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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
On Par With Richard Feynman:Clear,Educational,Entertaining,
This review is from: Six Roads from Newton: Great Discoveries in Physics (Wiley Popular Science) (Hardcover)
I read this book in 1998 and find myself revisiting it again and again. I love this book.I keep it along side "Six Easy Pieces" (by Richard Feyman) as one of the two books that have helped me understand the concepts of physics more than any other. Six Roads in fact compliments Six Easy Pieces by picking up where Feynman left off in his book, describing in greater detail "The Theory of Gravitation", complimenting Feynman's explanations of "Quantum Behavior" and moving into explanations of Relativity Theory (which Feyman deals very little with). Makes me wonder if Speyer wasn't consciously drawing from and complimenting Feynman's book. I can't give any higher recommendation to read this book. It's inspiring, fun to read, fun to reference, it's challenging and includes many graphs and some equations but it doesn't require prior knowledge of scientific jargon or advanced math, provides fundanmental explanations of a wide range of physical theories, and it gives an interesting perspective on the history of scientific thought that has led to those theories. The history of scientific thought, interactions of ideas, and achievements of great thinkers gave the book an engaging story, but ultimately, insight into the thoughts and equations themselves and the fundamental context of where those theories came from is the main feature and tremendous resource of this great science book. Buy this book! (and maybe I'll get to see more like it)
5.0 out of 5 stars
On Par With Richard Feynman:Clear,Educational,Entertaining,
By Mark "Mark" (Madison, Wisconsin USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Six Roads from Newton: Great Discoveries in Physics (Wiley Popular Science) (Hardcover)
I read this book in 1998 and find myself revisiting it again and again. I love this book.
I keep it along side "Six Easy Pieces" (by Richard Feyman) as one of the two books that have helped me understand the concepts of physics more than any other. Six Roads in fact compliments Six Easy Pieces by picking up where Feynman left off in his book, describing in greater detail "The Theory of Gravitation", complimenting Feynman's explanations of "Quantum Behavior" and moving into explanations of Relativity Theory (which Feyman deals very little with). Makes me wonder if Speyer wasn't consciously drawing from and complimenting Feynman's book. I can't give any higher recommendation to read this book. It's inspiring, fun to read, fun to reference, it's challenging and includes many graphs and some equations but it doesn't require prior knowledge of scientific jargon or advanced math, provides fundanmental explanations of a wide range of physical theories, and it gives an interesting perspective on the history of scientific thought that has led to those theories. The history of scientific thought, interactions of ideas, and achievements of great thinkers gave the book an engaging story, but ultimately, insight into the thoughts and equations themselves and the fundamental context of where those theories came from is the main feature and tremendous resource of this great science book. Buy this book! (and maybe I'll get to see more like it) |
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Six Roads from Newton: Great Discoveries in Physics (Wiley Popular Science) by Edward Speyer (Paperback - Oct. 1996)
$19.95
In Stock | ||