The notion of a <i>strongly regular </i> Banach space was introduced and studied in [Some topological and geometrical structures in Banach spaces, Ghoussoub et al., Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society, (1987), No. 378], see <a href="http://www.ams.org/books/memo/0378/">here.</a> I won't define it because I doubt the definition would help. Let $C^k(M)$ be the Banach space of the $k$-times continuously differentable real-valued functions on a smooth compact manifold $M$ with the usual norm. I wish to show that $C^k(M)$ is not strongly regular (because it is an assumption in a theorem I would like to quote). Is this known? I suspect that no Banach space that contains an isomorphic copy of <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sequence_space#c_and_c0"> $c_0$ </a> is strongly regular. Is this true? Is there a slick way to see that $C^k(M)$ contains a copy of $c_0$? I think I can prove by hand by embedding $c_0$ to $C([0,1])$, and then embedding the latter into $C^k(M)$ by integrating $k$ times and using spherical coordinates, but I would rather quote a reference. Disclaimer: Banach spaces in not my area of expertise.