Before the argument. Before the evidence. Before the first word of the debate was spoken — there was the symbol. The ability to make one. The ability to read one. The absolute requirement, baked into both acts, of a mind behind the mark. This is not a philosophical position. It is a fact about how symbols work. Follow it to the end.
I. What a Symbol Is — Exactly
A symbol is not an icon. Not a picture. Not a sound. A symbol is any mark, gesture, or signal that carries meaning not contained in itself. This is the technical definition and it is the explosive one.
The dollar sign does not look like money. The word water is not wet. A red traffic light emits no force that stops a car. The cross is two pieces of wood at right angles — a shape that occurs in every set of window frames in every building on Earth, yet somehow carries two thousand years of concentrated meaning that no other intersection of perpendicular lines has ever carried.
The meaning is not in the mark. It is assigned to it. That assignment — that act of designation — requires an assigner. It requires a mind that can hold the mark in one hand and the meaning in the other and declare: these two things are now connected. Not by chemistry. Not by physics. By intention.
The argument in full
SymbolIf the universe contains symbols — marks that carry meaning beyond their physical properties — then the universe contains something matter cannot produce alone. The universe contains symbols. Therefore the universe contains something matter cannot produce alone. That something has a name.
II. Origin — Where Symbols Come From
The secular answer is unsatisfying not because it is wrong but because it stops too early. Symbols, on the materialist account, emerged from evolving hominid brains capable of associative cognition — the capacity to link a mark with a referent and share that link with other minds. The emergence is dated approximately 70,000–100,000 years ago, coinciding with what archaeologists call the cognitive revolution: the sudden appearance of abstract art, burial ritual, long-distance trade in non-functional objects, and — critically — language.
III. The Arbitrariness Argument — Why This Closes the Case
Here is the argument Saussure handed to theology without knowing it. The connection between a symbol and its meaning is arbitrary — meaning it is not determined by the physical properties of either. You cannot look at the shape of a dollar sign and derive its purchasing power. You cannot look at the molecular structure of ink and derive the sentence it forms. The gap between mark and meaning is real, non-physical, and irreducible.
That gap can only be bridged by a mind. Not by time. Not by selection pressure. Not by complexity. Evolution can select for the capacity to use symbols. It cannot produce the convention that makes a given mark mean a given thing. The convention requires agents who agree to it. Agreement requires minds that can hold intention. Intention is not a physical property. It does not appear in the periodic table.
Marks. Patterns. Repetition. Complexity. Chemistry can produce crystals with regular lattice structures. Physics can produce standing wave patterns in sand. Neuroscience can produce correlated brain states. None of these are symbols. A crystal does not mean anything. A wave pattern in sand does not stand for anything. A correlated brain state, by itself, designates nothing outside itself.
A sender who intends the mark to carry meaning. A receiver capable of recognizing the convention. A shared framework — a code — in which the assignment holds. All three are mind-dependent. Remove the minds and the marks remain — but the symbols evaporate. The ink survives. The meaning does not. Meaning is not a physical residue. It is a relational act.
IV. Types of Symbols — A Working Taxonomy
Not all symbols work the same way. The taxonomy matters because each type demonstrates a different depth of the same underlying requirement: a mind that assigns, and a mind that receives.
The mark resembles its referent. A photograph. A map. A cave painting of a bison. Even here, the resemblance is selected and framed — no photograph is reality, only a chosen slice of it. Iconic symbols require a mind to choose what to represent and how.
Examples: Cave art · Emoji · Architectural blueprints · Anatomical diagramsThe mark has a physical connection to its referent. Smoke → fire. Footprint → animal. These approach the boundary of pure symbol — but only a mind interprets them as signs. Smoke is smoke; only a cognitive agent converts it into information.
Examples: Smoke signal · Animal tracks · Fever as disease indicator · Traffic accidentsThe mark has zero physical connection to its referent. The dollar sign does not look like purchasing power. The word "God" in English and "Dieu" in French are acoustically unrelated but designate the same concept. Pure convention. Requires the most cognitive infrastructure of all symbol types.
Examples: All alphabetic letters · Currency symbols · Mathematical operators · Traffic lights · National flagsThe mark carries meaning that exceeds its physical form and exceeds its cultural convention. It points to something outside the symbol system entirely. The cross. The menorah. The crescent. These are not explained by arbitrariness alone — they claim to be grounded in events and realities that transcend the agreement.
Examples: The Cross · The Star of David · The Chi-Rho · The Ichthys · OMThe most profound and least appreciated class. DNA is a four-letter symbol system (A, T, G, C) in which triplet codons designate specific amino acids — a designation with no chemical necessity. The codon does not attract its amino acid; it is recognized by a transfer RNA that was itself encoded. A symbol system encoding a symbol system.
Examples: DNA codons · mRNA transcription · Protein folding instructions · tRNA anticodon recognitionMeaning carried by body movement or spatial position — no marks required. A raised right hand meaning "stop." A nod meaning agreement. A shrug meaning uncertainty. A hand raised to the left shoulder at a festival meaning "this man needs a water." Gestural symbols disappear completely without the mind behind them.
Examples: Sign language · Referee signals · Conductor gestures · Military hand signals · Festival team codesV. Complexity Is Not Development Time
There is a persistent assumption embedded in evolutionary accounts of language and symbolism: that the complexity of a code implies a proportional duration of development. The assumption is false. And it is easiest to demonstrate with a story from a festival in downtown Denver.
Capitol Hill People's Fair — CHUN — first week of June, downtown Denver. Three hundred thousand of our closest friends arriving simultaneously in a space the size of a few city blocks. A team. A sign. A system that took approximately ninety seconds to establish. And which has never needed re-explaining.
| Signal | Meaning | Condition / Context |
|---|---|---|
| Right hand → left shoulder | I need a water. Bring one. | Sender has no drink in hand |
| Right hand → left shoulder while holding water |
That man over there needs a water. Give him yours or get one. | Sender has water; third party identified by posture/gaze |
| Right hand → left shoulder while holding a beer |
Check six — someone behind you needs attention. [Or: just water, depending on time of day.] | AM: water protocol · PM: tactical awareness signal |
Code development time: ~90 seconds. Duration of validity: indefinite. If the team reconvened today — decades later — at any tent, in any city, under any GODISNOWHERE sign — the code would function without review. The complexity of a code does not equal the time required to build or retrieve it.
This matters enormously for the origin-of-language debate. The dominant materialist narrative assumes that the sophistication of human language implies an enormous developmental runway — tens of thousands of years of incremental symbol acquisition. But symbol systems, once the cognitive infrastructure exists, can be established instantaneously between minds that are ready to use them. The complexity of the system is a function of the minds involved, not of the time elapsed. The shoulder protocol was not primitive. It was complete, functional, context-sensitive, and time-of-day adaptive — in ninety seconds.
VI. "Words Are Meaningless" — The Sign Beneath the Sign
At the festivals, below the GODISNOWHERE banner, there was a second sign: Words Are Meaningless.
Read it once. Then read it again. The sign is a sentence. The sentence is made of words. The words are claiming that words are meaningless. Every person who read it stopped. Because something happened when they read it — and that something was not nothing. It was meaning. Delivered by the very instrument declared to be without it.
The sign was not a contradiction. It was a demonstration. It was showing — not telling — that meaning is not in the word itself. It is in the relationship between the word, the mind that made it, and the mind that receives it. Strip the minds and the letters are just ink. Put the minds back and you cannot stop the meaning from arriving. That is the symbol. That is the argument. In one sign.
VII. The Half-Code — INXS and the Economy of Agreement
INXS — the Australian rock band — had a stage protocol. In the early touring years, they would write half the code on the set list and half in a secondary communication visible only to the band. Each musician held one layer of context. Together they held the complete instruction. Separately, each half looked like noise.
This is not an unusual arrangement. It is the structure of all encryption, all two-key authentication systems, all distributed secret codes in military and diplomatic history. The Navajo Code Talkers during WWII operated on this principle: one language mapped onto another, with the full meaning recoverable only by a mind that held both maps simultaneously. The Japanese cryptanalysts who intercepted the transmissions heard sound. The Navajo listeners heard meaning. Same signal. Different minds.
Standard set list notation. Keys, tempos, cues. Interpretable as normal stage directions to any outsider. Incomplete without the second layer.
The shared convention held only in trained minds. Not written. Not displayed. Not deducible from the first half alone. The complete code requires both halves — and both halves require minds that agreed to link them.
The point is not about INXS. The point is that the code's existence presupposes the agreement that made it. Remove the agreement and you have marks. Add the agreement — the shared convention held in minds — and you have a language. No amount of time produces the agreement by itself. Agreement is not a physical event. It is a relational one. It happens between persons.
VIII. Three Symbols That Tell the Whole Story
Let three symbols stand as the argument in concentrated form.
Derived from the abbreviation for "pesos" in colonial American accounting — a P overlaid on an S, the vertical strokes surviving. Zero physical relationship to value. Pure convention. Move to a country that doesn't share the convention: the mark has no purchasing power. The meaning is entirely in the agreement.
Red was chosen because it was already culturally associated with danger — itself a historical accident of dye chemistry and railway signaling in the 1830s. The light emits no physical force. The car stops because a mind in a body chooses to comply with a convention it was taught. Remove the minds: the light keeps changing. Nothing stops.
Two lines at right angles. Appears in every window frame in the world. Appears in the letter T. Appears in the human body viewed from the front — arms extended. Before 33 AD it was an instrument of maximum humiliation and torture. After a single weekend in history, it became the most recognized symbol on Earth. The cross did not change. The event changed everything.
Every other symbol on this page is conventional — its meaning assigned by
community agreement and recoverable only by those who share the convention.
The cross is different. Not because Christians say so, but because of how
it behaves across cultural boundaries it has never been taught.
The cross appears independently as a sacred symbol in pre-Columbian Mesoamerica,
in ancient Egyptian ankh symbolism (the crux ansata), in Sumerian astronomical
notation for the four cardinal directions, in Hindu and Buddhist tantric diagrams,
in the Chinese character for ten (十).
No global symbol campaign distributed it.
No central authority imposed it. It emerged.
The structural reason is plain: the cross is the intersection of the vertical
(heaven-to-earth, transcendence-to-immanence) and the horizontal
(human-to-human, time and community). It is the diagram of the very relationship
that religion everywhere attempts to name. When Christianity chose it —
or was given it — as its central symbol, the choice was not arbitrary.
It was the most accurate picture available.
And then there is the additional fact:
that a man was executed on one. And came back.
Which is either the most consequential event in human history
or the most elaborate false claim in human history.
The cross does not allow a neutral third position.
IX. The Logos — What John 1:1 Actually Claims
The secular world discovered the problem of the symbol in 1916, with Saussure. It named the problem — the arbitrary gap between signifier and signified — but offered no resolution. If meaning is conventional, and convention requires minds, then every system of meaning in the universe traces back to the minds that established it. Follow that chain backward and ask: where did the first convention come from?
Who held the first agreement? Who was on both sides of the first designation? If the universe of meaning bottoms out in minds, and the universe of matter cannot produce minds — cannot produce the irreducibly intentional — then either meaning is an illusion (the price of strict materialism) or meaning has a ground that precedes the physical universe. The Gospel of John opens with the second option, stated without apology.
Logos (λόγος) in first-century Greek carried a freight that the
English "Word" does not fully convey. It meant: word, reason, rational principle,
the ground of intelligibility, the ordering principle of the cosmos.
Heraclitus used it to describe the rational structure underlying apparent change.
Stoic philosophy used it for the divine reason permeating all things.
Philo of Alexandria used it to bridge Greek philosophy and Jewish theology.
John did not reach for this word by accident. He was saying:
the rational principle you have been searching for — the one that makes symbols possible,
that makes meaning non-arbitrary, that makes the universe intelligible —
is not an abstraction. It is a Person.
It was there before the first atom.
It became flesh and walked into history at a known address, in a known year,
under a known governor (Pontius Pilate, 26–36 AD).
The symbol problem — where does meaning come from? —
is answered not by philosophy but by an event.
The Logos did not remain behind the veil of abstraction.
It spoke. It acted. It was killed. And the tomb was empty by Sunday morning.
X. One Word — The Summary
You were told this article would prove the existence of God with one word. Here is the proof in its compressed form:
Symbols exist. You are reading one right now.
The marks on this screen carry meaning that is not in the marks.
That meaning was assigned by minds. Those minds were produced by a universe
that, on the materialist account, consists entirely of matter in motion —
matter that has no intention, no designation, no capacity to hold a convention.
But the universe produced minds. Minds that hold conventions.
Minds that use symbols. Minds that ask: why is there something rather than nothing?
The question is itself a symbol — a string of marks that stands in for
the deepest reach of human cognition.
The capacity to ask the question is the answer to the question.
Only a universe with a mind behind it produces minds that ask about minds.
Only a Logos at the origin produces creatures that need one —
and spend their entire lives reaching toward it without being able to explain
why they cannot stop.
Primary sources behind the argument. The secular linguistics literature converges with the theological claim — often without intending to.
- Saussure, F. de (1916). Cours de Linguistique Générale (Course in General Linguistics). Payot, Lausanne. The foundational text establishing the arbitrariness of the linguistic sign — that the connection between signifier and signified is conventional, not physical. The single most important secular source for the argument that meaning requires minds. Saussure handed theology its strongest premise without knowing it. Search this source ↗
- Peirce, C.S. (1931–1958). Collected Papers, Vols. 1–8. Harvard University Press. Peirce developed the triadic sign theory: sign, object, interpretant — the three-part relationship requiring a mind (interpretant) to complete the sign function. His taxonomy of icon, index, and symbol is the standard classification used in this article. The requirement for an interpretant is Peirce's contribution to the proof: symbols do not exist without minds that actualize them. Search this source ↗
- Shannon, C.E. (1948). "A Mathematical Theory of Communication." Bell System Technical Journal 27, 379–423. Shannon's information theory defines information as reduction of uncertainty across a symbol set. DNA satisfies every formal criterion: discrete symbols (A, T, G, C), linear sequence, combinatorial encoding. Shannon explicitly distinguished syntactic information (structure) from semantic information (meaning) — semantic information is precisely what matter cannot produce by itself. Often cited against design; actually supports it. Search this source ↗
- Crick, F.H.C. (1958). "On Protein Synthesis." Symposia of the Society for Experimental Biology 12, 138–163. Crick's original formulation of the "sequence hypothesis" and the Central Dogma of molecular biology. Crick explicitly noted that the relationship between codon and amino acid is not chemically determined — it is a code, in the strict technical sense. "The specificity of a piece of nucleic acid is expressed solely by the sequence of its bases, and this sequence is a (simple) code for the amino acid sequence of a particular protein." A code. Not a chemical reaction. A code requires a coder. Search this source ↗
- Deacon, T.W. (1997). The Symbolic Species: The Co-Evolution of Language and the Brain. W.W. Norton. Neuroscientist Terrence Deacon's account of how symbolic cognition — specifically the ability to use arbitrary conventional signs — distinguishes Homo sapiens from all other species. Deacon argues that symbolic reference cannot be reduced to associative learning; it requires a qualitatively different cognitive architecture. His own conclusion is naturalistic; the argument he makes for the uniqueness and irreducibility of symbolic cognition is useful for the theistic case. Search this source ↗
- Nagel, T. (2012). Mind and Cosmos: Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Nature Is Almost Certainly False. Oxford University Press. Nagel — a committed atheist — argues that consciousness, cognition, and reason (the very capacities that make symbol use possible) cannot be explained by materialist evolution. "The existence of consciousness is both one of the most familiar and one of the most astounding things about the world." His argument that mind is a fundamental feature of the universe, not a late product of it, supports the Logos argument without Nagel intending it to. Search this source ↗
- Plato. (~360 BCE). Cratylus. In Complete Works, ed. Cooper, J.M. (1997). Hackett Publishing. The first sustained philosophical investigation of the relationship between words and their referents. Hermogenes argues for conventionalism (the connection is agreed, not natural); Cratylus for naturalism (names have an inherent correctness). Socrates mediates. The answer — conventionalism is closer to the truth, but the conventions are not arbitrary at the deepest level — sets up the Logos argument 400 years before John uses the term. Search this source ↗
- Logos entry. Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, ed. Kittel, G. & Friedrich, G. (1967). Eerdmans. Vol. IV, pp. 69–143. The definitive scholarly treatment of λόγος across Greek philosophy (Heraclitus, Stoics), Hellenistic Judaism (Philo), and the New Testament. Documents how John 1:1 deliberately appropriated and fulfilled a concept that secular philosophy had been reaching toward for 600 years. The Logos is not a Jewish concept dressed in Greek clothes; it is the answer Greek philosophy had been asking for without knowing the question was theological. Search this source ↗
Where Does This Argument Lead You?
Select the conclusion that most honestly reflects where the symbol argument takes you.