Popular math at its most entertaining and enlightening. Zero is really
something-Washington Post
A New York Times Notable Book.
The Babylonians invented it, the Greeks banned it, the Hindus worshiped
it, and the Church used it to fend off heretics. Now it threatens the
foundations of modern physics. For centuries the power of zero savored
of the demonic; once harnessed, it became the most important tool in
mathematics. For zero, infinity's twin, is not like other numbers. It is
both nothing and everything.
In Zero, Science Journalist Charles Seife follows this
innocent-looking number from its birth as an Eastern philosophical
concept to its struggle for acceptance in Europe, its rise and
transcendence in the West, and its ever-present threat to modern
physics. Here are the legendary thinkers--from Pythagoras to Newton to
Heisenberg, from the Kabalists to today's astrophysicists--who have
tried to understand it and whose clashes shook the foundations of
philosophy, science, mathematics, and religion. Zero has pitted East
against West and faith against reason, and its intransigence persists in
the dark core of a black hole and the brilliant flash of the Big Bang.
Today, zero lies at the heart of one of the biggest scientific
controversies of all time: the quest for a theory of everything.