On Dec 30, 2007, at 3:05 PM, Günther Greindl wrote: > Dear Owen, > > I am actually reading it at the moment, I am at around page 300. It is > my second go, the first one was before I had CompSci Math under my > belt > and I got lost. > > This time is much better, although he of course employs a rather broad > sweep of mathematics, most of which you will only hear as a physics > student (like Riemannian geometry etc) But the going is quite nice, > though you have to believe him some stuff.
The intro is certainly comfy! And browsing through a few places of interest were satisfying. > I have also bought Needham's Visual Complex Analysis (excellent > book!!), Wow, what a coincidence! So did I, due to some FRIAM conversations a while back but without knowing anything about the Penrose book, and its focus on complex numbers. > and concepts somewhat thin in Penrose's book make sense after going > through a chapter in the Needham book. (Penrose loves complex > analysis, > and I am beginning to share his fascination :-)) > Also for the later math chapters some additional mathematical > literature > is recommended. Good to know. I actually like that sort of read .. an "index" into the mathematics world and a good motivator. > I can really recommend this book - I have of course already made > "sneak > reads" into the physical sections, and if you work through this book > (instead of reading it casually and ignoring the parts you don't > understand) I guess there is no quicker way to be informed about > modern/foundational physics at a considerably more than superficial > level (the next step is to study physics, really). > > But it will take work - that is the question you have to ask yourself: > if you are willing to "tackle" the book instead of just "reading" > it, I > give it a serious thumbs up :) > > Cheers, > Günther Thanks, -- Owen ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org