Who Invented Zero?
By Jessie Szalay, Live Science Contributor | September 18, 2017 12:29pm ET

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[image: Who Invented Zero?]
The concept of zero, both as a placeholder and as a symbol for nothing, is
a relatively recent development.
Credit: Iraidka <http://www.shutterstock.com/gallery-501640p1.html> |
Shutterstock <http://www.shutterstock.com/>

Though people have always understood the concept of nothing or having
nothing, the concept of zero is relatively new; it fully developed in India
around the fifth century A.D., perhaps a couple of centuries earlier.
Before then, mathematicians struggled to perform the simplest arithmetic
calculations. Today, zero — both as a symbol (or numeral) and a concept
meaning the absence of any quantity — allows us to perform calculus, do
complicated equations, and to have invented computers.

"The Indian [or numerical] zero, widely seen as one of the greatest
innovations in human history, is the cornerstone of modern mathematics and
physics, plus the spin-off technology," said Peter Gobets, secretary
of the ZerOrigIndia
Foundation <https://www.zerorigindia.org/>, or the Zero Project. The
foundation, based in the Netherlands, researches the origins of the zero
digit.
Early history: Angled wedges

Zero as a placeholder was invented independently in civilizations around
the world, said Dr. Annette van der Hoek, Indiologist and research
coordinator at the Zero Project. The Babylonians got their number system
from the Sumerians, the first people in the world to develop a counting
system <https://www.livescience.com/2283-writing-changed-world.html>.
Developed 4,000 to 5,000 years ago, the Sumerian system was positional —
the value of a symbol depended on its position relative to other symbols.


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Robert Kaplan, author of "The Nothing That Is: A Natural History of
Zero," suggests that an ancestor to the placeholder zero may have been a
pair of angled wedges used to represent an empty number column. However,
Charles Seife, author of "Zero: The Biography of a Dangerous Idea,"
disagrees that the wedges represented a placeholder.

The Sumerians' system passed through the Akkadian Empire to the Babylonians
around 300 B.C. There, Kaplan agrees, a symbol appeared that was clearly a
placeholder — a way to tell 10 from 100 or to signify that in the number
2,025, there is no number in the hundreds column. Initially, the
Babylonians left an empty space in their cuneiform number system, but when
that became confusing, they added a symbol — double angled wedges — to
represent the empty column. However, they never developed the idea of zero
as a number.
Zero in the Americas

Six hundred years later and 12,000 miles from Babylon, the Mayans developed
zero as a placeholder around A.D. 350 and used it to denote a placeholder
in their elaborate calendar
<https://www.livescience.com/7937-truth-2012-doomsday-hype.html> systems.
Despite being highly skilled mathematicians, the Mayans never used zero in
equations, however. Kaplan describes the Mayan invention of zero as the
"most striking example of the zero being devised wholly from scratch."
India: Where zero became a number

Some scholars assert that the Babylonian concept wove its way down to
India, but others, including those at the Zero Project, give Indians credit
for developing numerical zero independently. "We are of the view that in
ancient India are found numerous so-called 'cultural antecedents' that make
it plausible that the mathematical zero digit was invented there," said
Gobets, whose organization is composed of academics and graduate students
devoted to studying the development of zero in India. "The Zero Project
hypothesizes that mathematical zero ('shunya', in Sanskrit) may have arisen
from the contemporaneous philosophy of emptiness or Shunyata," said Gobets.
If philosophical and cultural factors found in India were important to the
development of zero as a mathematical concept, it would explain why other
civilizations did not develop zero as a mathematical concept, said van der
Hoek.

According to the book "The Crest of the Peacock; Non-European Roots of
Mathematics," by Dr. George Gheverghese Joseph, the concept of zero first
appeared in India around A.D. 458. Joseph suggests that the Sanskrit word
for zero, śūnya, which meant "void" or "empty" and derived from the word
for growth, combined with the early definition found in the Rig-veda of
"lack" or "deficiency." The derivative of the two definitions is Śūnyata, a
Buddhist doctrine of "emptiness," or emptying one's mind from impressions
and thoughts.

"From this philosophy, we think that a numeral to use in mathematical
equations developed," said van der Hoek. "We are looking for the bridge
between Indian philosophy and mathematics."

"Zero and its operation are first defined by [Hindu astronomer and
mathematician] Brahmagupta in 628," said Gobets. He developed a symbol for
zero: a dot underneath numbers. "But he, too, does not claim to have
invented zero, which presumably must have been around for some time,"
Gobets added.

An inscription on a temple wall in Gwalior, India, dates back to the ninth
century, and has been considered the oldest recorded example of a zero,
according to the University of Oxford. Another example is an ancient Indian
scroll called the Bhakshali manuscript. Discovered in a field in 1881,
researchers thought it also had originated in the ninth century. However,
recent carbon dating has revealed that it was probably written in the third
or fourth century, which pushes the earliest recorded use of zero
<http://www.ox.ac.uk/news/2017-09-14-earliest-recorded-use-zero-centuries-older-first-thought>
back
500 years.

Marcus du Sautoy, a professor of mathematics at the University of Oxford,
said, "Today we take it for granted that the concept of zero is used across
the globe and is a key building block of the digital world. But the
creation of zero as a number in its own right, which evolved from the
placeholder dot symbol found in the Bakhshali manuscript, was one of the
greatest breakthroughs in the history of mathematics.

"We now know that it was as early as the third century that mathematicians
in India planted the seed of the idea that would later become so
fundamental to the modern world. The findings show how vibrant mathematics
have been in the Indian sub-continent for centuries."
>From the Middle East to Wall Street

Over the next few centuries, the concept of zero caught on in China and the
Middle East. According to Nils-Bertil Wallin of YaleGlobal
<http://yaleglobal.yale.edu/about/zero.jsp>, by 773, zero reached Baghdad
where it became part of the Arabic number system, which is based upon the
Indian system.

A Persian mathematician, Mohammed ibn-Musa al-Khowarizmi, suggested that a
little circle should be used in calculations if no number appeared in the
tens place. The Arabs called this circle "sifr," or "empty." Zero was
crucial to al-Khowarizmi, who used it to invent algebra
<https://www.livescience.com/26681-most-beautiful-mathematical-equations.html>
in
the ninth century. Al-Khowarizmi also developed quick methods for
multiplying and dividing numbers, which are known as algorithms — a
corruption of his name.

Zero found its way to Europe through the Moorish conquest of Spain and was
further developed by Italian mathematician Fibonacci, who used it to do
equations without an abacus, then the most prevalent tool for doing
arithmetic. This development was highly popular among merchants, who used
Fibonacci's equations involving zero to balance their books.

Medieval religious leaders in Europe did not support the use of zero, van
der Hoek said. They saw it as satanic. "God was in everything that was.
Everything that was not was of the devil," she said.

Wallin points out that the Italian government was suspicious of Arabic
numbers and outlawed the use of zero. Merchants continued to use it
illegally and secretively, and the Arabic word for zero, "sifr," brought
about the word "cipher," which not only means a numeric character, but also
came to mean "code."

By the 1600s, zero was used fairly widely throughout Europe. It was
fundamental in Rene Descartes' Cartesian coordinate system and in calculus,
developed independently by Sir Isaac Newton
<https://www.livescience.com/20296-isaac-newton.html> and Gottfried Wilhem
Liebniz. Calculus paved the way for physics, engineering, computers and
much of financial and economic theory.

"The concept of emptiness is now central to modern physics: the entire
known universe is seen as 'zero sum game' by among others, such as Stephen
Hawking," said Gobets.

The numeral and concept of zero, imported from India, has manifested in
various ways. "So commonplace has zero become that few, if any, realize it
astounding role in the lives of every single person in the world," said
Gobets.

*Additional resources*

   - Scientific American: The Origin of Zero
   <https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/history-of-zero/>
   - Yale University: The History of Zero
   <http://yaleglobal.yale.edu/history-zero>
   - American Mathematical Society: All For Naught
   <http://www.ams.org/samplings/feature-column/fcarc-india-zero>

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