Title: Making Mountains Out of Molehills The Banach-Tarski Paradox
1Making Mountains Out of MolehillsThe
Banach-Tarski Paradox
- By
- Bob Kronberger
- Jay Laporte
- Paul Miller
- Brian Sikora
- Aaron Sinz
2Introduction
Definitions Schroder-Bernstein Theorem Axiom of
Choice Conclusion
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5Banach-Tarski Theorem
- If X and Y are bounded subsets of having
nonempty interiors, then there exists a natural
number n and partitions and
of X and Y (into n pieces each)
such that is congruent to for all j.
6Definitions
- Rigid Motions
- Partitions of Sets
- Hausdorff Paradox
- Piecewise Congruence
7Rigid Motions
8Rigid Motion
9Partition of Sets
- A partition of a set X is a family of sets whose
union is X and any two members of which are
identical or disjoint.
10Partition of Sets
11Hausdorff Rotations
12Hausdorff
13Hausdorff Rotations
14Hausdorff Rotations
15Piecewise Congruence
16Piecewise Congruence
17Piecewise Congruence
18Schröder-Bernstein Theorem
- Theorem
- If A B and B A, then A B.
19Cardinality
- Questions that need to be answered
- What is cardinality of sets?
- How do you compare cardinalities of different
sets?
20Cardinality
- Definition
- Number of elements in a set.
- Relationship between two cardinalities
determined by - existence of an injection function
- existence of a bijection function
21Cardinality
- Bijection function
- One-to-one
- Onto
22Cardinality
- Bijection function
- One-to-one
- Onto
- Injection function
- One-to-one
23Cardinality
24Cardinality
- Comparing cardinalities of two finite sets
- Both cardinalities are integers
- If integers are
- Bijection exists
- If integers are
- No Bijection exists
- Injection exists
25Cardinality
- Comparing cardinalities of two infinite sets
- Cardinality
- Cardinality
26Cardinality
- Comparing cardinalities of two infinite sets
- Cardinality
- Cardinality
- Not always clear
- Z
- Z
- Bijection function
-
27Cardinality
- Comparing cardinalities of a finite and an
infinite - Infinite cardinality gt finite cardinality
28Schröder-Bernstein Theorem
- Four cases for sets A B
- Case I A finite B finite
- Case II A infinite B infinite
- Case III A finite B infinite
- Case IV A infinite B finite
- Schröder-Bernstein Theorem If A B and B
A, then A B
29Schröder-Bernstein Theorem
- Four cases for sets A B
- Case I A finite B finite
- Case II A infinite B infinite
- Case III A finite B infinite
- Case IV A infinite B finite
- Schröder-Bernstein Theorem If A B and B
A, then A B
30Schröder-Bernstein Theorem
- Two cases for sets A B
- Case I A finite B finite
- Case II A infinite B infinite
- Schröder-Bernstein Theorem If A B and B
A, then A B
31Schröder-Bernstein Theorem
- Case I A finite B finite
- A B are integers
- Let A r, B s
- Given conditions A B B A,
- Given conditions r s s r , then r
s - A B
- Schröder-Bernstein Theorem If A B and
B A, then A B
32Schröder-Bernstein Theorem
- Case II A infinite B infinite
- First condition Schröder-Bernstein Theorem
- If A B and B A, then A B
- Injection function f from A into a subset of B,
33Schröder-Bernstein Theorem
- Case II A infinite B infinite
- Second condition Schröder-Bernstein Theorem
- If A B and B A, then A B
- Injection function g from B to a subset of A,
34- Case II A infinite B infinite
- Result Schröder-Bernstein Theorem
- If A B and B A, then A B
- Bijection function h between A and B
35Schröder-Bernstein Theorem
- Case II A infinite B infinite
- To get resulting bijection function h
- Combine the two given conditions
- Remove some of the mappings of g
- Reverse some of the mappings of g
-
36Schröder-Bernstein Theorem
- Resulting bijection function h
- A B
37The Axiom of Choice
- For every collection A of nonempty sets there is
a function f such that, for every B in A, f(B)
B. Such a function is called a choice function
for A.
38Galaxy O Shoes
39Questions That Surround the Axiom of Choice
- Can It Be Derived From Other Axioms?
- Is It Consistent With Other Axioms?
- Should We Accept It As an Axiom?
40The First Six Axioms
- Axiom 1 Two sets are equal if they contain the
same members. - Axiom 2 For any two different objects a, b there
exists the set a,b which contains just
a and b. - Axiom 3 For a set s and a definite predicate P,
there exists the set Sp which contains
just those x in s which satisfy P. - Axiom 4 For any set s, there exists the
union of the members of s-that is, the
set containing just the members of
the members of s. - Axiom 5 For any set s, there exists the power set
of s-that is, the set whose members are just
all the subsets of s. - Axiom 6 There exists a set Z with the properties
(a) is in Z and (b) if x is in
Z, the x is in Z.
41Can It Be Derived From Other Axioms?
42Is It Consistent With Other Axioms?
43Major schools of thought concerning the use of
the Axiom of Choice
- Accept it as an axiom and use it without
hesitation. - Accept it as an axiom but use it only when you
can not find a proof without it. - Axiom of Choice is unacceptable.
44Three major views are
- Platonism
- Constructionism
- Formalism
45Platonism
- A Platonist believes that mathematical objects
exist independent of the human mind and a
mathematical statement, such as the Axiom of
Choice is objectively true or false.
46Constructivism
- A Constructivist believes that the only
acceptable mathematical objects are ones that can
be constructed by the human mind, and the only
acceptable proofs are constructive proofs
47Formalism
- A Formalist believes that mathematics is
strictly symbol manipulation and any consistent
theory is reasonable to study.
48Against
- Its not as simple, aesthetically pleasing, and
intuitive as the other axioms. - With it you can derive non-intuitive results such
as the Banach-Tarski Paradox. - It is nonconstructive
49For
- Every vector space has a basis
- Tricotomy of Cardinals For any cardinals k and
l, either klt1 or k1 or kgt1. - The union of countably many countable sets is
countable. - Every infinite set has a denumerable subset.
50What is a mathematical model?
51What does the Banach-Tarski Paradox show?
52Conclusion
53References
- Dr. Steve Deckelman
- The Banach-Tarski Paradox
- By Karl Stromberg
- The Axiom of Choice
- By Alex Lopez-Ortiz
- Proof, Logic and Cojecture The
Mathematicians - By Robert S. Wolf