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The Story of Indian Zero.

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Sudhakar Sadasivuni

Posts: 418
Nickname: sadasivuni
Registered: Nov, 2003

Sudhakar Sadasivuni is a Microsoft .NET MVP, a project engineer for Wipro technologies.
The Story of Indian Zero. Posted: Apr 2, 2004 7:14 AM
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            The story of zero is always been an interesting and proud story for any indian. Today I found the story behind zero which is almost unknown to me here. I am not a very good learner of vedic mathematics but I could not resist to be a fan of them. Vedic Mathematics has got most powerful algorithm at the ages of ancient india and rediscovered in 1911 by Sri Bharati Krsna Tirthaji (1884-1960).

Some interesting notes on Zero Evolution.
India: 458 A.D. (debated)

The final independent invention of the zero was in India. However, the time and the independence of this invention has been debated. Some say that Babylonian astronomy, with its zero, was passed on to Hindu astronomers but there is no absolute proof of this, so most scholars give the Hindus credit for coming up with zero on their own.

The reason the date of the Hindu zero is in question is because of how it came to be.

Most existing ancient Indian mathematical texts are really copies that are at most a few hundred years old. And these copies are copies of copies of copies passed through the ages. But the transcriptions are error free...can you imagine copying a math book without making any errors? Were the Hindus very good proofreaders? They had a trick.

Math problems were written in verse and could be easily memorised, chanted, or sung. Each word in the verse corresponded to a number. For example,

viya dambar akasasa sunya yama rama veda
sky (0) atmosphere (0) space (0) void (0) primordial couple (2) Rama (3) Veda (4)
0 0 0 0 2 3 4

Indian place notation moved from left to right with ones place coming first. So the phrase above translates to 4,230,000.

Using a vocabulary of symbolic words to note zero is known from the 458 AD cosmology text Lokavibhaga. But as a more traditional numeral--a dot or an open circle--there is no record until 628, though it is recorded as if well-understood at that time so it's likely zero as a symbol was used before 628.

Which it probably was, considering that 30 years previously, an inscription of a date using a zero symbol in the Hindu manner was made in Cambodia.

A striking note about the Hindu zero is that, unlike the Babylonian and Mayan zero, the Hindu zero symbol came to be understood as meaning "nothing." This is probably because of the use of number words that preceded the symbolic zero.

Read: The Story of Indian Zero.

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