Imagine you're a designer or mathematician living in ancient Rome. Being a curious & imaginative sort, used to exploring wild ideas, you ask yourself: is there some way you can improve on the roman numeral system? Might it be possible to find a better way of representing number?
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Now, I'm pretty certain this would have seemed a wild idea to most of your contemporaries. But from our modern vantage point we know that in fact a much better system is possible: arabic numerals.
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So a modern phrasing of the question might be: how to invent arabic numerals, assuming you only know roman numerals?
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To be clear, I'm not talking here about delving into the actual history of arabic numerals. That's long and complex and fascinating, but this is a different kind of challenge.
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What I'm talking about is a kind of discovery fiction, a plausible line of reasoning that might have led you to the discovery of arabic numerals, with roughly the set of raw materials on hand in ancient rome.
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I spent quite a bit of time trying to find such a discovery fiction. Originally, I started from the question "If we changed notation [from roman numerals] might there be an easier way to multiply?"
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Replying to @michael_nielsen
David Deutsch explores this in The Beginning in Infinity in the chapter on universals.
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He does? I'd completely forgotten! Just reread it in response to your tweet. Really lovely.
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