natural number
Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.
Join Britannica's Publishing Partner Program and our community of experts to gain a global audience for your work!Learn about this topic in these articles:
arithmetic operations
- In arithmetic: Natural numbers
…called the counting numbers or natural numbers (1, 2, 3, …). For an empty set, no object is present, and the count yields the number 0, which, appended to the natural numbers, produces what are known as the whole numbers.
Read More
foundations of mathematics
- In foundations of mathematics: Foundational logic
…logic, but what about the natural numbers? Kronecker had suggested that, while everything else was made by man, the natural numbers were given by God. The logicists, however, believed that the natural numbers were also man-made, inasmuch as definitions may be said to be of human origin.
Read More - In mathematics: The foundations of mathematics
…such as that of the natural numbers (the integers 1, 2, 3, and so on) and on certain constructions involving them. The algebraic theory of numbers and the transformed theory of equations had focused attention on abstract structures in mathematics. Questions that had been raised about numbers since Babylonian times…
Read More
games and puzzles
- In number game: Number patterns and curiosities
Some groupings of natural numbers, when operated upon by the ordinary processes of arithmetic, reveal rather remarkable patterns, affording pleasant pastimes. For example:
Read More
numeral systems
- In numerals and numeral systems
…people had learned how to count. Probably the earliest way of keeping record of a count was by some tally system involving physical objects such as pebbles or sticks. Judging by the habits of indigenous peoples today as well as by the oldest remaining traces of written or sculptured records,…
Read More
set theory
- In formal logic: Set theory
…is widely held that the natural numbers can be adequately defined in set-theoretic terms. Moreover, given suitable axioms, standard postulates for natural-number arithmetic can be derived as theorems within set theory.
Read More - In set theory: Fundamental set concepts
…indicates that the list of natural numbers ℕ goes on forever. The empty (or void, or null) set, symbolized by {} or Ø, contains no elements at all. Nonetheless, it has the status of being a set.
Read More
use in analysis
- In analysis: Number systems
The natural numbers ℕ. These numbers are the positive (and zero) whole numbers 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, …. If two such numbers are added or multiplied, the result is again a natural number. b. The integers ℤ. These numbers are the positive and negative…
Read More