James's theorem
In mathematics, particularly functional analysis, James's theorem, named for Robert C. James, states that a Banach space is reflexive if and only if every continuous linear functional's norm on attains its supremum on the closed unit ball in
A stronger version of the theorem states that a weakly closed subset of a Banach space is weakly compact if and only if the dual norm each continuous linear functional on attains a maximum on
The hypothesis of completeness in the theorem cannot be dropped.
Statements
The space considered can be a real or complex Banach space. Its continuous dual space is denoted by The topological dual of -Banach space deduced from by any restriction scalar will be denotedA Banach space being reflexive if and only if its closed unit ball is weakly compact one deduces from this, since the norm of a continuous linear form is the upper bound of its modulus on this ball: