Ancient cultures had various ideas about the nature of infinity. The
ancient Indians and the
Greeks did not define infinity in precise formalism as does modern mathematics, and instead approached infinity as a philosophical concept.
Early Greek The earliest recorded idea of infinity in Greece may be that of
Anaximander (c. 610 – c. 546 BC) a
pre-Socratic Greek philosopher. He used the word
apeiron, which means "unbounded", "indefinite", and perhaps can be translated as "infinite".
Aristotle (350 BC) distinguished
potential infinity from
actual infinity, which he regarded as impossible due to the various
paradoxes it seemed to produce. It has been argued that, in line with this view, the
Hellenistic Greeks had a "horror of the infinite" which would, for example, explain why
Euclid (c. 300 BC) did not say that there are an infinity of primes but rather "Prime numbers are more than any assigned multitude of prime numbers." It has also been maintained, that, in proving the
infinitude of the prime numbers, Euclid "was the first to overcome the horror of the infinite". There is a similar controversy concerning Euclid's
parallel postulate, sometimes translated: Other translators, however, prefer the translation "the two straight lines, if produced indefinitely ...", thus avoiding the implication that Euclid was comfortable with the notion of infinity. Finally, it has been maintained that a reflection on infinity, far from eliciting a "horror of the infinite", underlay all of early Greek philosophy and that Aristotle's "potential infinity" is an aberration from the general trend of this period.
Zeno: Achilles and the tortoise Zeno of Elea ( 495 – 430 BC) did not advance any views concerning the infinite. Nevertheless, his paradoxes, especially "Achilles and the Tortoise", were important contributions in that they made clear the inadequacy of popular conceptions. The paradoxes were described by
Bertrand Russell as "immeasurably subtle and profound".
Achilles races a tortoise, giving the latter a head start. • Step #1: Achilles runs to the tortoise's starting point while the tortoise walks forward. • Step #2: Achilles advances to where the tortoise was at the end of Step #1 while the tortoise goes yet farther. • Step #3: Achilles advances to where the tortoise was at the end of Step #2 while the tortoise goes yet farther. • Step #4: Achilles advances to where the tortoise was at the end of Step #3 while the tortoise goes yet farther. And this continues infinitely. Basically, • Step #(n+1): Achilles advances to where the tortoise was at the end of Step #n while the tortoise goes yet farther. Apparently, Achilles never overtakes the tortoise, since however many steps he completes, the tortoise remains ahead of him. Zeno was not attempting to make a point about infinity. As a member of the
Eleatics school which regarded motion as an illusion, he saw it as a mistake to suppose that Achilles could run at all. Subsequent thinkers, finding this solution unacceptable, struggled for over two millennia to find other weaknesses in the argument. Finally, in 1821,
Augustin-Louis Cauchy provided both a satisfactory definition of a limit and a proof that, for , a+ax+ax^2+ax^3+ax^4+ax^5+\cdots=\frac{a}{1-x}. Suppose that Achilles is running at 10 meters per second, the tortoise is walking at 0.1 meters per second, and the latter has a 100-meter head start. The duration of the chase fits Cauchy's pattern with and . Achilles does overtake the tortoise; it takes him :10+0.1+0.001+0.00001+\cdots=\frac {10}{1-0.01}= \frac {10}{0.99}=10.10101\ldots\text{ seconds}.
Early Indian The
Jain mathematical text
Surya Prajnapti (c. 4th–3rd century BCE) classifies all numbers into three sets:
enumerable, innumerable, and infinite. Each of these was further subdivided into three orders: • Enumerable: lowest, intermediate, and highest • Innumerable: nearly innumerable, truly innumerable, and innumerably innumerable • Infinite: nearly infinite, truly infinite, infinitely infinite
17th century In the 17th century, European mathematicians started using infinite numbers and infinite expressions in a systematic fashion. In 1655,
John Wallis first used the notation \infty for such a number in his
De sectionibus conicis, and exploited it in area calculations by dividing the region into
infinitesimal strips of width on the order of \tfrac{1}{\infty}. But in
Arithmetica infinitorum (1656), he indicates infinite series, infinite products and infinite continued fractions by writing down a few terms or factors and then appending "&c.", as in "1, 6, 12, 18, 24, &c." In 1699,
Isaac Newton wrote about equations with an infinite number of terms in his work
De analysi per aequationes numero terminorum infinitas. == Symbol ==