In the theory of automorphic forms we often right away reduce the study to admissible representations, and I wonder how much everything breaks when not. If I understood well, admissible representations are nice because
- They have finite-dimensionality properties (of the $K$-types).
- The contragredient of an admissible representation still is admissible.
- The parabolic induction of an admissible representation still is admissible.
I feel 1 is great in practice and 3 is important to classify representations. But are there less philosophical reasons to consider only admissible representations? E.g., do the properties above break for non-admissible representations? Or are there other very important properties we can prove of them and not of other representations?
I would like clear counter-examples, if any.