A Conversation for Ask h2g2

Was zero invented or discovered?

Post 1

The Groob

I heard there was a time when zero didn't exist. Technically speaking, was zero (0) invented or discovered?


Was zero invented or discovered?

Post 2

Zak T Duck

Think it depends on the counting system, and it was probably because a concept of something from nothing would be useful.


Was zero invented or discovered?

Post 3

Geggs

I'd say invented, on the basis that the whole of mathematics was invented. Though it is a useful way of describing the things that we do discover.


Geggs


Was zero invented or discovered?

Post 4

Mr. Dreadful - But really I'm not actually your friend, but I am...

Zero as a state (i.e. there is nothing there) was already known by the time zero as a mathematical concept was invented in the Middle East.


Was zero invented or discovered?

Post 5

YalsonKSA - "I'm glad birthdays don't come round regularly, as I'm not sure I could do that too often."

I believe that early counting and arithmetic systems did without zero altogether, causing all manner of obvious problems. I don't think that the Romans used a zero in their maths system, for example. I also believe it was the Arabs who first came up with the concept of the zero, although they used a dot instead of the circle we use now. I think that the circle as a representation of 'nothing' as we know it evolved later, presumably as a way of differentiating it from the decimal point.

I wouldn't take any of the above as gospel, though, as it is remembered from a TV programme I saw years ago on the subject.

smiley - erm


Was zero invented or discovered?

Post 6

mazie (returning soon...)

i thought the Maya first used the zero smiley - erm


Was zero invented or discovered?

Post 7

Feisor - -0- Generix I made it back - sortof ...

India to be precise - somewhere between the first and fifth centuries A.D

smiley - cheers


Was zero invented or discovered?

Post 8

Gnomon - time to move on

All numbers are an invention of the human brain.

Zero was invented independently in India (from where it spread to Europe) and in Meso America (the Maya). These two inventions probably happened around the same time.

There is also some evidence that the concept of zero was known to the Ancient Greeks, but it was not a widespread concept that caught on.


Was zero invented or discovered?

Post 9

neongreencat

Zero does not exist.


Was zero invented or discovered?

Post 10

neongreencat

Actually I know Zero, and he would say that the number 0 only ensures that you have a page 10 between 9 and 11 when you read the paper.


Was zero invented or discovered?

Post 11

mazie (returning soon...)

ah finally gnomon (the mountain of knowledge) arrives with the definitive answer smiley - biggrin


Was zero invented or discovered?

Post 12

neongreencat

smiley - winkeye


Was zero invented or discovered?

Post 13

Mr. Dreadful - But really I'm not actually your friend, but I am...

If it didn't then we'd just have to have a page X between IX and XI in the paper. smiley - tongueout


Was zero invented or discovered?

Post 14

Ged42

Acorrding to Wikipedia:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/0_%28number%29

The first evidence of zero being used, is by the Babylonians

As to whether it was discovered or invented. When i'd say they defined the existance of nothing (if nothing can exist?) as zero, rather than creating it. (not sure if that make sense)


Was zero invented or discovered?

Post 15

neongreencat

Thankx Mr. Dreadful, more proof that zero does not, in fact, exist.



Was zero invented or discovered?

Post 16

YalsonKSA - "I'm glad birthdays don't come round regularly, as I'm not sure I could do that too often."

That's not necessarily true. There is a big difference between the concept of 'nothing' and an empty column in our base 10 arithmetical system.

'Nothing' is a void, a vacuum and an absence of all things.

'Zero' is a mathmatical device used to denote an absence of a figure in any given number grouping, be it units, tens, hundreds, thousands etc. It's an accounting device, essentially, not a philosophical concept.


Was zero invented or discovered?

Post 17

Mu Beta

Regardless of whether it was invented or discovered, I would love to be the founder trying to explain it to his contemporaries...

"I've discovered a new number. Well, it's sort of a number...it's more of a concept. Well, it's nothing, really. I've discovered nothing. What are you all laughing about?"

B


Was zero invented or discovered?

Post 18

Gnomon - time to move on

The Mayans even numbered the days of the week and the days of the month starting at zero! The symbol for zero was a shell, while the symbol for 1 appears to have been a cocoa bean. Cocoa beans were used as currency.

I'll raise you three Toblerones and a Wispa.


Was zero invented or discovered?

Post 19

YalsonKSA - "I'm glad birthdays don't come round regularly, as I'm not sure I could do that too often."

That means that to the Mayas, hot chocolate would have the profits from a bank raid.

smiley - laugh


Was zero invented or discovered?

Post 20

Gnomon - time to move on

Up to the discovery of non-Euclidean geometry, mathematicians generally believed that there was a Platonic "mathematical universe" which existed independently of our own, in which everything was perfect, lines were straight and numbers exact. People who went along with this view would have considered that zero already existed in the mathematical world and that all the mathematicians were doing was discovering it.

THe discovery of non-Euclidean geometry shattered that belief. ALl of a sudden, there were alternative ways of describing the world, each making sense and being consistent with the observed world, but conflicting with each other. No longer could it be said that there is a geometrical world "out there" of which ours is a poor shadow. Geometry and by inference the whole of mathematics is now perceived to be an artificial construct in our heads, so we now consider that zero was invented, not discovered.

It raises the interesting question, if mathematics is just something we invented, how come it is so spectacularly good at making predictions about the real world?


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