We give an elementary proof of Brouwer's fixed-point theorem. The only
mathematical prerequisite is a version of the Bolzano-Weierstrass theorem: a
sequence in a compact subset of n-dimensional Euclidean space has a
convergent subsequence with a limit in that set. Our main tool is a
`no-bullying' lemma for agents with preferences over indivisible goods. What
does this lemma claim? Consider a finite number of children, each with a single
indivisible good (a toy) and preferences over those toys. Let's say that a
group of children, possibly after exchanging toys, could bully some poor kid if
all group members find their own current toy better than the toy of this
victim. The no-bullying lemma asserts that some group S of children can
redistribute their toys among themselves in such a way that all members of S
get their favorite toy from S, but they cannot bully anyone