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Eric Gandarilla

Eric Gandarilla. Most people may not necessarily appreciate the importance of the number zero, besides the fact that you would love to have a lot of them

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Page 1: Eric Gandarilla. Most people may not necessarily appreciate the importance of the number zero, besides the fact that you would love to have a lot of them

Eric Gandarilla

Page 2: Eric Gandarilla. Most people may not necessarily appreciate the importance of the number zero, besides the fact that you would love to have a lot of them

Most people may not necessarily appreciate the importance of the number zero, besides the fact that you would love to have a lot of them behind

some other numbers in your bank account. In fact, you would think that the number zero is just like

any other number.

Page 3: Eric Gandarilla. Most people may not necessarily appreciate the importance of the number zero, besides the fact that you would love to have a lot of them

The number zero that we know, arrived in Europe in 1200.

It was delivered by a famous Italian mathematician Fibonacci (aka Leonardo of Pisa).

Fibonacci brought it along with the rest of the Arabic numerals, back from his travels to north Africa. But the history of zero both as a concept and a number, stretches far deeper into history.

There are at least two discoveries, or inventions, of zero.

Page 4: Eric Gandarilla. Most people may not necessarily appreciate the importance of the number zero, besides the fact that you would love to have a lot of them
Page 5: Eric Gandarilla. Most people may not necessarily appreciate the importance of the number zero, besides the fact that you would love to have a lot of them

It first came to be between 400 and 300 B.C. in Babylon.

Before developing in India, it made its way through northern Africa and into Fibonacci so hands, crossing into Europe via Italy.

Page 6: Eric Gandarilla. Most people may not necessarily appreciate the importance of the number zero, besides the fact that you would love to have a lot of them

First Discovery

Initially, zero functioned as a mere placeholder, a way to tell 1 from 10 from 100 to give an example using Arabic numerals.

A full zero is a number on its own; it's the average of –1 and 1.

It began to take shape as a number rather than a punctuation mark between numbers in India in the fifth century A.D.

It wasn’t until then and not even fully then, that zero gets full citizenship in the republic of numbers. Some cultures were slow to accept the idea of zero, which for many carried darkly magical connection.

Page 7: Eric Gandarilla. Most people may not necessarily appreciate the importance of the number zero, besides the fact that you would love to have a lot of them

The second discovery of zero occurred independently in the New World in the Mayan culture, which was likely in the first few centuries A.D.

In even earlier appearance of a placeholder zero a pair of angled wedges used by the Sumerians to denote an empty number column some 4,000 to 5,000 years ago.

Page 8: Eric Gandarilla. Most people may not necessarily appreciate the importance of the number zero, besides the fact that you would love to have a lot of them