Let $K$ be a field. I have seen this construction in lectures but am having difficulty understanding it. Let $P(x) \in K[x]$, an irreducible polynomial, whose "root" may not exist in $K$ which we call $\alpha$. Then, $$ \frac{K[X]}{\langle P(X) \rangle} $$ is a field, and a bigger one that we started with. Firstly, why is this a field? And secondly, the only construction that I know of starts with an element $\alpha$ in some bigger field of $K$, and then derives the minimal polynomial of $\alpha$. But in the construction above we are starting from an irreducible polynomial (which is supposed to be the minimal polynomial of $\alpha$ I suppose), and ending by somehow deriving a (sometimes) non-existent (in $K$) element $\alpha$. Is there a way to explain this clearly and rigorously? I'm just having a hard time getting my head around these constructions.
(A construction that goes "the other way around" might be: Prove that $p(x)$ is irreducible in $F[x]$)
There is a lemma which says that if $R$ is a commutative ring and $\mathfrak m$ a maximal ideal in $R$, then $R/\mathfrak m$ is a field. This follows from the correspondence between ideals of $R$ containing $\mathfrak m$ and ideals of $R/\mathfrak m$ (they are in bijection). And fields are exactly the commutative rings with two ideals (the two trivial ideals containing either just $0$, or the entire ring). This is because an ideal contains a unit if and only if it is already identical to the entire ring. So if the zero ideal and the entire ring are the only ideals, then every element except for $0$ must be a unit. But that's what a field is. And we can also note that if $\mathfrak m$ is maximal, then there are exactly two ideals in which it is contained: $\mathfrak m$ itself, and all of $R$. By the correspondence with ideals of $R/\mathfrak m$, we see that $R/\mathfrak m$ has only two ideals, and is thus a field.
So in your case, we have $R=K[X]$ and $\mathfrak m=\langle P\rangle$. If $\langle P\rangle$ is maximal, then $K[X]/\langle P\rangle$ is a field. Luckily, this is the case, since $K[X]$ is Euclidean, and thus a principal ideal domain, in which ideals generated by an irreducible element are maximal. So the ideal in question is indeed maximal, and thus the corresponding quotient a field.
Now a short calculation will show that we can embed $K$ into this field, let's call it $L$, and so we can view $P$ as a polynomial in $L[X]$, and with some calculations we can see that the equivalence class of $X$ is a root of the embedded polynomial. So we gain a field which contains the original one (in the sense that there is a natural embedding), as well as a root of the given polynomial (again in the sense that it's a root of the embedded polynomial).