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Although the Chinese were also using a decimal based counting system, the Chinese lacked a formal notational system that had the
abstraction and elegance of the Indian notational system, and it was the Indian notational system that reached the Western world
through the Arabs and has now been accepted as universal. Several factors contributed to this development whose significance is
perhaps best stated by French mathematician, Laplace: "The ingenious method of expressing every possible number using a set of
ten symbols (each symbol having a place value and an absolute value) emerged in India. The idea seems so simple nowadays that
its significance and profound importance is no longer appreciated. It's simplicity lies in the way it facilitated calculation
and placed arithmetic foremost amongst useful inventions."
Brilliant as it was, this invention was no accident. In the Western world, the cumbersome roman numeral system posed as a major
obstacle, and in China the pictorial script posed as a hindrance. But in India, almost everything was in |
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place to favor such a
development. There was already a long and established history in the use of decimal numbers, and philosophical and cosmological
constructs encouraged a creative and expansive approach to number theory. Panini's studies in linguistic theory and formal
language and the powerful role of symbolism and representational abstraction in art and architecture may have also provided
an impetus, as might have the rationalist doctrines and the exacting epistemology of the Nyaya Sutras, and the innovative
abstractions of the Syadavada and Buddhist schools of learning.
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