Here's a problem that may ultimately require just simple algebraic-geometry skills to be solved, or perhaps it's very deep and will never be solved at all. From the comments, some literature and my memory it appears this was posed by Grothendieck as part of the big program of motives. Consider **classes of complex algebraic varieties X modulo relations** [X] - [Y] = [X\Y], [X x Y] = [X] x [Y], Also, if you're familiar with taking inverse of an affine line, let's do that too: exists A^-1 such that [A] * [A^-1] = [point] (+ if you want, you can also take idempotent completion and formal completion by A^-1). It's not hard to see that you can add (formally) and multiply (geometric product as above) those things, so they **form a ring**. Let's denote this ring **`Mot`** (It's actually very close to what Grothendieck called *baby motives*.) And for things that form a ring you can **study their `Spec`**. For example, you can talk about **points of the ring** — each point is by definition a homomorphism to complex numbers. > **Question:** what are the properties of `Spec M`? How to describe its points? For example, one point is **Euler characteristics** `\chi \in \Spec \Mot`, since it's additive and multiplicative (it's even integral!) Any other homomorphism to complex numbers is thus sometimes called *generalized Euler characteristics*. There's also a plane there given by mixed Hodge polynomials (that is, polynomials whose coefficients are weighted Hodge numbers `h^{p,q}_k`), since Hodge polynomial at a given point satisfies those relations too (see the references soon). Are there any other points? Any more information?