Audio lecture finished
Apr. 3rd, 2009 05:39 pmGreat Ideas in Classical Physics (TTC)
vanishingly little math, good overview / history of the development of physics. Pretty short series, 24 x 30 minute courses. I learned some new (to me) history. No new physics, but I didn't expect to.
vanishingly little math, good overview / history of the development of physics. Pretty short series, 24 x 30 minute courses. I learned some new (to me) history. No new physics, but I didn't expect to.
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Date: 2009-04-04 03:22 am (UTC)I did learn, working problems with my peers in graduate school, that some people can do higher math over the phone, and some (extremely smart people) can't. I can, if necessary.
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Date: 2009-04-04 12:03 pm (UTC)What I enjoyed was the history; which of the big guys were contemporaries, which were building on each other's work. Being a classical physics course, the physicists (at least, the 18th/19th century ones) were a gallery of unit names; Watt, Joule, Newton, Ampere, Coloumb, plus Galileo, Maxwell, Copernicus, etc.
He did a pretty good job of relating how things that seem obvious to us now weren't really that easy to think up given the general beliefs of the times. I think that's important; students should realize that generally accepted beliefs are sometimes totally wrong, and you've got to be willing to let go if compelling evidence comes along.