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Aristotle, an ancient Greek philosopher, believed that infinity could exist, because finite quantities were infinitely separable, but infinity could not be achieved.

/kloc-in the 20th century, a great Indian mathematician, Bascara, appeared, and his concept was close to that of theory.

The symbol of putting 8 horizontally as ∞ to represent infinity was first used in john wallis's paper Arithmetic Infinity (published in 1655).

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The origin of infinite symbols

Aristotle (384-322 BC), an ancient Greek philosopher, believed that infinity could exist, because a finite quantity was infinitely separable and could not reach the pole, but infinity was universally acknowledged as unreachable.

/kloc-in the 20th century, a great Indian mathematician, Bascara, appeared, and his concept was close to that of modern theorization.

The symbol of putting 8 horizontally as ∞ to represent infinity was first put forward in john wallis's paper Arithmetic Infinity (published in 1655).

In mathematics, two equations with infinite symbols are occasionally used, namely: ∞=∞+ 1, ∞=∞× 1.

A formula in which positive values represent infinity. There is no specific number, but positive infinity means a value greater than any number. The sign is +∞, and the sign of negative infinity is -∞.