physio said:
My question may come as a surprise to many people but I have not understood the importance of zero and its significance. How can nothing be something? Why do we have zero as a number? If it's used for measuring then we can very well do without zero, for example if there is a fellow counting pebbles then after say 9 pebbles he can count 11,12 etc. upto infinite. Also I don't understand the reason for negative numbers. How can something be less than nothing?
There are really two different discoveries here. One is the discovery of zero as a
numeral; and the other is the discovery of zero as a
number.
The numeral zero made possible the invention of
positional notation. The number 12304 means 10,000 + 2000 + 300 + 4. This notational trick gave us the ability to write down and manipulate really large numbers. Try multiplying VIII by XL and you can see how positional notation is vastly superior to Roman numerals.
There's a lot of power in a good notation!
The other aspect of zero is as a number.This is a lot more subtle. It involves accepting that if I haven't got any tomatoes, that I have zero tomatoes. That a number can be used to indicate the absence, as well as the presence, of something. Or even a deficit. If I owe you two tomatoes, I have negative 2 tomatoes.
The discovery that zero is a number, and that negative numbers can be used according to rules and give answers that make sense, are both great leaps of abstraction for humanity. And abstraction is something we're really good at.
Can you relate to negative numbers in terms of quantities of things owed? And to the number zero in terms of describing the quantity of things you don't have? Someone could have two cats and zero dogs, right?