{"title":"An Introduction to Langlands Functoriality","authors":"James Arthur","doi":"10.1017/9781108591218.016","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The Principle of Functoriality has long been regarded as the centre of the Langlands Program. More recently, it has had to share the spotlight with Reciprocity, Langlands’ conjecture that relates automorphic representations with motives from algebraic geometry. However, the two principles are closely related, and in any case, Reciprocity came at the end of the decade that followed the years 1960–1967 that are the focus of this volume. Functoriality famously had its roots in the seventeen-page letter that Langlands gave to André Weil in 1967 [L2]. He wrote some of the details shortly afterwards in the article he dedicated to Salomon Bochner [L3]. It represented a very different direction for Langlands after his monumental volume [L1] on Eisenstein series, which was largely analysis. Langlands credits Bochner, an analyst himself, with directing him towards number theory, especially, I believe, class field theory and its long-sought nonabelian generalization. There are several ways to introduce functoriality to a general reader. One is as a series of identities (reciprocity laws) that relate families of conjugacy classes c = {cp : p N}","PeriodicalId":306197,"journal":{"name":"The Genesis of the Langlands Program","volume":"25 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-07-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"The Genesis of the Langlands Program","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108591218.016","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
The Principle of Functoriality has long been regarded as the centre of the Langlands Program. More recently, it has had to share the spotlight with Reciprocity, Langlands’ conjecture that relates automorphic representations with motives from algebraic geometry. However, the two principles are closely related, and in any case, Reciprocity came at the end of the decade that followed the years 1960–1967 that are the focus of this volume. Functoriality famously had its roots in the seventeen-page letter that Langlands gave to André Weil in 1967 [L2]. He wrote some of the details shortly afterwards in the article he dedicated to Salomon Bochner [L3]. It represented a very different direction for Langlands after his monumental volume [L1] on Eisenstein series, which was largely analysis. Langlands credits Bochner, an analyst himself, with directing him towards number theory, especially, I believe, class field theory and its long-sought nonabelian generalization. There are several ways to introduce functoriality to a general reader. One is as a series of identities (reciprocity laws) that relate families of conjugacy classes c = {cp : p N}
功能原理一直被认为是朗兰兹纲领的核心。最近,它不得不与朗兰兹(Langlands)提出的自同构表示与代数几何的动机联系起来的“互易性”(Reciprocity)共同受到关注。然而,这两个原则是密切相关的,在任何情况下,互惠是在1960-1967年之后的十年结束时出现的,这是本卷的重点。众所周知,功能性起源于1967年朗兰兹给安德烈·韦尔的一封长达17页的信[2]。不久之后,他在一篇献给所罗门·博希纳的文章中写下了一些细节。它代表了朗兰兹在他关于爱森斯坦系列的巨著[1]之后的一个非常不同的方向,这主要是分析。朗兰兹认为,博奇纳本人也是一位分析师,是他引导他走向数论,尤其是我相信的阶级场论及其长期寻求的非阿贝尔推广。有几种方法可以向普通读者介绍功能。一种是将共轭类c = {cp: p N}的族联系起来的一系列恒等式(互易律)。