A beautiful theorem known as the Japanese Theorem (Wikipedia, MathWorld) says that, no matter how one triangulates a cyclic (inscribed in a circle) polygon, the sum of the radii of the incircles is the same:
(Wikipedia image)
Q. Does this generalize to higher dimensions? In particular, if one partitions a convex polyhedron in $\mathbb{R}^3$, all of whose vertices lie on a sphere, into tetrahedra, is the sum of the radii of the inspheres independent of the tetrahedralization?
A bit of search has not resulted in an answer, which suggests that the answer may well be No...
Addendum. Following TMA's suggestion, I computed the radii sum for the five-tetrahedron partition—$1.334$, and the sum for the six-tetrahedron partition—$1.242$. Barring a computation error, this settles the question negatively. Too bad!