The condition of separability is central in Galois theory. A perfect field is one for which all algebraic extensions are separable (equivalently, all finite extensions are separable). There exists a simple criterion for perfectness: a field F is perfect if and only if
In particular, all fields of characteristic 0 and all finite fields are perfect. This means that the separability condition can be assumed in many contexts. The effects of inseparability (necessarily for infinite K of characteristic p) can be seen in the primitive element theorem, and for the tensor product of fields.
Given a finite extension L/K of fields, there is a largest subfield M of L containing K such that M is a separable extension of K. When M = K the extension L/K is called a purely inseparable extension. In general an algebraic extension factors as a purely inseparable extension of a separable extension, since the compositum of a family of separable extensions is again separable.
Purely inseparable extensions do occur for quite natural reasons, for example in algebraic geometry in characteristic p. If K is a field of characteristic p, and V an algebraic variety over K of dimension > 0, consider the function fieldK(V) and its subfieldK(V)p of p-th powers. This is always a purely inseparable extension. Such extensions occur as soon as one looks at multiplication by p on an elliptic curve over a finite field of characteristic p.
In dealing with non-perfect fields K, one introduces the separable closureKsep inside an algebraic closure, which is the largest separable subextension of Kalg/K. Then Galois theory can be carried out inside Ksep.