who discovered number and alphabet.
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Answer:
Who created the alphabet and the number?
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The splitting of numbers from alphabet is a Greek development. Until then, numbers were integral signs of written communication - the only thing that changed was context surrounding a sign. We see this in Proto-tifinagh, Akkadian, Ugarit, Eblait, Babylonian, Aramaic, Hebrew, Tifinagh. Going back to 3000 BCE, these abjads have letters which are also used to represent numbers depending upon context. These abjads, however, also represent a continuous chain of transmission of phonetic alphabet with Verb-object-subject sentence structures practices to this day. The first phonetic alphabet, an abjad, is represented by proto-tifinagh which is better known as proto-Hebrew; they are the same grammar and pronunciation. Hebrew is a construction of a tribe called “Bani Ibri” - as old as the ‘Ad of Arabian Peninsula, if not older. Phonetic Hebrew abjad has been expressed in many different writing systems such as Cuneiform (Akkadian, Babylonian, Ugarit, Eblait), multi-stroke block (‘ktav Assir’, proto-tifinagh, proto-hebrew).
Arabic, however, underwent a transformation, bifurcating from other trilateral root languages around 700 CE when the Caliph adopted the decimal Hindu–Arabic numeral system with zero - developed in India. With this, Arabic severed “The Logos” along with the Greeks…and charting a course for its grammar which separates its semiotics from other abjads. Indeed, we can say that Arabic became more “Greek” after the death of Prophet Muhammad…this explains why the animus of Arabic-speaking societies, towards Trinitarian societies is common - their Logos is split along the same lines…and their respective theological debates are mirror images of each other.
Historically speaking, we have archaeological evidence of “counting Sticks” dating back to 25,000 BCE which some anthropologists claim were used to count members of herds of animals…but in truth these notches on sticks can just as easily be explained as “grip” notches to insure the stick doesn’t slip out of their hand during butchering of animals they hunted and killed.
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Answer: hey mate,
Humans did...
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