2: (A), (C), (B), (D) -> Starts with "which" without an antecedent, making it grammatically incorrect.
Option 3: (B), (A), (D), (C) -> Begins with "of intellectual property rights" which creates a fragment, not a complete sentence.
Option 4: (C), (B), (D), (A) -> Starts with the verb "centres on" without a subject, making it grammatically incorrect.
Hence, Option 1: (D), (C), (A), (B) -> This arrangement correctly begins with the subject (D), follows with the main verb and object (C), and completes with a relative clause (A) and prepositional phrase (B), creating a coherent sentence about a satire focused on Aryabhatta's zero in the context of intellectual property rights -> correct