The Concept

Zero is not simply a placeholder, like an empty seat in a row; it is a number with its own value. It represents ‘nothingness’ (0) and can modify values when added to the right of a digit (1 becomes 10). It unites positive and negative integers, providing a neutral centre for all mathematics.

The Story:

Imagine a world where ‘nothing’ was a crime. In medieval Europe, the Church looked at the void with terror; if God was everything, then ‘nothingness’ must be the work of the devil. While Florence was busy outlawing Hindu numerals in 1299 CE to prevent ‘fraud,’ a silent revolution had already been completed in India millennia earlier. For the Vedic Rishis, Shunya wasn’t a scary void; it was a philosophical necessity, a reflection of Shiva himself. The story of Zero is the story of an Indian concept so powerful it survived being labelled ‘Saracen Magic’ by the West. It eventually took the courage of a young Italian named Fibonacci to smuggle this ‘forbidden’ Hindu theory into Europe, finally giving the world the tool it needed to build the digital age.

Time Line:

Western Ref. 1202 CE (Fibonacci introduces ‘Zephirum’)
Indian Source Prior to 10,000 BCE (Concept in Vedas); Prior to 2,000 BCE (Pingala)
Chronological Gap Over 11,000 Years
Sanskrit Shloka: गा़यत्रे षट् । रूपे शून्यम् । द्विः शून्ये ।

Transliteration: Gāyatre ṣaṭ. Rūpe śūnyam. Dviḥ śūnye.

Meaning: Gāyatre a: In the Gayatri meter, there are six syllables. Rūpe śūnyam: When the number is halved (and an odd number results), place a Zero. Dvi śūnye: When a Zero is placed, multiply by two. (Pingala Chhandas Sutra 8.28 – 8.30)

 

 

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