A brief history of banned numbers Alessandra King

They say the pen is mightier
than the sword,

and authorities have often agreed.

From outlawed religious tracts
and revolutionary manifestos

to censored and burned books,

we know the potential power
of words to overturn the social order.

But as strange as it may seem,

some numbers have also been considered
dangerous enough to ban.

Our distant ancestors long counted
objects using simple tally marks.

But as they developed agriculture and
began living together in larger groups,

this was no longer enough.

As numbers grew more complex,

people began not just using them,
but thinking about what they are

and how they work.

And by 600 B.C.E. in Ancient Greece,
the study of numbers was well-developed.

The mathematician Pythagoras
and his school of followers

found numerical patterns in shapes,
music, and the stars.

For them, mathematics held
the deepest secrets of the universe.

But one Pythagorean named Hippasus
discovered something disturbing.

Some quantities, like the diagonal
of a square with sides of length one

couldn’t be expressed by any combination
of whole numbers or fractions,

no matter how small.

These numbers,
which we call irrational numbers,

were perceived as a threat

to the Pythagorean’s notion
of a perfect universe.

They imagined a reality
that could be described

with rational, numerical patterns.

Historians write that Hippasus
was exhiled for publicizing his findings,

while legends claim he was drowned
as punishment from the gods.

While irrational numbers
upset philosophers,

later mathematical inventions
would draw attention

from political
and religious authorities, as well.

In the Middle Ages, while Europe
was still using Roman numerals,

other cultures had developed
positional systems

that included a symbol for zero.

When Arab travelers brought this system
to the bustling maritime cities of Italy,

its advantages for merchants
and bankers was clear.

But the authorities were more wary.

Hindu-Arabic numerals were considered
easier to forge or alter,

especially since they were less
familiar to customers than to merchants.

And the concept of zero opened
the door to negative numbers

and the recording of debt

at a time when moneylending
was regarded with suspicion.

In the 13th century, Florence banned
the use of Hindu-Arabic numerals

for record keeping.

And though they soon proved
too useful to ignore,

controversies over zero
and negative numbers

continued for a long time.

Negative numbers
were dismissed as absurd

well into the 19th century.

And prominent mathematicians,
like Gerolamo Cardano,

avoided using zero,

even though it would have made it
much easier to find solutions

to cubic and the quartic equations.

Even today it’s illegal to use
some numbers for different reasons.

Some are banned because
of what they represent.

For example, governments
have prohibited the display of numbers

that have symbolic meaning,

such as the date of a revolution

or connections to oppositional
political figures or parties.

Other numbers are potentially illegal
because of the information they carry.

Just about any information,

whether text,

image,

video,

or executable programs can
be translated into a string of numbers.

But this means that protected information,

whether copyrights,

proprietary materials,

or state secrets

can also be represented as numbers,

so possessing or publishing these numbers
may be treated as a criminal offense.

This idea gathered attention in 2001

when code that could be used
to decrypt DVDs

was widely shared and distributed
in the form of a large prime number.

The idea of illegal numbers
may sound absurd,

but like words,

written numbers are a way
of expressing concepts and information.

And in a world where calculations
and algorithms

shape more and more of our lives,

the mathematician’s pencil
grows stronger by the day.