RE: Is zero a natural number?
June 5, 2023 at 1:19 am
(This post was last modified: June 5, 2023 at 1:21 am by Carl Hickey.)
(January 18, 2022 at 7:34 am)GrandizerII Wrote: The answer depends on the class you're taking. Sometimes it's considered a natural number, sometimes it's not.
Couldn't locate the segment using the timestamp you posted. What's the argument exactly?
natural (adj.)
c. 1300, naturel, "of one's inborn character; hereditary, innate, by birth or as if by birth;" early 14c. "of the world of nature (especially as opposed to man)," from Old French naturel "of nature, conforming to nature; by birth," and directly from Latin naturalis "by birth, according to nature," from natura "nature" (see nature).
...
etimonline
=
nature (n.)
late 13c., "restorative powers of the body, bodily processes; powers of growth;" from Old French nature "nature, being, principle of life; character, essence," from Latin natura "course of things; natural character, constitution, quality; the universe," literally "birth," from natus "born," past participle of nasci "to be born," from PIE root *gene- "give birth, beget."
...
etimonline
=
entropy (n.)
1868, from German Entropie "measure of the disorder of a system," coined 1865 (on analogy of Energie) by German physicist Rudolph Clausius (1822-1888), in his work on the laws of thermodynamics, from Greek entropia "a turning toward," from en "in" (see en- (2)) + trope "a turning, a transformation" (from PIE root *trep- "to turn"). The notion is supposed to be "transformation contents." Related: Entropic.
It was not until 1865 that Clausius invented the word entropy as a suitable name for what he had been calling "the transformational content of the body." The new word made it possible to state the second law in the brief but portentous form: "The entropy of the universe tends toward a maximum," but Clausius did not view entropy as the basic concept for understanding that law. He preferred to express the physical meaning of the second law in terms of the concept of disgregation, another word that he coined, a concept that never became part of the accepted structure of thermodynamics. [Martin J. Klein, "The Scientific Style of Josiah Willard Gibbs," in "A Century of Mathematics in America," 1989]
etymonline
=
...
== =
Latin and Greek and invented and ... other words are used in science. Naming is a kind of (an?) art.
In some languages Latin and Greek and other scientific terms are translated.
Language is all about politics.