EAM Jaishankar Unveils India’s Math Legacy Exhibition at UN HQ in New York

External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar inaugurated the 'From Shunya to Ananta' exhibition at the UN headquarters in New York, showcasing India's mathematical contributions. He emphasized mathematics as a universal language that fosters global good and international cooperation. Jaishankar also referenced the AI Impact Summit in India, advocating for inclusive access to emerging technologies. The exhibition was attended by his wife Kyoko Jaishankar, Ambassador Harish Parvathaneni, and mathematician Manjul Bhargava.

Key Points: India’s Math Legacy Exhibition at UN HQ by Jaishankar

  • Exhibition 'From Shunya to Ananta' inaugurated at UN HQ
  • Highlights India's contributions to mathematics
  • Jaishankar calls for closer international collaboration
  • AI Impact Summit in India promotes inclusive tech access
2 min read

New York: EAM Jaishankar inaugurates special exhibition on India's contribution to Mathematics at UN HQ

EAM S. Jaishankar inaugurates 'From Shunya to Ananta' exhibition at UN, highlighting India's contributions to mathematics and global cooperation.

"Mathematics is a universal language and its spread has served and continues to serve a global good. - S. Jaishankar"

New York, May 12

External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar inaugurated a special exhibition titled 'From Shunya to Ananta -- The Indian Civilisation's Contribution to Mathematics' at the United Nations headquarters in New York.

The exhibition, which is organised by the Permanent Mission of India to the United Nations, sets out to document what it describes as the Indian civilisation's contribution to mathematics.

Speaking at the inauguration of the exhibition, EAM Jaishankar hoped that it would heighten awareness and spark a debate about the richness of the inherently pluralistic world and help cast aside prejudices and assumptions about the embrace of technology in the current era.

"This exhibition is a reminder that mathematics is a universal language and its spread has served and continues to serve a global good", he said.

Noting how the United Nations is the most established platform for international cooperation, he said, "We can draw on that message in its quest to advocate closer international collaboration."

He recalled the AI Impact Summit held in New Delhi earlier this year, which sent a message of inclusivity and larger access to emerging technologies like Artificial Intelligence.

"We can already perceive where and how digital public infrastructure has delivered good governance and social benefits. The recent AI Impact Summit in India has also sent a strong message that creativity and innovation cannot be limited to a few", he said.

EAM Jaishankar saw the exhibition along with his wife, Kyoko Jaishankar; Ambassador Harish Parvathaneni, Permanent Representative of India to the UN, and world-renowned mathematician and a recipient of Padma Bhushan in 2015, Manjul Bhargava.

Last year, during an exhibition in New Delhi on India's mathematical contributions, Manjul Bhargava spoke to ANI about India's indispensable contributions to mathematics, which include the number system, zero, quadratic equations, negative numbers, the first exact formula of Pi, sine and cosine, among others.

"Lots of fundamental discoveries of mathematics happened in India, which have influenced global mathematics. The idea of zero came from yoga- to achieve 'shunyata'. So the ideas of mathematics came from social science, philosophy," Bhargava said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
As someone who studied math in university, I always found the history fascinating. It's great to see this recognition at the UN. The concept of zero is mind-blowing when you think about it.
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Vikram M
Excellent initiative by our diplomats. But I wish we'd put more effort into modern math research too. We celebrate ancient glory, but what about our current contributions? Just saying... 🤔
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Michael C
Visited a similar exhibition in Delhi last year. The part about how 'shunya' (zero) came from yogic concepts of emptiness was fascinating. Manjul Bhargava really brings these ideas to life.
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Priya S
As a math teacher in a government school, I'm thrilled! Our children need to know that mathematics isn't just Western. Those ancient Indian mathematicians were solving quadratic equations while others were still counting on fingers! 😄
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David E
Interesting timing with the AI Summit reference. Indian math concepts are foundational for modern computing. Good to see soft power diplomacy working at the UN.

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