Hey, you just learned there "exists" constructivism, it's not "fringe", it's a central effort
in _rigorous formalism for mathematics_.
I.e., some constructivists have the "non-constructive" is not even _sound_, and is at
best incomplete and not self-contradictory.
Then, about Banach-Tarski, what the Burse-bot there is doing is what's called
"talking out the ass", because it's just something you don't know, and whether
"the devil made you do it" is a sufficient "arbitrary consequent" or "arbitrary antecedent"
would suffice, something "you don't know".
About Banach-Tarski, there are two at-odds approaches, one's plainly geometric and
is for Vitali-Hausdorff. Another is plainly geometric and for, say, Micielski-Marczewski.
Here's a thread about "Banach-Tarski". Of course, I think what I write is most informative,
and I understand that's subjective.
https://groups.google.com/g/sci.logic/c/UFQub2CKXQo/m/eksBibcTAQAJ
One hopes that someday you might understand
that "ALGEBRAIC geometry" is not "algebraic GEOMETRY".
"So, you can see that "re-Vitali-ization" is ongoing in
mathematics writ large, and quite more accessibly these
days then that as the dust arises of the construction,
it all has to settle to the foundations again. Then,
looking to "re-Vitali-ize" measure as from some quite
fundamental notions as the spiral-space-filling curve
and unique properties of the equivalency function (in
continuity, analysis, differential analysis, singularity
theory, and probability theory) makes a neat course for
then laying out what are building up as these quite
immense structures in categorical algebra in descriptive
set theory, as somewhat neatly primitive (and accordingly
fundamental)."
"Too wordy?"
"It's a "spherical group".
One's geometry's, the other algebra's.
This is in "dynamical topology" in "descriptive set theory". "
"Now, why this relates to Marczewski-Dougherty-Foreman's
Banach-Tarski's is because the "group paradoxical action"
that was set under "decomposition paradoxical action"
(so they didn't look "stupid" or plain "wrong" or otherwise
have to defend another "paradox") is these days being disambiguated
from where they were framed together in the corresponding
systems together.
This arrives full-circle at Zeno. "
Of course you can always read Burse instead:
"Lol, banach-tarski-fication of herpes boy" - Burse.
Ross:
"This then is for such notions about
Szpilrajn that these days are framed
in notions of "transfer principle"
and "antitransfer principle", but
re-using the development without
re-seating the terms leaves a bit
of an inconsistency in the middle
that naive inference could work out
either way.
Informed inference though is rather
setting such notions in the first-class
where they belong and able to redress
such hand-waving abandonment of topology's
usual difference between results in union
and results in intersection about the
special or limit cases for the transfer
principle where such infinitary results
would be disambiguated to hold or not.
classical geometry -> "paradoxical" decompositions
algebraic geometry -> "paradoxical" group actions
"... as long as we have two copies here,
might as well just stop at the first
and call it the action, though we'll
frame it in the results of the second."
But, really it's that both meet in the middle
(and either way, under some ambiguous assumptions).
So, one might neatly consider a theory of
Banach-Tarski as independent of some usual
assumptions, here basically under topology
and of course as here about that being under
all these usual assumptions of measure, and
whether for example it's "area", as least
under the quadratic , or, "volume", as
under the sphere. "
"An anagram of Banach-Tarski's Paradox
is Marczewski-Swierczkowski's Banach-Tarski's Paradox".
"Here then Banach and Tarski's development
is Banach and Tarski's, vis-a-vis, variously,
Groot, Steinhaus, Swierczkowski, and
algebraic interpretations. "
"That appears to be among Hausdorff's theorems, there (and see above)."