Nobody “made” numbers in a single moment the way an inventor makes a gadget; number ideas grew over thousands of years in different cultures.

Quick Scoop: So who gets credit?

Think of numbers as a long, global collaboration:

  • Earliest counting
    • Prehistoric humans used tally marks on bone, stone, and wood to keep track of things like animals or traded goods.
* These weren’t symbols like “1, 2, 3” yet, just marks that stood for “how many.”
  • Ancient number systems
    • Sumerians and Babylonians in Mesopotamia had positional number systems (base‑60) over 4,000 years ago.
* Egyptians and Romans created written numerals (like Roman I, V, X), good for recording but clumsy for calculation.
  • Who made our modern digits (0–9)?
    • The symbols we use today (0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9) come from Indian mathematicians , developed between about the 1st and 7th centuries CE.
* They also developed the deep idea of **place value** (the “2” in 20 vs 200) and treated **zero** as a real number. Brahmagupta in 7th‑century India gave rules for arithmetic with zero.
  • Why are they called Hindu–Arabic numerals?
    • Scholars in the Islamic world adopted and refined these Indian numerals and methods.
* In the 1100s–1200s, the Italian mathematician **Fibonacci** helped introduce this “Hindu–Arabic” system to Europe, where it slowly replaced Roman numerals.
  • Later “kinds” of numbers
    • Negative numbers , irrational numbers (like 2\sqrt{2}2​), and real numbers were gradually accepted and formalized by Greek, European, and other mathematicians over many centuries.
* In the 19th century, people like **Dedekind** and **Cantor** made rigorous theories of real numbers and infinity.

Did we invent or discover numbers?

This is a big philosophy + forum‑style debate that still pops up online.

  • One view: numbers are discovered
    • The universe has patterns (2 apples, 2 stars, 2 people), and “2” is a real abstract thing we uncover, like a planet or a law of physics.
* On this view, humans just discovered how to talk about something that was always there.
  • Another view: numbers are invented
    • The symbols (like “7”) and the exact rules we use (base‑10, decimal notation, etc.) are human-made conventions.
* Some writers today even say we should treat numbers like a **language** that we learn to “translate” into human terms so people feel what they mean, not just see digits.
  • Middle ground (most common among working mathematicians)
    • The notations and systems are clearly invented.
* But they latch onto deep **structures** in reality that feel discovered.
* In practice we live with both ideas at once: we invent the tools, then discover surprising truths with them.

Mini timeline (story style)

  1. Hunter scratches tallies on a bone: “These are my goats.” (No symbols yet.)
  1. Sumerian scribe tracks grain with a base‑60 system.
  1. Indian scholar writes huge numbers using only 1–9 and a new “empty” symbol (0), realizing place value makes everything easier.
  1. Brahmagupta writes rules for using zero like a normal number.
  1. Arab mathematician copies, studies, and spreads these ideas across the Islamic world.
  1. Fibonacci sees them in North Africa, brings them to Europe, and says: we should all use this.
  1. Centuries later, people formalize negatives, irrationals, real numbers, and different infinities.

So if you ask “who made numbers?” the best honest answer is:

  • Many unknown ancient people created ways to count.
  • Indian mathematicians created the core of our modern numeral system and zero.
  • Arab scholars and Fibonacci spread that system globally.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.