No.14056832 ViewReplyOriginalReport
There is no such thing as zero. What we refer to as zero in mathematics is actually just an infinite, all-containing set. Attempting to divide by zero yields an infinite, uncountable result.

Say you have a ball which travels in a small circle inside a perfect vaccuum. The ball gradually speeds up until it reaches the speed of light. Ignoring the infinite mass and velocity creating a black hole, where does the ball go? Current consensus says it is compressed into an infinitely small singularity and it's momentum is transferred to spin. The information which created the "ball" is, with this theory, lost, or at least unrecoverable, but it's not gone.

In fact, nothing is ever "gone". Even in the inscrutably huge universe, in the deepest recesses of space, there will be photons, particles, quantum space. There can't be nothing. Zero and infinity are one and the same, tied together Ouroboros style.