One of the commonest questions which the readers of this archive ask is: Who
discovered zero? Why then have we not written an article on zero as one of the
first in the archive? The reason is basically because of the difficulty of
answering the question in a satisfactory form. If someone had come up with the
concept of zero which everyone then saw as a brilliant innovation to enter
mathematics from that time on, the question would have a satisfactory answer
even if we did not know which genius invented it. The historical record,
however, shows quite a different path towards the concept. Zero makes shadowy
appearances only to vanish again almost as if mathematicians were searching for
it yet did not recognise its fundamental significance even when they saw it.
The first thing to say about zero is that there are two uses of zero which
are both extremely important but are somewhat different. One use is as a empty
place indicator in our place-value number system. Hence in a number like 2106
the zero is used so that the positions of the 2 and 1 are correct. Clearly 216
means something quite different. The second use of zero is as a number itself in
the form we use it as 0. There are also different aspects of zero within these
two uses, namely the concept, the notation, and the name.
Neither of these uses has an easily described history. It just did not happen
that someone invented the ideas, and then everyone started to use them. Also it
is fair to say that the number zero is far from an intuitive concept.
Mathematical problems started as 'real' problems rather than abstract problems.
Numbers in early historical times were thought of much more concretely than the
abstract concepts which are our numbers today. There are giant mental leaps from
5 horses to 5 "things" and then to the abstract idea of "five". If ancient
peoples solved a problem about how many horses a farmer needed then the problem
was not going to have 0 or -23 as an answer.
One might think that once a place-value number system came into existence
then the 0 as a empty place indicator is a necessary idea, yet the Babylonians
had a place-value number system without this feature for over 1000 years.
Moreover there is absolutely no evidence that the Babylonians felt that there
was any problem with the ambiguity which existed. Remarkably, original texts
survive from the era of Babylonian mathematics. The Babylonians wrote on tablets
of unbaked clay, using cuneiform writing. The symbols were pressed into soft
clay tablets with the slanted edge of a stylus and so had a wedge-shaped
appearance (and hence the name cuneiform). Many tablets from around 1700 BC
survive and we can read the original texts. Of course their notation for numbers
was quite different from ours (and not based on 10 but on 60) but to translate
into our notation they would not distinguish between 2106 and 216 (the context
would have to show which was intended). It was not until around 400 BC that the
Babylonians put two wedge symbols into the place where we would put zero to
indicate which was meant, 216 or 21 '' 6.
The two wedges were not the only notation used, however, and on a tablet
found at Kish, an ancient Mesopotamian city located east of Babylon in what is
today south-central Iraq, a different notation is used. This tablet, thought to
date from around 700 BC, uses three hooks to denote an empty place in the
positional notation. Other tablets dated from around the same time use a single
hook for an empty place. There is one common feature to this use of different
marks to denote an empty position. This is the fact that it never occured at the
end of the digits but always between two digits. So although we find 21 '' 6 we
never find 216 ''. One has to assume that the older feeling that the context was
sufficient to indicate which was intended still applied in these cases.
If this reference to context appears silly then it is worth noting that we
still use context to interpret numbers today. If I take a bus to a nearby town
and ask what the fare is then I know that the answer "It's three fifty" means
three pounds fifty pence. Yet if the same answer is given to the question about
the cost of a flight from Edinburgh to New York then I know that three hundred
and fifty pounds is what is intended.
We can see from this that the early use of zero to denote an empty place is
not really the use of zero as a number at all, merely the use of some type of
punctuation mark so that the numbers had the correct interpretation.
Now the ancient Greeks began their contributions to mathematics
around the time that zero as a empty place indicator was coming into use in
Babylonian mathematics. The Greeks however did not adopt a positional number
system. It is worth thinking just how significant this fact is. How could the
brilliant mathematical advances of the Greeks not see them adopt a number system
with all the advantages that the Babylonian place-value system possessed? The
real answer to this question is more subtle that the simple answer that we are
about to give, but basically the Greek mathematical achievements were based on
geometry. Although Euclid's
Elements contains a book on number theory, it is based on geometry. In
other words Greek mathematicians did not need to name their numbers since they
worked with numbers as lengths of lines. Numbers which required to be named for
records were used by merchants, not mathematicians, and hence no clever notation
was needed.
Now there were exceptions to what we have just stated. The
exceptions were the mathematicians who were involved in recording astronomical
data. Here we find the first use of the symbol which we recognise today as the
notation for zero, for Greek astronomers began to use the symbol O. There are
many theories why this particular notation was used. Some historians favour the
explanation that it is omicron, the first letter of the Greek word for nothing
namely "ouden". Neugebauer,
however, dismisses this explanation since the Greeks already used omicron as a
number - it represented 70 (the Greek number system was based on their
alphabet). Other explanations offered include the fact that it stands for
"obol", a coin of almost no value, and that it arises when counters were used
for counting on a sand board. The suggestion here is that when a counter was
removed to leave an empty column it left a depression in the sand which looked
like O.
Ptolemy in the Almagest written around 130 AD uses the Babylonian sexagesimal
system together with the empty place holder O. By this time Ptolemy is using the symbol both between digits and at the end of a number and one might
be tempted to believe that at least zero as an empty place holder had firmly
arrived. This, however, is far from what happened. Only a few exceptional
astronomers used the notation and it would fall out of use several more times
before finally establishing itself. The idea of the zero place (certainly not
thought of as a number by who still considered as a sort of punctuation mark) makes its next appearance in
Indian mathematics.
The scene now moves to India where it is fair to say the numerals and number
system was born which have evolved into the highly sophisticated ones we use
today. Of course that is not to say that the Indian system did not owe something
to earlier systems and many historians of mathematics believe that the Indian
use of zero evolved from its use by Greek astronomers. As well as some
historians who seem to want to play down the contribution of the Indians in a
most unreasonable way, there are also those who make claims about the Indian
invention of zero which seem to go far too far. For example Mukherjee claims:-
... the mathematical conception of zero ... was also present in
the spiritual form from 17 000 years back in India.
What
is certain is that by around 650AD the use of zero as a number came into Indian
mathematics. The Indians also used a place-value system and zero was used to
denote an empty place. In fact there is evidence of an empty place holder in
positional numbers from as early as 200AD in India but some historians dismiss
these as later forgeries. Let us examine this latter use first since it
continues the development described above.
In around 500AD Aryabhata devised a number system which has no zero yet was a positional system. He used
the word "kha" for position and it would be used later as the name for zero.
There is evidence that a dot had been used in earlier Indian manuscripts to
denote an empty place in positional notation. It is interesting that the same
documents sometimes also used a dot to denote an unknown where we might use
x. Later Indian mathematicians had names for zero in positional numbers
yet had no symbol for it. The first record of the Indian use of zero which is
dated and agreed by all to be genuine was written in 876.
We have an inscription on a stone tablet which contains a date which
translates to 876. The inscription concerns the town of Gwalior, 400 km south of
Delhi, where they planted a garden 187 by 270 hastas which would produce enough
flowers to allow 50 garlands per day to be given to the local temple. Both of
the numbers 270 and 50 are denoted almost as they appear today although the 0 is
smaller and slightly raised.
We now come to considering the first appearance of zero as a
number. Let us first note that it is not in any sense a natural candidate for a
number. From early times numbers are words which refer to collections of
objects. Certainly the idea of number became more and more abstract and this
abstraction then makes possible the consideration of zero and negative numbers
which do not arise as properties of collections of objects. Of course the
problem which arises when one tries to consider zero and negatives as numbers is
how they interact in regard to the operations of arithmetic, addition,
subtraction, multiplication and division. In three important books the Indian
mathematicians Brahmagupta, Mahavira and Bhaskara tried to answer these questions.
Brahmagupta
attempted to give the rules for arithmetic involving zero and negative numbers
in the seventh century. He explained that given a number then if you subtract it
from itself you obtain zero. He gave the following rules for addition which
involve zero:-
The sum of zero and a negative number is negative, the sum of a
positive number and zero is positive, the sum of zero and zero is zero.
Subtraction is a little harder:-
A negative number subtracted from zero is positive, a positive
number subtracted from zero is negative, zero subtracted from a negative
number is negative, zero subtracted from a positive number is positive, zero
subtracted from zero is zero.
Brahmagupta
then says that any number when multiplied by zero is zero but struggles when it
comes to division:-
Positive or negative numbers when divided by zero is a fraction
the zero as denominator. Zero divided by negative or positive numbers is
either zero or is expressed as a fraction with zero as numerator and the
finite quantity as denominator. Zero divided by zero is zero.
Really Brahmagupta
is saying very little when he suggests that n divided by zero is
n/0. Clearly he is struggling here. He is certainly wrong when he then
claims that zero divided by zero is zero. However it is a brilliant attempt from
the first person that we know to try to extend arithmetic to negative numbers
and zero.
In 830, around 200 years after Brahmagupta
wrote his masterpiece, Mahavira
wrote Ganita Sara Samgraha which was designed as an updating of Brahmagupta's book. He correctly states that:-
... a number multiplied by zero is zero, and a number remains
the same when zero is subtracted from it.
However
his attempts to improve on Brahmagupta's
statements on dividing by zero seem to lead him into error. He writes:-
A number remains unchanged when divided by zero.
Since this is clearly incorrect my use of the words
"seem to lead him into error" might be seen as confusing. The reason for this
phrase is that some commentators on Mahavira
have tried to find excuses for his incorrect statement.
Bhaskara wrote over 500 years after Brahmagupta.
Despite the passage of time he is still struggling to explain division by zero.
He writes:-
A quantity divided by zero becomes a fraction the denominator
of which is zero. This fraction is termed an infinite quantity. In this
quantity consisting of that which has zero for its divisor, there is no
alteration, though many may be inserted or extracted; as no change takes place
in the infinite and immutable God when worlds are created or destroyed, though
numerous orders of beings are absorbed or put forth.
So Bhaskara
tried to solve the problem by writing n/0 = . At first sight we might be tempted to believe
that Bhaskara has it correct, but of course he does not. If this were true then 0 times must be equal to every number
n, so all numbers are equal. The Indian mathematicians could not bring
themselves to the point of admitting that one could not divide by zero. Bhaskara
did correctly state other properties of zero, however, such as 02 =
0, and 0 = 0.
Perhaps we should note at this point that there was another civilisation
which developed a place-value number system with a zero. This was the Maya
people who lived in central America, occupying the area which today is southern
Mexico, Guatemala, and northern Belize. This was an old civilisation but
flourished particularly between 250 and 900. We know that by 665 they used a
place-value number system to base 20 with a symbol for zero. However their use
of zero goes back further than this and was in use before they introduced the
place-valued number system. This is a remarkable achievement but sadly did not
influence other peoples.
You can see a separate article about Mayan
mathematics.
The brilliant work of the Indian mathematicians was transmitted
to the Islamic and Arabic mathematicians further west. It came at an early stage
for Al-Khwarizmi
wrote Al'Khwarizmi on the Hindu Art of Reckoning which describes the
Indian place-value system of numerals based on 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, and 0.
This work was the first in what is now Iraq to use zero as a place holder in
positional base notation. Ibn Ezra,
in the 12th century, wrote three treatises on numbers which helped to bring the
Indian symbols and ideas of decimal fractions to the attention of some of the
learned people in Europe. The Book of the Number describes the decimal
system for integers with place values from left to right. In this work ibn Ezra
uses zero which he calls galgal (meaning wheel or circle). Slightly later in the
12th century al-Samawal
was writing:-
If we subtract a positive number from zero the same negative
number remains. ... if we subtract a negative number from zero the same
positive number remains.
The Indian ideas spread
east to China as well as west to the Islamic countries. In 1247 the Chinese
mathematician Ch'in
Chiu-Shao wrote Mathematical treatise in nine sections which uses the
symbol O for zero. A little later, in 1303, Chu
Shih-Chieh wrote Jade mirror of the four elements which again uses the symbol O
for zero.
Fibonacci
was one of the main people to bring these new ideas about the number system to
Europe. As the authors of [12] write:-
An important link between the Hindu-Arabic number
system and the European mathematics is the Italian mathematician Fibonacci.
In Liber Abaci he described the nine Indian
symbols together with the sign 0 for Europeans in around 1200 but it was not
widely used for a long time after that. It is significant that Fibonacci
is not bold enough to treat 0 in the same way as the other numbers 1, 2, 3, 4,
5, 6, 7, 8, 9 since he speaks of the "sign" zero while the other symbols he
speaks of as numbers. Although clearly bringing the Indian numerals to Europe
was of major importance we can see that in his treatment of zero he did not
reach the sophistication of the Indians Brahmagupta,
Mahavira
and Bhaskara
nor of the Arabic and Islamic mathematicians such as al-Samawal.
One might have thought that the progress of the number systems in
general, and zero in particular, would have been steady from this time on.
However, this was far from the case. Cardan
solved cubic and quartic equations without using zero. He would have found his
work in the 1500's so much easier if he had had a zero but it was not part of
his mathematics. By the 1600's zero began to come into widespread use but still
only after encountering a lot of resistance.
Of course there are still signs of the problems caused by zero. Recently many
people throughout the world celebrated the new millennium on 1 January 2000. Of
course they celebrated the passing of only 1999 years since when the calendar
was set up no year zero was specified. Although one might forgive the original
error, it is a little surprising that most people seemed unable to understand
why the third millennium and the 21 century begin on 1 January 2001. Zero is
still causing problems!
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