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Conceptual problems, ideology clashes and xenophobia prevented the concept of zero from catching on for a long time. Today all mathematics is based on it ...
In 628 A.D., the Indian mathematician Brahmagupta wrote the first-ever ... As Timothy Revell reports for the New Scientist, carbon dating of an ancient text called the Bakhshali manuscript has ...
But only the Indian dot that would eventually go on to gain true number status, first described in 628 AD by the Indian astronomer and mathematician Brahmagupta ... at New Scientist Live in ...
Brahmagupta’s Brahmasphutasiddhanta (628 ... Mathematica solidified the concept of gravitational force in Western science.
The debate between mythology and "rational" science in India is at least as old as Aryabhata and Brahmagupta and, to this day, has not been resolved in the Indian popular thinking on science.' ...
Brahmagupta lived in seventh century Ujjain ... The list is endless. Indian science and technology began at Mehrgarh (now in Pakistan) and continued throughout the country’s history.
our modern conception of zero was first published in A.D. 628 by the Indian scholar Brahmagupta, although earlier cultures also had concepts of zero, including the Babylonians and Maya.