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The physics books that no one wanted 

Tibees²
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Books are linked below. Check your library first!
Emperor's New Mind by Roger Penrose: amzn.to/3YJUneo
University of Chicago Graduate Problems in Physics with Solutions: amzn.to/3Man0K5
Disturbing The Universe by Freeman Dyson: amzn.to/4dKtrzo
Mathematical Handbook for Scientists and Engineers by Theresa and Granino Korn: amzn.to/4drM1N4
Notes on Quantum mechanics by Enrico Fermi: amzn.to/3WXmNPI
Nuclear Physics by Enrico Fermi: amzn.to/3STZdlx
The Meaning of Relativity by Albert Einstein: amzn.to/3YJUWow
Statistical Physics by Landau and Lifshitz: amzn.to/3yJGa6A
Support me with a monthly donation on Patreon and receive a gift from me: / tibees
Buy me a coffee (one-off donation): ko-fi.com/tibees
Main channel: ‪@tibees‬
Edited by Noor Hanania

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13 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 53   
@Bllackstaarr
@Bllackstaarr 20 дней назад
As a recent graduate of physics in Poland seeing Landau's Statistical Physics here made me chuckle. I studied this book front to back multiple times xD
@bryandraughn9830
@bryandraughn9830 20 дней назад
What I love about physics history are the ways that scientists have used science to expand science. Ways of building hypotheses using existing knowledge and unique approaches to building conclusions. There were personal styles and ways of considering things that set each explorer on their own path. I can't get enough of it!
@agranero6
@agranero6 17 дней назад
Here in Brazil URSS tried to do massive propaganda to universitaries: they translated several Physics and Mathematics books to Portuguese and sold them very cheap usin MIR publiser. I have all Landau book of this collection because of that.
@rog2224
@rog2224 17 дней назад
The Emperor's New Mind was my lunchtime reading for a couple of weeks in 1989. I've not popped it open since I finished it, but it held my attention at the time.
@erdemmemisyazici3950
@erdemmemisyazici3950 19 дней назад
Roger Penrose is brilliant and he is correct about A.I. When we think of A.I. we think of ChatGPT and image generation models mostly but none of those have the insight and capacity of the human mind. All ChatGPT knows is 67 comes before 68 based on billions of conversations fed into it with each word or three given a number. Then the system is trained to look at how likely is one of those tokens to appear next based on the training data and the question presented. If a conversation isn't fed into it before it's not going to know how to respond. This was simply called Big Data in the 2010s, then we lost our minds and thought we created life.
@bengoodwin2141
@bengoodwin2141 19 дней назад
This is true about modern AI but I highly doubt that he can be correct in a general sense. He's also claimed that consciousness is in some way more fundamental and can never be simulated, rather than it just being about our understanding.
@seanmcmanus9656
@seanmcmanus9656 19 дней назад
yep. unti agi isn't just one update away "and the next" and the "next", "is it already here?" nope, still a word calculator with conversational based exploits. It does offer much more "thinking", but it's like an autistic person with an iq multiple deviations below in most aspects, and exponentially higher at set, agonizing, and specific tasks. weird models for sure.
@erdemmemisyazici3950
@erdemmemisyazici3950 19 дней назад
@@bengoodwin2141 I think he simply stated that we don't even understand basic stuff like quantum gravity for example (if it is quantum at all). Today we can build something that acts humanish, that's about it. There were some recent discussions of quantum effects that occur in the brain, one of which is microtubules that regulate neural-level synaptic functions. Quantum effects aside which may or may not be simulated with a computer a human is more than just the brain. Couple more points here are one of biology, all of our organs contribute to the consciousness experience. Another of psychology where being evolving primates is essential to us, knowing our parents having children, our slow evolution etc. There are also philosophical aspects. The fact is you can't even be certain you're not a brain in a jar in a lab somewhere yet you can tell me you made something that is just like you. You who can really only be certain that you will die someday. Those are really just some of the basic points but there are much more detailed explanations you can read about on the topic. ChatGPT seems humanish because we input ordered data from people and lots of it, an experimental gimmick born out of big data concepts, nothing more.
@bengoodwin2141
@bengoodwin2141 19 дней назад
@@seanmcmanus9656 I wouldn't compare it to an autistic person. Autistic people are great at understanding logic, they're just bad at human social instincts. Current AI is great at pattern matching to approximate things like social and conversational skills, while it's awful at consistent logic.
@bengoodwin2141
@bengoodwin2141 19 дней назад
@@erdemmemisyazici3950 These are true, yeah. I should point out that quantum effects don't explain anything except randomness, and that all those things that Penrose claimed we can do that defy the completeness theorem can be explained incredibly easily by understanding that our brains use probabilistic reasoning and pattern matching (basically generalized curve fitting) for intuition, instead of ever proving anything.
@ericerpelding2348
@ericerpelding2348 16 дней назад
At 12:16 the "Piaggio" book that Dyson read was "An elementary treatise on differential equations and their applications."
@ericerpelding2348
@ericerpelding2348 16 дней назад
At 26:58 we see the price of Landau's "Statistical Physics" book is only $2.00. That is indeed a bargain for such a classic book.
@ShmoopDooper
@ShmoopDooper 20 дней назад
I thought the second review on the back of the dyson book to be particularly poignant, as well as the tragic details around the imprisonment of Landau. Both minds concerned about these lofty scientific exploits while being subject and victim to the practical, harsh realities of life. I feel like that is a concept that is very relatable to a lot of intellectual types, myself included. I certainly don’t have it as bad as being in the gulags though! Nonetheless, toiling away at manual labor, acquiescing to angry people who haven’t had a single intelligent thought enter or leave their brains. Maybe in the future people will be free to think without dealing with these horrid things. Landau would make a great subject for a biographical video. Love your stuff Toby! ❤
@agranero6
@agranero6 17 дней назад
I have several books that were donated by my University Physics Institute library: they offered first to other libraries on the University, to professors and then they stamped: DONATION over all other stamps of the library and let them on the library entrance for anyone to take.
@aboubenadhem9066
@aboubenadhem9066 20 дней назад
I’ve read and appreciated Penrose’s “The Road to Reality: A Complete Guide to the Laws of the Universe”. But going from that to his theories on quantum consciousness (which I think he was just getting started on in “Emperor’s New Mind”) feels like going from Isaac Newton’s “Principia” to his treatises on alchemy.
@theunknownunknowns5168
@theunknownunknowns5168 21 день назад
Tibees is a psychologist acting as a physicist. I mean the venn diagram for all this is. Well consider this; virtual old book smell, historical science figures, brilliant young lady (with soothing voice) voice over, dead smart guys compared to moden standards and Tibees.
@theunknownunknowns5168
@theunknownunknowns5168 21 день назад
Oh. What do libraries throw out. Never thought about that before.
@user-yt6le1hx1e
@user-yt6le1hx1e 20 дней назад
we agree. see my comment, if not deleted.
@cdenn016
@cdenn016 20 дней назад
Everybody wants landau/lifshitz. It belongs in every physicists personal library
@douglasstrother6584
@douglasstrother6584 18 дней назад
L&L present different angles on Physics. "Electrodynamics of Continuous Media", Vol. 8, is one of my favorites.
@sino-wt7pu
@sino-wt7pu 19 дней назад
I read 'Penrose Emperor's New Mind' as a Computer Science student, who's only had some undergrad Physics course in the 90'ties. I quite liked the book, found it very interesting back then, even if I wasn't convinced with what seemed to be one of the conclusions, like that AI won't be able to develop true mathematical intuition and genius. But even if one doesn't agree with that, it's very readable popular science book giving some introduction on some quantum physics, math and computer science topics. ( I also got Penrose Book ''The Road To Reality'' , which is more demanding/challenging to read, because very mathematical, seemed more like a work book. Compared to that ''The Emperors New Mind'' is a more typical popular science book, introducing you to some science topics in some quite ''relaxed'' way, I'd say. ) edit: If I understood Penrose right back then, he thought Genius requires Consciousness, and Consciousness involves Quantum Physics, and Quantum Physics is incomplete, where it matters, because to Penrose oppinion gravity plays an important role, when it comes to the ''collapse of the wavefunction'' ... ( But maybe I remember or got this all wrong ... So many years ago. Actually personally I think of intuition more as associative memory and neural network pattern matching activity that goes unconscious, until it digs something out and makes you aware of it. )
@thesecretthirdthing
@thesecretthirdthing 20 дней назад
Penrose argument (having not read the book) reminds me of these hallucinations llms are having and how constrained they are just to get them to do what they're told. Imagine something with human level intelligence just, listening 😂
@brkly99
@brkly99 19 дней назад
I have the Einstein and Penrose books, I enjoyed them very much. I especially liked The Meaning of Relativity, my first real introduction to general relativity. I disagree that the math is not for beginners, I did not have a background in tensor algebra at the time, but found it easy enough to follow. I would love to have a copy of the Fermi book!
@luciusrex
@luciusrex 20 дней назад
i love Tibees! also youre becoming a book collector now! its a very interesting world, book collecting!
@greatestone4eva
@greatestone4eva 19 дней назад
Fermi's books!!!!
@douglasstrother6584
@douglasstrother6584 18 дней назад
I had a paperback copy the Chicago Problems.
@kevinriveron27
@kevinriveron27 20 дней назад
I'm so glad to see a new upload on this channel!
@Steaphany
@Steaphany 16 дней назад
Thank you, I found several titles that I want to get and put to use.
@yanntal954
@yanntal954 16 дней назад
The math sorcerer be sounding different 😮
@islamadam8502
@islamadam8502 21 день назад
I like to start my day by reading about Logic, I feel it enhances my focus on whatever I do later.
@dxcvvxd
@dxcvvxd 21 день назад
babe, wake up new tibees2 video
@eternaldoorman5228
@eternaldoorman5228 19 дней назад
That book of Penrose is about trying to understand the mind of someone like Roger Penrose. He's dead right, that's something not even Penrose understands! He wrote another big fat book after that called "The Road to Reality" ...
@Connections-ff4bs
@Connections-ff4bs 11 дней назад
I'd like to.get free books like those. It seems like you got some Dover publications? Books in the pile
@dianamorgan9668
@dianamorgan9668 15 дней назад
The Emperor’s new mind is the only book I’ve ever brought twice He is arguing that maths is discovered
@lucasbernard5304
@lucasbernard5304 20 дней назад
the best voice
@dadsonworldwide3238
@dadsonworldwide3238 19 дней назад
I witness lectures today that would get them blackballed by their peers when I was in school in 70s & 80s. Especially health class where millions of Americans asked natural duh factor questions lol The problem in changing word context really has disproven much that inspired many arguments & theories in 1880s-1945s but morph into almost meaning. Syntax and semantics that start on one extreme taken to the most yoo hoo woo uncertainty broad sloppy taxonomical order and cateregory This Is a serious problem when you can disprove or reform anything. One generation can never actually read the last not because hue = wavelength spectrum in human wasnt there in 16th century English but because we have censorship and etymological corruption taking generation in looping orbits rather than letting the gallaleo or conprencous code of measure be known. It makes it's way into places that argued against and destroyed such testing or line of thought exploration properly on time.
@MrDharmeshgusani
@MrDharmeshgusani 21 день назад
Tibees, Which country do you belong to?
@islamadam8502
@islamadam8502 21 день назад
She's a New Zealander residing in Australia.
@theunknownunknowns5168
@theunknownunknowns5168 21 день назад
Kiwi Australian American.
@Obaidur121
@Obaidur121 17 дней назад
❤❤❤
@SpaceGhost1701
@SpaceGhost1701 20 дней назад
I can smell this video.
@consciouspi
@consciouspi 19 дней назад
After 4 girls, they gave up. People I knew. True story.
@transmissions_completed
@transmissions_completed 21 день назад
i thought she abandoned this channel ngl
@danielfernandes1010
@danielfernandes1010 20 дней назад
I didn't realize it wasn't the main one!
@Inventodd2748
@Inventodd2748 21 день назад
Morning, before reading several laws of physics books at the library I felt like anything was possible. After I got these boundaries, that made me focus better on the important stuff in life. This is probably why Elon Musk is so successful.
@user-yt6le1hx1e
@user-yt6le1hx1e 20 дней назад
This attitude replaces science with faith in tech. Not adult. Elon is a thief of intellectual property, like the criminal Edison, and is a vicious psychopath analogous to Trump. Their ideas of success are money, power, fame control.
@pingnick
@pingnick 20 дней назад
Wow reputation of the writer hmmm well I’ll have you know I’m both a Harvard professor and an👽! Buy me!!📚🚀🌌🤩🫶♾️
@pingnick
@pingnick 20 дней назад
I think the child sex ratio answer doesn’t correspond with reality!? A family that stops at one child who is a son skews numbers heavily or!?!?
@pingnick
@pingnick 20 дней назад
Particularly among communities with high rate of death of mother in childbirth sadly obviously… or hmm one of those crazy statistical things yeah seems that mother having a 50% chance of death after each birth would influence overall sex ratio combined with this societal rule though not as much obviously as female selective abortion - perhaps I’m not the ideal person to exploit casino mistakes etc ha🤪
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