|  |      I came across the Banach-Tarski Theorem many years ago.
     The instructor called it the Banach-Tarski Paradox. 
     It isn't magic; the reassembly process allows one to
     do wondrous things with infinite sets of points.  For
     example, consider this collection of points on the unit
     circle in the x-y plane: {(cos n, sin n) | n = 0, 1,2, 3, ...}
     where n is in radians.  Since the integer n is a multiple
     of pi only for n=0, the points all are distinct.  Now
     suppose that during the reassembly you rotate the set
     of points by, say, 5 radians counterclockwise.  Then the
     rotated set is {(cos n, sin n) | n = 5, 6, 7, ...}. 
     The "reassembly" process, i.e., the rotation, looks as
     if it just subtracted five points from the set.  If you
     had rotated it 5 radians in the other direction, it would
     look like five new points had been added to the set.
     This doesn't happen when you rotate a triangle, which
     is why you may not be used to it.
     
     The proof of the Banach-Tarski Theorem "cuts" one sphere
     into a finite number of point sets which can be rotated
     and translated etc. so that they now take up all of the
     points of two spheres the size of the original.
     
     I wish that I could remember the method.  It would be
     interesting to know why/how those two came up with this
     result.  "Why" if they set out to prove this particular
     result, "how" if it was a by-product of other
     investigations.
     
     Dan
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|  |     The Intelligencer article does not prove the main theorem but indicates
    the direction.  More important, the applications section is
    interesting.  To quote, "All you need is a sharp knife, a small
    loaf of bread, a few fish and a large audience. ... who knows where
    it might lead."
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