Possible Duplicates:
Why are vector spaces not isomorphic to their duals?
Dual space question
Can someone give an (as easy as possible) example (together with a proof) of an infinite dimensional vector space that is not isomorphic to its dual ?
Possible Duplicates:
Why are vector spaces not isomorphic to their duals?
Dual space question
Can someone give an (as easy as possible) example (together with a proof) of an infinite dimensional vector space that is not isomorphic to its dual ?
We can consider $l^1$, the vector space of the sequences $\{x_n\}$ such that $\displaystyle\sum_{n=1}^{+\infty}|x_n|<\infty$. The dual can be identified with $l^{\infty}$, the vector space of all bounded sequences. But these two spaces cannot be isomorphic, since the first is separable whereas the second is not.