I came across this PPS.. found it interesting and thought of sharing with YOU ALL...............
Hope you all like it. .
Thanks & Regards,
Rahul Ambavkar
-------------------------------------------
“Don’t aim for success if you want it; just do what you love and believe in, and it will come naturally.”
From India, Mumbai
Hope you all like it. .
Thanks & Regards,
Rahul Ambavkar
-------------------------------------------
“Don’t aim for success if you want it; just do what you love and believe in, and it will come naturally.”
From India, Mumbai
Dear Rahul, Really some minutes i can’t realized..... very logical information is this actually.........!!!!!! thanks for sharing here to all peoples.
From India, Mumbai
From India, Mumbai
Dear Rahul, Suprbbbbb, Good Thinking, AISA HI AUR ACHHA SOCHE, BHAGWAN AAPKI SAHAYATA KAREGA, Regards,
From India, Gurgaon
From India, Gurgaon
Dear Rahul,
Thanks for the post. Have/has anybody checked out whether really true or not. If it's logically reasoned out good work. On the other hand any historical truth behind this let us know pl. Because in India we believe Indians are forerunners of these numbers. Especially '0' is the invention of Indian's. Am I correct.?
Pl.see what the Wikipedia says about the numbers:
" Most of the positional base 10 numeral systems in the world have originated from India, where the concept of positional numeration was first developed. The Indian numeral system is commonly referred to in the West as the Hindu-Arabic numeral system or just Arabic numerals, since it reached Europe through the Arabs.
Since Sanskrit is an Indo-European language, it is obvious that the words for numerals closely resemble those of Greek and Latin. The word "Shunya" for zero was translated into Arabic as "صفر" "sifr", meaning 'nothing' which became the term "zero" in many European languages from Medieval Latin, zephirum (Arabic: sifr).[2]
Note: The symbol for zero in Tamil is modern innovation. Unicode 4.1 and later define encodings for them.[3][4]
A decimal place system has been traced back to ca. 500 in India. Before that epoch, the Brahmi numeral system was in use; that system did not encompass the concept of the place-value of numbers. Instead, Brahmi numerals included additional symbols for the tens, as well as separate symbols for hundred and thousand.
The Indian place-system numerals spread to neighboring Persia, where they were picked up by the conquering Arabs. In 662, a Nestorian bishop living in what is now called Iraq said:
I will omit all discussion of the science of the Indians ... of their subtle discoveries in astronomy - discoveries that are more ingenious than those of the Greeks and the Babylonians - and of their valuable methods of calculation which surpass description. I wish only to say that this computation is done by means of nine signs. If those who believe that because they speak Greek they have arrived at the limits of science would read the Indian texts they would be convinced even if a little late in the day that there are others who know something of value.
The addition of zero as a tenth positional digit is documented from the 7th century by Brahmagupta, though the earlier Bakhshali Manuscript, written sometime before the 5th century, also included zero. But it is in Khmer numerals of modern Cambodia is where the first extant material evidence of zero as a numerical figure, dating its use back to the seventh century, is found.[5]
As it was from the Arabs that the Europeans learned this system, the Europeans called them Arabic numerals; the Arabs refer to their numerals as Indian numerals. In academic circles they are called the Hindu-Arabic or Indo-Arabic numerals.
The significance of the development of the positional number system is probably best described by the French mathematician Pierre Simon Laplace (1749–1827) who wrote:
It is India that gave us the ingenious method of expressing all numbers by
the means of ten symbols, each symbol receiving a value of position, as well as an absolute value; a profound and important idea which appears so simple to us now that we ignore its true merit, but its very simplicity, the great ease which it has lent to all computations, puts our arithmetic in the first rank of useful inventions, and we shall appreciate the grandeur of this achievement when we remember that it escaped the genius of Archimedes and Apollonius, two of the greatest minds produced by antiquity."
Also pl.see the attachment for a detailed writeup posted by Wikipedia on Numbers & Indians' contributions.
kumar.s.
From India, Bangalore
Thanks for the post. Have/has anybody checked out whether really true or not. If it's logically reasoned out good work. On the other hand any historical truth behind this let us know pl. Because in India we believe Indians are forerunners of these numbers. Especially '0' is the invention of Indian's. Am I correct.?
Pl.see what the Wikipedia says about the numbers:
" Most of the positional base 10 numeral systems in the world have originated from India, where the concept of positional numeration was first developed. The Indian numeral system is commonly referred to in the West as the Hindu-Arabic numeral system or just Arabic numerals, since it reached Europe through the Arabs.
Since Sanskrit is an Indo-European language, it is obvious that the words for numerals closely resemble those of Greek and Latin. The word "Shunya" for zero was translated into Arabic as "صفر" "sifr", meaning 'nothing' which became the term "zero" in many European languages from Medieval Latin, zephirum (Arabic: sifr).[2]
Note: The symbol for zero in Tamil is modern innovation. Unicode 4.1 and later define encodings for them.[3][4]
A decimal place system has been traced back to ca. 500 in India. Before that epoch, the Brahmi numeral system was in use; that system did not encompass the concept of the place-value of numbers. Instead, Brahmi numerals included additional symbols for the tens, as well as separate symbols for hundred and thousand.
The Indian place-system numerals spread to neighboring Persia, where they were picked up by the conquering Arabs. In 662, a Nestorian bishop living in what is now called Iraq said:
I will omit all discussion of the science of the Indians ... of their subtle discoveries in astronomy - discoveries that are more ingenious than those of the Greeks and the Babylonians - and of their valuable methods of calculation which surpass description. I wish only to say that this computation is done by means of nine signs. If those who believe that because they speak Greek they have arrived at the limits of science would read the Indian texts they would be convinced even if a little late in the day that there are others who know something of value.
The addition of zero as a tenth positional digit is documented from the 7th century by Brahmagupta, though the earlier Bakhshali Manuscript, written sometime before the 5th century, also included zero. But it is in Khmer numerals of modern Cambodia is where the first extant material evidence of zero as a numerical figure, dating its use back to the seventh century, is found.[5]
As it was from the Arabs that the Europeans learned this system, the Europeans called them Arabic numerals; the Arabs refer to their numerals as Indian numerals. In academic circles they are called the Hindu-Arabic or Indo-Arabic numerals.
The significance of the development of the positional number system is probably best described by the French mathematician Pierre Simon Laplace (1749–1827) who wrote:
It is India that gave us the ingenious method of expressing all numbers by
the means of ten symbols, each symbol receiving a value of position, as well as an absolute value; a profound and important idea which appears so simple to us now that we ignore its true merit, but its very simplicity, the great ease which it has lent to all computations, puts our arithmetic in the first rank of useful inventions, and we shall appreciate the grandeur of this achievement when we remember that it escaped the genius of Archimedes and Apollonius, two of the greatest minds produced by antiquity."
Also pl.see the attachment for a detailed writeup posted by Wikipedia on Numbers & Indians' contributions.
kumar.s.
From India, Bangalore
Find answers from people who have previously dealt with business and work issues similar to yours - Please Register and Log In to CiteHR and post your query.