Noether-Lasker Theorem: In a Noetherian ring $R$, every ideal $I$ is an intersection of finitely many primary ideals $P_1, P_2, ..., P_n$. My textbook (Grillet's Abstract Algebra) proves that the radical of each primary ideal is an associated prime ideal $I:a=\{r\in R\mid ra\in I\}$ of $I$ for some $a\notin I$.
But I don't know the motivation of the associated prime ideal. That is, I don't know why we need to express these primary ideals as ideal quotient.
An idea is that the ideal quotient is easy to compute. But I am not sure.
The decomposition of an ideal $I$ as intersection of primary ideals is the extension to an arbitrary noetherian ring of the decomposition of an ideal in a P.I.D., or more generally a Dedekind domain, of an ideal as a product of powers of prime ideals, which itself is the generalisation of the decomposition of a positive integer as the product of powers of primes.
In $\mathbf Z$, a $p$-primary ideal is the ideal generated by a power of the prime number $p$.