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M**N
Extremely Worthwhile Compilation of Previous Exercise Books for the Feynman Lectures on Physics
I have been a staff member for the edX/MITx online courses in Quantum Mechanics 8.04x-8.06x, as well as a CTA for innumerable online MOOC courses in mathematics and physics. In the discussion forums for those courses, when students ask how can they learn enough physics to meet the prerequisites for these QM courses, I always recommend that they read the Feynman Lectures on Physics, they are an incomparable resource for physics students.I first read the Feynman lectures in 1974, and even had exercise books, first the small paperback for volume 3, and later the now out of print exercises in introductory physics by Leighton and Vogt. Amazingly, I never did the exercises. Until now. I recently purchased the Millennium edition exercises (blue book), and have worked through about 1/2 of the exercises. Many are interesting, some routine, some a little more challenging, so far I would not consider any to be puzzle type problems that I am not fond of.To get a taste simply, go the the Feynman Lectures on Physics Website maintained by Michael Gottlieb, and go to the exercise tab where there are about 50 problems with complete solutions. The blue book only contains answers, not detailed solutions.The blue exercise book itself, contains 908 problems in 85 chapters that more or less parallel the chapters in the Feynman Lectures on Physics. My only complaint is that there are 655 problems devoted to volume I, 184 problems to volume II, and 69 to volume III. Basically as the material gets more advanced, the number of problems drops considerably e.g. there is only 1 problem on the vector potential chapter. I know it is harder to compose problems for more advanced material, but I suspect this is not the cause. Probably many of the problems have simply been lost from the original course runs. Anyway for a second edition it would be nice if more problems could be added for the electromagnetism and quantum mechanics volumes.
W**9
Could be a good guide for those hoping to grasp parts of Feynman's "Lectures on Physics" book set
This could be a useful book for anyone who endeavors or hopes (beyond all hope in my case:-) to gain the greatest understanding of Richard Feynman's "Lectures on Physics" book set. There is no guarantee implied that normal, intelligent, even highly-intelligent, human beings will achieve success at comprehending what I'm beginning to think is the incomprehensible wealth of knowledge that I'm finding dangled in front of my bloodshot eyes. If nothing else the reading (and re-reading and re-re-reading) is good mental exercise if your brain doesn't overheat.
J**5
High quality
The questions are really good and helopful for practicing for my exams. High quality made book as well
J**I
Mathamatics.
I purchased it as a gift for my grandson currently at Michigan Technological University. O good gift for a math minor student.
B**L
Something to think about
Wonderful problems to think about. For example, the first problem in the whole book asks "If heat is merely molecular motion, what is the difference between a hot, stationary baseball and a cool, rapidly moving one?" There are plenty of "compute the force on member D in the diagram above" type of problems, but also lots of ones to simply get you thinking about how all of this relates to the real world.
A**Z
a great book if you really want to understand physics
a great book if you really want to understand physics, Feynman has his own style to explain physics really simple.
M**O
Five Stars
The book is not easy but ones you opened it ,it stick to you
A**Y
A MUST HAVE FOR PHYSICS STUDENT
Perfect complement to the Feynman Lectures. There are some amazing problems in this book. I am so happy I BOUGHT THIS.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
2 weeks ago