Mathematics
T1
In 628 CE, Brahmagupta wrote the world's first explicit arithmetic of zero. Add zero, subtract zero, multiply by zero — he gave each operation a rule. He also wrote down a rule for dividing by zero. He got that one wrong, but he tried — and 'tried' is exactly the achievement: Western mathematics wouldn't treat zero as a number with its own arithmetic for another thousand years.
From the source
“The sum of two affirmative quantities is affirmative; of two negative is negative; of an affirmative and a negative is their difference; or, if they be equal, nought. ”
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Featured in 4 articles
- The thousand-year road trip of the digits 0–9
Published July 5, 2026
- Counting to a trillion in the Vedic era: the Yajurveda's ladder of tens
Published July 5, 2026
- Bhāskara II divides by zero — and names the result (1150 CE)
Published July 5, 2026
- Brahmagupta in 628 CE: the world's first explicit arithmetic of zero (including a wrong-but-pioneering division-by-zero attempt)
Published May 14, 2026