ZER O HAS HAD a long history. The Babylonians invented the
concept of zero; the ancient Greeks debated it in lofty terms
(how could something be nothing?); the ancient Indian scholar
Pingala paired zero with the numeral 1 to get double digits;
and both the Mayans and the Romans made zero part of their
numeral systems. But zero really found its place about AD 498,
when the Indian astronomer Aryabhata sat up in bed one
morning and exclaimed, "Sthanam sthanam dasa gunam"—
which translates, roughly, as "Place to place in 10 times in
value." With that, the idea of decimal-based place-value notation
was born. Now zero was on a roll: It spread to the Arab
world, where it flourished; crossed the Iberian Peninsula to Europe
(thanks to the Spanish Moors) ; got some tweaking from
the Italians; and eventually sailed the Atlantic to the New
World, where zero ultimately found plenty of employment (together
with the digit 1) in a place called Silicon Valley.
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