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by nivertech
456 days ago
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IMO zero represents an absence of quantity and doesn't appear in Nature, so it cannot be classified as a Natural number Just like a negative numbers, it's a higher-level abstraction or a model, not a direct observation from the Nature Likewise, the digit "0" originating from the Hindu-Arabic numeral system[1] is merely a notation, not a number --- 1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hindu%E2%80%93Arabic_numeral_s... |
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From one point of view, zero never appearing in nature is exactly an example of it appearing in nature!
From another point of view, do you not think a prairie dog has ever asked another prairie dog, "how many foxes are out there now?" with the other looking and replying "None! All clear!"? Crows can count to at least 5, and will count down until there are zero humans in a silo before returning to it. Zero influences animal behavior!
From a third point of view, humans are natural, so everything we do appears in nature.
From a fourth point of view, all models are wrong, but some models are useful. Is it more useful to put zero in the natural numbers or not? That is: if we exclude zero from the natural numbers, do we just force 90% of occurrences of the term to be "non-negative integers" instead?