| A Countdown
to Zero
What's 2 minus 2? The answer is obvious, right? But not if you
wore a tunic, no socks and lived in Ancient Greece. For strange
as it sounds, 'nothing' had to be invented, and then it took thousands
of years to catch on. It's discovery went something like this:
400BC
The Babylonians were the first to develop the concept of the zero
as position marker indicating an empty space in a sequence of numbers.
They used two wedge symbols for this purpose allowing them to distinguish
between 26 and 206 hanging gardens.
Meanwhile the concept of zero went largely unnoticed in Ancient
Greece, except for a group of astronomers who used "O"
as a position marker. Theories suggest that "O" stood
variously for "Omicron" (the first letter of the Greek
word for nothing or "ouden"), "Obol" (a coin
considered to be of little value, similar to the British view of
the Euro), or "Oh ****, I can't make this calculation work!"
130AD
The Romans may have been very good at feeding Christians to big
cats and building roads without bends, but they were sadly lacking
in the zero department. In 130 AD Ptolemy attempted to change this
by adding "O" (Omicron) to the number system. However
'nothing' came of it.
700-900AD
India's answer to Alan Titchmarsh made plans for a flower garden
in Gwalior, a small town south of Delhi. His instructions, inscribed
on a stone tablet, prescribed 187 by 270 hastas of land in order
to produce 50 garlands per day for the local temple. This position
marker zero was practically identical in appearance to the "0"
we use today. Good news for the temple, bad news for the local hay
fever sufferers.
Most importantly, India gave birth to zero as a number in its own
right. For the first time, the abstract concept of nothingness had
a symbol, and did more than just mark a space in a string of digits.
A trio of Indian mathematicians struggled to slot this symbol into
their developing decimal number system. In particular, the Hindu
astronomer Brahmagupta worked out the rules for addition, subtraction
and multiplication by zero. Dividing by zero, on the other hand,
proved to be a more troublesome pursuit and is still causing headaches
today. Divide by zero and computers crash, civilisation crumbles
and maths teachers reach for the sherry bottle.
1202AD
Italian mathematician Fibonacci introduces the concept of zero
to Europe, and 'nothing' is ever the same again......
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