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Finding Zero: A Mathematician's Odyssey to Uncover the Origins of Numbers
by
The invention of numerals is perhaps the greatest abstraction the human mind has ever created. Virtually everything in our lives is digital, numerical, or quantified. The story of how and where we got these numerals, which we so depend on, has for thousands of years been shrouded in mystery. Finding Zero is an adventure filled saga of Amir Aczel's lifelong obsession: to fi
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Hardcover, 256 pages
Published
January 6th 2015
by St. Martin's Press
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No, 7th century refers to 7th century CE (the preferred usage over AD; likewise, BCE is preferred over BC)
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Start your review of Finding Zero: A Mathematician's Odyssey to Uncover the Origins of Numbers
Everything Is Not Everything
One of the enduring but fruitless debates in the philosophy of mathematics is whether or not numbers exist apart from human thought about them. This little book provides a pleasing alternative to these abstruse arguments by suggesting that numbers and the mathematics which use numbers as its raw material are a remarkable genre of religious poetry devoted to the concept of the ‘void’. The oldest form of this poetry seems to arise in the Buddhist cultures of Southeast A ...more
One of the enduring but fruitless debates in the philosophy of mathematics is whether or not numbers exist apart from human thought about them. This little book provides a pleasing alternative to these abstruse arguments by suggesting that numbers and the mathematics which use numbers as its raw material are a remarkable genre of religious poetry devoted to the concept of the ‘void’. The oldest form of this poetry seems to arise in the Buddhist cultures of Southeast A ...more
Amir D. Aczel's Finding Zero presents the reader with a number of challenges:
1. Poor style
2. Parochial travelogue
3. Disturbing juxtaposition of `East' and `West'
4. Dated attitude to Hindu and Jain erotic art...as well as the suggestive art of Angkor Wat
5. Fascinating history of the search for Zero
The last of these, and the main reason for reading the book, is in fact not a challenge at all, but for those interested in the history of mathematics and the origin of one of the most important discove ...more
1. Poor style
2. Parochial travelogue
3. Disturbing juxtaposition of `East' and `West'
4. Dated attitude to Hindu and Jain erotic art...as well as the suggestive art of Angkor Wat
5. Fascinating history of the search for Zero
The last of these, and the main reason for reading the book, is in fact not a challenge at all, but for those interested in the history of mathematics and the origin of one of the most important discove ...more
This book was comprised of rather stilted prose. I was hoping for an intriguing math book, and I do enjoy a good travel book, but I didn't fully get either. It was a solidly mediocre travel and math book. Another reviewer made a comparison of an off-brand Indiana Jones of math, and I very much got that vibe. I did enjoy the author's opening, describing how he was drawn into math at a young age.
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I liked the math and history divulged in this book but wasn't too jazzed about the author's personal narrative and adventures. It's not that they were uninteresting but rather, detracted from the greater story of numbers and math.
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This ponderous, self-indulgent, and anaesthetisingly dull book starts with a banal retelling Aczel's childhood before getting progressively less interesting. I am a fool for having read it.
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There's nothing publishers like more than authors talking about themselves, because they think it connects them to their audience. I must admit, when it's, say, a physicist talking about their feelings about their latest discoveries, or how they travelled to yet another conference in a gorgeous location at taxpayers' expense, it makes me want to throw the book away. However there are some writers who have a genuinely interesting story to tell, and that's definitely the case with Amir Aczel's Fin
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Dec 06, 2019
Carla
added it
Gobbled this book up, such a rich story of Aczel’s own fascination with numbers, and a wonderfully lucid explanation of why zero matters. The childhood stuff is great, and the ending, very moving.
Picked this up on a whim and I'm so glad I did. Some other readers complained that Amir would get off topic in describing his adventures, but I just loved it. I tend to have trouble remembering details unless they're embedded in narrative, and so I found Amir's storytelling to be so much more engaging and memorable than your usual mathematics nonfiction- I retained much more than usual. Amir's connection to numbers, math, and his hunt for the first zero gave new meaning to numbers for me and I l
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The origins of our numbers, of our decimal place value system, of our numerals, is certainly an interesting topic! After all, we take for granted that we write numbers the way we do today—most of us learned Roman numerals as kids and quickly realize they are clunky and formidable as we try to write the year we were born (although anyone born after 2000 has a much easier time of it now!). But Amir Aczel was curious about the origins of our number system, and in particular its linchpin of zero. Fi
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This is not really a book about math, as an abstract topic of human thought. However, it is a book about math, in the sense of the human custom and tradition of thinking about numbers and logic. Not just in the sense that it involves the author's personal quest to find the first-ever known use of the numeral zero (in the Old World), but also in the sense that it involves people who, like mathematicians, way overthink things.
This isn't to say that it isn't fun reading, or even of intrinsic intere ...more
This isn't to say that it isn't fun reading, or even of intrinsic intere ...more
Finding Zero is an interesting story very poorly written. The author is on a mission to find the first zero used with the so-called Arabic numerals, the familiar 0 though 9 used by most of the world. Some archaeologists have claimed that zero was a European invention; others claim Arabia as the source; others India. The author researches the claims and then goes on a search to rediscover the proof of the first Old World zero. Along the way we learn about the importance zero to modern calculation
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I am not a math person but the writing was interesting and I learned as I read. Since I teach history I thought, "I will read it through quickly and pass it on to one of our math teachers". To my surprise , once I got into the book I had to find out what happened next. After 2 days of trying to walk away from it, I finished it. Thoroughly enjoyed it.
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The parts of the book that actually talked about the mathematical history were interesting.
But the rest—a memoir / travelogue—wasn’t great. The writing is stilted, at times literally repeating previous sentences from other sections. And there were cultural attitudes that were problematically interwoven with the history, and which unfortunately made all the claims made (even the ones that were more in the realm of mathematics) suspect. I assume the author was trying to make the story more relata ...more
But the rest—a memoir / travelogue—wasn’t great. The writing is stilted, at times literally repeating previous sentences from other sections. And there were cultural attitudes that were problematically interwoven with the history, and which unfortunately made all the claims made (even the ones that were more in the realm of mathematics) suspect. I assume the author was trying to make the story more relata ...more
One of the best books I've ever read. When I finished I thought I was going to have to read it again because I couldn't find a new title that I wasn't afraid would be a total let down after this one.
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You know those book reviews that tend to read more like someone's blog? The ones that are full of personal details that seem relevant to a certain degree to the subject matter of a particular book or author but ultimately loses sight of the fact that they are supposedly writing a review? Well, this book, "Finding Zero," by Amir D. Aczel is very similar to reading one of those. The book cover and its inside jacket description all tell you about what the book is about but ultimately what you get i
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Seemed to me like it spent more time telling you how cool the author's life is than about math. Felt like a vanity book, there are better things to read if you're interested in math.
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An archeological adventure mixed with mathematics. This book made mathematics interesting and (mostly) understandable for someone who never enjoyed or understood math. The quest to find the first zero was mixed with interesting historical anecdotes and the journey through south east Asia was visually descriptive. Very well written about a topic that is far more interesting than you would expect!
Numbers are mysterious. Indeed, the more we try to understand them, the more mysterious they become. Yet there is no doubt that without them, the world as we know it would be the poorer. This book attempts to explore some of the concepts and ideas relating to numbers, and present them in a more or less accessible format for the ordinary reader.
Aczel frames his narrative in a kind of personal autobiography relating to his lifelong fascination with numbers. This is the dominant narrative arc of th ...more
Aczel frames his narrative in a kind of personal autobiography relating to his lifelong fascination with numbers. This is the dominant narrative arc of th ...more
Use of the numeral zero as a placeholder is a deceptively clever invention. The zero allows reuse of a small set of numerals to represent an infinitely large set of numbers. For example: 4, 40, 400, 404, 4400, 0.4, .04, .044 use only the numeral 4 and the zero placeholder to represent a wide range of numbers. Only nine numerals in addition to zero are required for a complete, compact, and unambiguous representation of all numbers. Similar representations become unwieldy with number systems lacki
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shelfnotes.com
Dear Reader,
This book was so much more than I expected. I went in to it anticipating a somewhat dry (if layperson) look at numbers and how they came to be a part of our world. I expected chapters to be organized by history, or by theory. Instead, this book read much more like a memoir. It began with the author's adventures as a young boy as the son of a ship captain, and how he became interested in seeking out the source of our Arabic numerals. There were parts that were kind of sl ...more
Dear Reader,
This book was so much more than I expected. I went in to it anticipating a somewhat dry (if layperson) look at numbers and how they came to be a part of our world. I expected chapters to be organized by history, or by theory. Instead, this book read much more like a memoir. It began with the author's adventures as a young boy as the son of a ship captain, and how he became interested in seeking out the source of our Arabic numerals. There were parts that were kind of sl ...more
This was a really fun read: part history of math, part adventure story. Though Aczel's adventures may not have been death-defying like Indiana Jones, they have something of the same fun and adventurous spirit. Aczel's telling really makes the journey engaging, and it's neat that he was able to find the first known zero and restore such a neat artifact. He does a great job explaining why zero is so important for mathematics as well as why this particular archaeological discovery is so important.
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Early in the twentieth century, an inscription was discovered on a stone slab in the ruins of a seventh-century temple in a place called Sambor on Mekong, in Cambodia. The French archaeologist Georges Cœdès gave this inscription the identifier K-127. He was an expert philologist and translated the inscription from Old Khmer. It begins:
"Chaka parigraha 605 pankami roc..."
Translated: The Chaka era has reached 605 on the fifth day of the waning moon...
The zero in the number 605 is the earliest zero ...more
"Chaka parigraha 605 pankami roc..."
Translated: The Chaka era has reached 605 on the fifth day of the waning moon...
The zero in the number 605 is the earliest zero ...more
Why Read: Although I find actual math (as in Algebra, Geometry, etc, etc) to be potentially one of the things that I am worst at in the world, abstract math and the history of numbers is something entirely different. I adore everything Amir Aczel has written. I love the way that he combines history and the advancement of formulas into a beautiful text that speaks to those who are not numerically skilled. So... there's little doubt that I was going to read this book.
Review: Whenever we get to tr ...more
Review: Whenever we get to tr ...more
Another reviewer hit the nail on the head when he described this book as "self-indulgent." That word encapsulates "Finding Zero" perfectly. A full 80% of this book is probably superfluous and has no bearing on the supposed point: the number zero. We learn where the author spent his layovers on long trips to Southeast Asia, which hotels he stayed in, what he ordered for lunch, and his sister's medical history, none of which has anything to do with numbers or zero. My wife and I were listening to
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I received this book for free through Goodreads First Reads.
caka parigraha 605 pankami roc ...
The caka era has reached 605 on the fifth day of the waning moon ...
This somewhat bland inscription on a Cambodian stele is, according to Amir Aczel, one of the most important in the world because it is the first use of the zero. Aczel weaves a wonderful story in Finding Zero: A Mathematician's Odyssey to Uncover the Origins of Numbers about his own obsession with numbers and an equal obsession to under ...more
caka parigraha 605 pankami roc ...
The caka era has reached 605 on the fifth day of the waning moon ...
This somewhat bland inscription on a Cambodian stele is, according to Amir Aczel, one of the most important in the world because it is the first use of the zero. Aczel weaves a wonderful story in Finding Zero: A Mathematician's Odyssey to Uncover the Origins of Numbers about his own obsession with numbers and an equal obsession to under ...more
Finding Zero starts and finishes well but meanders in the middle. The book is about the author's search for the origin of our base ten place value number system. Zero is the key to efficient place value systems so the author very reasonably zeroes in on zero. In this account zero was invented or discovered, (depending on your philosophy of mathematics), at least twice in human history. The Mayan culture is currently credited with the oldest unambiguously denoted zero but the Maya were isolated f
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As someone who enjoys mathematics, I found this book not only engaging in subject matter but in style. It tends to sound a bit like a textbook at times, but overall I found the writing to be appealing and accessible; something that's often hard to find in my university library. It was also very interesting to see that the title was quite literal, and the physical journey of finding zero was exciting! At least to me.
Aczel presents his theories in a combination of an overall adventure and desire ...more
Aczel presents his theories in a combination of an overall adventure and desire ...more
There's more to nothing than you might imagine. Zero is not only a convenient placeholder as a numeral, but it's also a slippery concept. Similar to infinity in its paradoxicality (is that a word?), zero is a relatively recent invention. Or is it a discovery?
Mathematician Amir Aczel explores these questions in his search for the first concrete evidence for the use of zero. On his journey, he remembers his childhood as the son of a cruise ship captain. His father's most trusted officer, Laci (pro ...more
Mathematician Amir Aczel explores these questions in his search for the first concrete evidence for the use of zero. On his journey, he remembers his childhood as the son of a cruise ship captain. His father's most trusted officer, Laci (pro ...more
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Amir Aczel was an Israeli-born American author of popular science and mathematics books. He was a lecturer in mathematics and history of mathematics.
He studied at the University of California, Berkeley. Getting graduating with a BA in mathematics in 1975, received a Master of Science in 1976 and several years later accomplished his Ph.D. in Statistics from the University of Oregon. He died in Nîme ...more
He studied at the University of California, Berkeley. Getting graduating with a BA in mathematics in 1975, received a Master of Science in 1976 and several years later accomplished his Ph.D. in Statistics from the University of Oregon. He died in Nîme ...more
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