Option 1 -> (A), (B), (C), (D) - Starting with "to inventions" doesn't form a proper sentence opening.
Option 2 -> (A), (C), (B), (D) - Beginning with "to inventions and at other times to destruction" lacks a subject and incomplete structure.
Option 3 -> (B), (A), (D), (C) - "Ethical conundrums experienced by human beings to inventions..." creates a grammatically incorrect flow.
Option 4 -> (C), (B), (D), (A) - Forms a complete, meaningful sentence: "Fascination for abominations is one of the ethical conundrums experienced by human beings since their origin, which sometimes leads them to inventions and at other times to destruction."
Hence, Option 4: (C), (B), (D), (A) -> This arrangement creates a grammatically correct and logically coherent sentence where (C) provides the subject, (B) completes the noun phrase, (D) adds temporal context, and (A) concludes with the consequences -> correct