From the perspective of
representation theory, a prime ideal
I corresponds to a module
R/
I, and the spectrum of a ring corresponds to
irreducible cyclic representations of
R, while more general subvarieties correspond to possibly reducible representations that need not be cyclic. Recall that abstractly, the representation theory of a
group is the study of modules over its
group algebra. The connection to representation theory is clearer if one considers the
polynomial ring R=K[x_1,\dots,x_n] or, without a basis, R=K[V]. As the latter formulation makes clear, a polynomial ring is the monoid algebra over a
vector space, and writing in terms of x_i corresponds to choosing a basis for the vector space. Then an ideal
I, or equivalently a module R/I, is a cyclic representation of
R (
cyclic meaning generated by 1 element as an
R-module; this generalizes 1-dimensional representations). In the case that the field is algebraically closed (say, the complex numbers), every maximal ideal corresponds to a point in
n-space, by the
Nullstellensatz (the maximal ideal generated by (x_1-a_1), (x_2-a_2),\ldots,(x_n-a_n) corresponds to the point (a_1,\ldots,a_n)). These representations of K[V] are then parametrized by the
dual space V^*, the covector being given by sending each x_i to the corresponding a_i. Thus a representation of K^n (
K-linear maps K^n \to K) is given by a set of
n numbers, or equivalently a covector K^n \to K. Thus, points in
n-space, thought of as the max spec of R=K[x_1,\dots,x_n], correspond precisely to 1-dimensional representations of
R, while finite sets of points correspond to finite-dimensional representations (which are reducible, corresponding geometrically to being a union, and algebraically to not being a prime ideal). The non-maximal ideals then correspond to
infinite-dimensional representations. == Functional analysis perspective ==