JonnyG
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In Wald's "General Relativity", in his section on abstract tensor notation, he let's g_{ab} denote the metric tensor. When applied to a vector v^a, we get a dual vector, because g_{ab}(v^a, \cdot) is just a dual vector. Okay cool. But then he says that this dual vector is actually g_{ab}v^b, which is a contraction. But don't we have g_{ab}v^b = \sum\limits_{i=1}^n g(\cdot, v^i) = \sum\limits_{i=1}^n g_{ab}(v^i, \cdot), which in general is not going to be equal to g_{ab}(v^a, \cdot)? Where am I messing up here?
EDIT: \{v^i\} is a basis for the tangent space.
EDIT: \{v^i\} is a basis for the tangent space.
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