...............................................................................
Zero
Ptolemy, the Greek mathematician and scientist
|
The Power of Zero
TRANSCRIPT FROM A LECTURE SERIES BY PROFESSOR EDWARD B. BURGER,
SOUTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY
How do you multiply using Roman numerals? How would you
write the number 10,030 without using zero?
A compact, place-based (or positional) number system
with a symbol for zero opens the floodgates for arithmetic calculations and the
discovery of new numbers.
With only 10 symbols, we have the machinery to describe
new numbers that grow beyond our imagination.
Here, we’ll explore the origins of zero and the
development of our modern decimal system.
With a powerful positional number system in place,
humankind was finally equipped with the tools necessary to begin the
development of modern mathematics.
Let’s begin with the downside of the ancient additive
systems. Most of the systems required the repetition of symbols.
For example, the Roman numerals XXIII equal 23, and
they’d add up the two Xs (10 each) and then the three Is, and get 23.
The Babylonians used dovetails and nails, which they
would add up.
Although computation with the additive systems was fast
using tools such as the abacus, those systems required a very long list of
symbols to denote larger and larger numbers, and this was a problem in
practice.
Slow Progress for Heaps of Numbers
Additive systems made it difficult to look at more
arithmetically complicated questions and thus slowed the progress of the study
of numbers.
In order to move to what we call a positional system,
they needed a new number.
This inspired a philosophical question: How many items
do you see in an empty box? Is your answer a number? This is the question about
zero.
In the Rhind Papyrus from 1650 B.C.E., the scribe Ahmes
referred to numbers as “heaps.”
This tradition actually continued through the
Pythagoreans, who in the 6th century B.C.E. viewed numbers as “a
combination or heaping of units.”
Even Aristotle defined number as an accumulation or
heap. Also, the word “three” derived from the Anglo-Saxon word throp, again meaning “pile” or “heap.”
Well, because we can’t have a heap of zero objects—with
zero objects, there would be no heaping at all—zero was not viewed as a number.
So this notion of having zero be a quantity didn’t make
any sense at all because they were thinking in terms of heaps. This lack of
zero caused many challenges.
A careless Sumerian scribe could cause ambiguities
because, in cuneiform, different spacing between symbols can actually represent
different numbers.
Egyptian system, on the other hand, did not require a
placeholder like zero, but their additive notation was cumbersome. Again, they
had all the symbols together, and they had to add them all up.
As a result, in the 2,000 years of the Egyptian numeral
system, they made very little progress in arithmetic or, more generally, in
mathematics.
It’s interesting to see how the notation really drives
our understanding, our intuition, and our further quest to consider number.
An Empty Placeholder Appears
Zero first appeared as an empty placeholder rather than
a number.
The Babylonians had a symbol for zero by 300 B.C.E. It
was a placeholder rather than a number because, again, they were thinking
heapings, but they needed to distinguish between numbers.
The Mayans also had an eye-shaped symbol for zero that
they also used only as a placeholder. The evolution of the symbol for zero is
actually very difficult to chart.
The modern symbol “0” may have arisen from the use of
sand tables that were used to calculate things, whereby pebbles would be placed
in and moved back and forth for addition or subtraction.
When a pebble would be removed, there would be an
indentation or a dimple in the sand, which reflects the “0” that we see today.
In fact, calculations performed on the sand tables may
have actually led to the development of the place-based number systems.
The Birth of the Zero
Later, in the 2nd century C.E., Ptolemy used the
Greek letter omicron, which looks like an “O,” in fact, to denote “nothing.”
So this is the symbol for zero, the “0” that we see — the
circle. But I want to make it very clear that Ptolemy did not view this as a
number, but merely as the idea of nothing.
But you can see, again, that these things were slowly
coming together. Zero as a number really occurred in India, most likely.
By the 7th century, the Indian astronomer
Bhramagupta offered a treatment of negative numbers and actually understood
zero as a number, not just as a placeholder.
In fact, he actually studied 0 divided by 0, and 1
divided by 0, and he decided erroneously that 0 divided by 0 equals 0 but just
didn’t know what to conclude about 1 divided by 0.
Here again we see a couple of things. First of all, we
know today that we can’t divide by 0.
If we divide by 0, it does not yield a number, so we
leave the realm of number. So we can’t do that — no dividing by 0 — and we
learn that in school. But we also see a wonderful thing.
Bhramagupta, this very important, great mind, was making
a mistake, again — something that is to be celebrated rather than to feel
embarrassed about.
He didn’t get it quite right. That’s okay; his
contributions were enormous.
So finally, humankind expanded its view of number to
actually include and embrace zero.
From Empty to Nothing to Zero
A few words about this “nothing” number in terms of
language: from the 6th to the 8th centuries, in Sanskrit there was
“sun-yah,” which meant “empty,” to represent zero as we think of it.
By the 9th century, in Arabic there was “sigh-fr.”
By 13th-century Latin, there was “zef-ear-e-um.”
From 14th-century Italian there was “zef-ear-row.”
By 15th-century English, we have “zero.” So we can see
the evolution of just that word.
Because of zero’s power in computation, some viewed it
as mysterious and nearly magical.
As a result, the word zero has the same origins as
another word that means “a hidden or mysterious code,” and that word, of
course, is “cipher.”
We can see that “cipher” actually came from the
mysterious qualities that zero possessed in the eyes of our ancestors.
From the lecture series Zero to Infinity: A History of Numbers
Taught by Professor Edward B. Burger, Southwestern Universityhttps://www.thegreatcoursesdaily.com/zero/
The Rhind Papyrus
|
Bhramagupta, the Indian astronomer
|
No comments:
Post a Comment