180 Are the Androids Dreaming Yet? the number zero behaves just like any other counting number. It also works with multiplication. If I have zero lots of 4 cakes, I have no cakes. Zero times four is zero, so multiplication with zero works. There is one embarrassing exception, if I divide by zero I seem to get infinity. When I was a child this was a definition for infinity, but nowadays mathematicians simply forbid the operation. Division by zero is not allowed and if you try it on your computer, you will get the not terribly useful, #DIV/0! Error. That’s progress I guess! Zero had been tamed. What about infinity? Cantor showed that while you could think of infinity as a number, it might not be just one number. He proposed there are many infinities. In fact, there are a greater than infinite number of them! He did this through a rigorous analysis of a new branch of mathematics called set theory. Set theory is now the cornerstone of modern mathematics, but it was treated with suspicion in Cantor's time. Rather than embrace the new thinking, many mathematicians ridiculed it; Poincaré wrote that Cantor’s ideas were a grave disease infecting the discipline of mathematics! This seems odd given our modern propensity to embrace innovation, but the tone of science back then was different: innovation was not necessarily considered a good thing. At the turn of the 20" century, scientists were on a mission to tidy things up. Lord Kelvin announced in 1890 that mankind had discovered everything there was to know and the role of future scientists was simply to catalogue and observe the consequences of these laws, and to improve the accuracy of measurement. The last thing scientists wanted was a completely new set of numbers that behaved in strange ways. Cantor was upsetting the apple cart, but he was in good company. Just a few miles away in Berlin, a young Albert Einstein was beginning to study physics in his spare time. Those studies would culminate in his four papers of 19